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#16
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Thats cool. Refueling would be as messy as replacing a toner cartridge.
I know Georgia Pacific Savannah burns coal dust to generate power. They actually back feed the grid and make bank doing so. |
#17
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Quote:
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[SIGPIC] Diesel loving autocrossing grandpa Architect. 08 Dodge 3/4 ton with Cummins & six speed; I have had about 35 benzes. I have a 39 Studebaker Coupe Express pickup in which I have had installed a 617 turbo and a five speed manual.[SIGPIC] ..I also have a 427 Cobra replica with an aluminum chassis. |
#18
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Or gasoline hidden inside the tubing of the frame/roll cage.
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#19
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Probably both, though in his book I believe he said it was fuel lines.
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[SIGPIC] Diesel loving autocrossing grandpa Architect. 08 Dodge 3/4 ton with Cummins & six speed; I have had about 35 benzes. I have a 39 Studebaker Coupe Express pickup in which I have had installed a 617 turbo and a five speed manual.[SIGPIC] ..I also have a 427 Cobra replica with an aluminum chassis. |
#20
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Sure, like he's going to tell ALL his secrets!
I remember when Parnelli Jones, or maybe it was A.J. Foyt, got caught for an over sized fuel tank. Before the final inspection they'd use a floor jack to collapse the tank and after the inspection they'd use compressed air to pop it back. That was in the days before fuel cells of course.
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“Whatever story you're telling, it will be more interesting if, at the end you add, "and then everything burst into flames.” ― Brian P. Cleary, You Oughta Know By Now |
#21
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[SIGPIC] Diesel loving autocrossing grandpa Architect. 08 Dodge 3/4 ton with Cummins & six speed; I have had about 35 benzes. I have a 39 Studebaker Coupe Express pickup in which I have had installed a 617 turbo and a five speed manual.[SIGPIC] ..I also have a 427 Cobra replica with an aluminum chassis. |
#22
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Its done this way for combustion efficiency/heat rate. Those pulverizers are x00HP electric motors so I'm guessing we get enough 'more' heat from the dust to justify running them. My old 1300MW coal plant needed 100MW just to run its pulverizers and emissions control systems. Are they dirty ? dirty as hell, and temperamental (you need to balance air flows, or there will be too much primary air, or too little - either way efficiency and emissions go off the charts...) and worst of all - those pulveriziers are where >50% of coal plant fires start - the pulverizer itself is fed rock-coal and 300*F primary air, if any dust leaks out, or concentration of sparks, the coal dust will ignite before it gets into the boiler. The only people I know that burn coal rocks are blacksmiths at the John C. Campbell Folk School
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2009 Kia Sedona 2009 Honda Odyssey EX-L 12006 Jetta Pumpe Duse (insert Mercedes here) Husband, Father, sometimes friend =) |
#23
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Isn't this how Lotus engineered racing cars? Also, how some airplanes do?
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#24
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In 1964 I was a junior in high school and working part time in a service station. A private detective with an office in the community had a Chrysler turbine car and would park it at the service station to be washed by me. I had the chance to drive the car for a few miles one day. An experience I will never forget.
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#25
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I forget, but they must’ve change the rules, because that car and ones like it were set to dominate.
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1986 300SDL, 362K 1984 300D, 138K Last edited by cmac2012; 07-25-2021 at 03:23 PM. |
#26
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The house I grew up in, built in the 1920's, had a coal bin on the back. At some point, an oil furnace was installed and concrete was poured on the coal bin's dirt floor to make it a storage room.
My grandparents' house had a tiny fireplace, maybe about 9" deep, for burning coal to heat the house. |
#27
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Not only in '67 but also in '68 the turbines dominated the Indianapolis track.
For the '69 year the governing body restricted the engines so drastically they were no longer competitive. The turbines were never considered for any other racing format due to their slow acceleration response.
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“Whatever story you're telling, it will be more interesting if, at the end you add, "and then everything burst into flames.” ― Brian P. Cleary, You Oughta Know By Now |
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