Bio Fuel Storage: Building A Gasometer

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  • čas přidán 9. 07. 2018
  • In this video I build a wood gas storage device that cleans and pressurizes the gas all in one! Thanks to my sponsor Squarespace you can make a great website easily! Check them out at: www.squarespace.com/nighthawk
    In case you missed it, here's my last video where I built the gassifier used in this video to make my gas: • Testing A Better Wood ...
    The wikipedia page on gas holders has some great visualizations and images of commercial gasometers: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_holder
    Thanks to all my Patrons for helping me make these videos! A special thanks to my top Patrons: Syniurge, Matthew Leitzke, TheBackyardScientist, Enzo Breda Lee, John Johnson, & Thibaud Peverelli! / nighthawkprojects
    So what is wood gas good for? A lot of you have asked that question. The main point of wood gas is to turn a renewable fuel like wood/plant matter into a form that is compatible to be burned by modern technology like cars, generators, stoves, etc.. Wood gas is a fuel that can be made by anyone with simple equipment, and can run a gasoline engine with only minor modifications. The process I use in this video to make it produces a very clean result, but is not the most efficient way to make large quantities of gas for immediate burning. I'll be demonstrating other methods of wood gas production in future videos.
    Thanks for watching!

Komentáře • 2K

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight  Před 6 lety +161

    If you missed my last video where I build the gassifier used for this project, you can watch it here: czcams.com/video/HQIW4dVVokE/video.html

    • @danielpiotrowski1681
      @danielpiotrowski1681 Před 6 lety +6

      Who would miss one of your videos?

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  Před 6 lety +8

      To bubble the water from the bottom to the top means that the gas needs to have enough pressure to force the water out of the tube. That's more pressure than my gassifier generates in this setup.

    • @unusualfabrication9937
      @unusualfabrication9937 Před 6 lety +4

      silicone rubber is a thermal set, so it is pretty heat resistant

    • @fatihduran2110
      @fatihduran2110 Před 6 lety

      I think a shower head hose might be able to survive the heat better.

    • @walkingdead171
      @walkingdead171 Před 6 lety +2

      You should make an airtight crockpot to heat the wood inside, leading to a canister to store the gas. Something I found online: Higher temperatures improve hydrogen yield in the gaseous product while CO yield decreases. Under nitrogen atmosphere, after 2 s at 950 °C, 76% (daf) of the mass of wood is recovered as gases: CO, CO2, H2, CH4, C2H2, C2H4 and H2O. Tests performed under steam partial pressure showed that hydrogen production is slightly enhanced.

  • @AussieChemist
    @AussieChemist Před 6 lety +404

    Instead worrying about what type of tube you use , you could use a condenser to cool the gas before it reaches the tube

    • @robertwjenkins6916
      @robertwjenkins6916 Před 4 lety +21

      I was thinking almost the same thing...just use a cooling system on the pipe and hose like the worm in a still

    • @Solnoric
      @Solnoric Před 3 lety +13

      And condense out tar that blocks it all up.

    • @kbee225
      @kbee225 Před 3 lety +25

      I'd say just run it though a water column. It'll cool the gas and also remove the impurities.

    • @stanwashighski3553
      @stanwashighski3553 Před 3 lety +16

      Absolutely correct! Coil condenser with a collection pot to capture contaminates at the bottom works very efficiently.
      I've used this method for years to convert acetone to diketene with great success.

    • @marshallscreekfarm3833
      @marshallscreekfarm3833 Před 3 lety +2

      Isn't the condensed liquid diesel? so a diesel collector in the middle will prevent condensation in the pipe and melting the pipe.

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Před 4 lety +5

    My goodness, you are really clever using the gas pipe. And using the epoxy to seal the bottom and the seam seal. Great job fella too.

  • @lord_kinbote3920
    @lord_kinbote3920 Před 5 lety +86

    I like how pretty much every by-product of this process is a useful material. The charcoal has lots of uses, the tar can be used to make wood rot-resistant, the wood gas is a decent fuel. There's really no waste.

    • @ChemEDan
      @ChemEDan Před rokem +24

      Charcoal ash can make soap, and the chemistry goes on forever

    • @MrRasZee
      @MrRasZee Před rokem +8

      and i can grow my own fuel . and it also grows naturally . just takes a bit of work thats all

    • @rubenskiii
      @rubenskiii Před 10 měsíci +18

      @@MrRasZeein medieval times people had dedicated parts of their forest for firewood, idk how it’s called in English but in Dutch it’s called “kreupelhout”. They had fast growing trees that they kept short and guided into growing many sidebranches, these could then be harvested yearly for firewood in the winter, and then next year the tree had made new branches that could he harvested. Saved people a lot of trouble, as they where usually close to the farmstead/village and no need to end the lives of trees just to get firewood.

    • @ianwise2457
      @ianwise2457 Před 10 měsíci +10

      ​@@rubenskiii sounds like what I'd call a wood coppice. That method of regularly harvesting wood can result in the roots and base of the tree living for centuries!

    • @rubenskiii
      @rubenskiii Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@ianwise2457 yes! That was the word i was looking for.

  • @jack1701e
    @jack1701e Před 4 lety +78

    We had three massive gasometers in my town, a few minutes walk away from where I live, they were a sort of landmark you could see for miles. I miss them oddly enough.

    • @sharmaskill
      @sharmaskill Před rokem +2

      Just one dude who’s way into gasometers

    • @fundelgurgel3913
      @fundelgurgel3913 Před 10 měsíci +3

      In my city in Germany they just got them a different purpose, they are now exhibition rooms for museums and a restaurant.

  • @Cazzputer
    @Cazzputer Před 6 lety +306

    The look of pride on your face was so genuine in the intro :D

  • @gabrielschoene5725
    @gabrielschoene5725 Před 6 lety +486

    I like how you keep people from clicking away on your sponsored outro with your adorable bird

    • @NeonLightedDreams
      @NeonLightedDreams Před 6 lety +8

      Gabriel Schoene in a possessive context, it's 'your'*.
      Also I agree, that adorable bird prevents me from clicking away!!!

    • @gabrielschoene5725
      @gabrielschoene5725 Před 6 lety

      Marcus Polus read again, I said your.
      You're right because you used your brain to realize your is the right word..
      How about that there their they're word eh?

    • @NeonLightedDreams
      @NeonLightedDreams Před 6 lety +3

      Gabriel Schoene I'm looking right at it, it says you're!
      Also, I was trying to be helpful, didn't think I could write it any nicer!!!

    • @georgevavouras
      @georgevavouras Před 6 lety +1

      Lol, he said both "your" and "you're" in the sentence.😂😂

    • @gabrielschoene5725
      @gabrielschoene5725 Před 6 lety +2

      Marcus Polus I didn't intend to sound rude.. but I see it now. Not of the first your, the second your in the comment is incorrect.. good catch!

  • @uknowngamer1017
    @uknowngamer1017 Před 5 lety +10

    His smile when he turned it on and it worked, priceless :)

  • @davidfuller764
    @davidfuller764 Před 2 lety +4

    Why oh why on earth would I watch any other CZcams! 2 years it took to find you.. a $20 wood gasified camp stove brung me here. Thanks

  • @jacobopstad5483
    @jacobopstad5483 Před 4 lety +50

    That's so cool that you read all of the comments! I love how meticulous you are in your projects and how you're always showing where things didn't go as expected so we can learn from that too.

  • @shaggnar2014
    @shaggnar2014 Před 6 lety +48

    I absolutely love how simple and effective this is. Anyone and make an over-complicated solution to a problem, but it takes real genius to make something simple and elegant

    • @brucecowles9265
      @brucecowles9265 Před rokem

      Genius?yes sir and I bet you he read Tesla's Colorado note's-

  • @jamesfarmer6648
    @jamesfarmer6648 Před 5 lety +2

    I don't know about anyone else, but this kind of stuff fascinates me. I can't wait to build one of my own. People like you need to be running this country. Take Care.

  • @dougalexander7204
    @dougalexander7204 Před rokem +5

    Beautiful build. Many years ago, I played at my cousin’s house that was close to a coke plant. It was alway fascinating watching the gas storage tanks rise and lower, and I always wondered what was going on. At 70 years old, now I know. Thank you.

  • @akashmukherjee2405
    @akashmukherjee2405 Před 6 lety +121

    7:05 the condensation is a mixture of wood alcohol (methanol), gasoline, tar and diesel. All of them are also valuable. You can set multiple filtration setups to collect them as well.

    • @sharpjk
      @sharpjk Před 6 lety +1

      how would you separate the four...also is the water in the gasometer tainted in anyway?

    • @Snix121
      @Snix121 Před 6 lety +16

      Fractional distillation

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard Před 5 lety +2

      Could actually be harvested with some water-cooling of the pipes, perhaps a spiral chamber with an outlet, then the gas passed on to the gasometer will also be purer but of course also denser, so perhaps you'd need a spring or something to lower the pressure in there, basically sucking the gas in.

    • @Hellsong89
      @Hellsong89 Před 5 lety +3

      Tube with in and out connection, cooled by water, so it condensates to pipe surface and collects on the bottom as a pool, witch can then be with regulated flow valve let empty to container.
      Separation would be using standard oil industry techniques of fractional distillation as it was mentioned, where start product is heated and released to chamber. Due lack of oxygen it wont burn, but turn into gas. Chamber has several different levels with different levels of heat. Gasoline or methanol is easiest to turn to gas and will float on top chamber, where as heavier oils that take more temperature to turn into gas will condensate on lower levels, where these can be collected to separate containers, filtered again and put on use.

    • @gazzarrr666
      @gazzarrr666 Před 5 lety +1

      I would consider 'cracking' the distillate while it's still a avpour by heating further over some kind of catalyst. That way you will get more gas from the liquid portion, so more yield of usable gas.

  • @SianaGearz
    @SianaGearz Před 6 lety +66

    Silicone tubing is good to have around. It's short term temperature resistant to well over 300°C, long term to about 200. It won't melt ever, and if it starts to discolour, it's degrading or basically slowly burning up.
    Vinyl has a fairly high melting temperature... i forget... but it's a very hard plastic, so tubing must contain plastifier, which potentially has little effect on melting temperature but gets glass transition temperature way down. Incidentally this is why it's becoming softer when it heats up. At the start of the video i guessed that it would survive and hey happy that it did.

  • @markfryer9880
    @markfryer9880 Před 5 lety +8

    I am enjoying this video series. My late Grandpa and his late brother converted their car to run on wood gas here in Melbourne Australia during WW II to get around the petrol rationing problem. Back in the late 70's I can recall a couple of gasometer tanks near Heidelberg being dismantled as the town gas supply system matured.

  • @kawalpine11
    @kawalpine11 Před 5 lety +8

    A suggestion. The condensate is called wood vinegar and has many agricultural applications. Thanks for the work you've done to explain this process so well!

  • @USWaterRockets
    @USWaterRockets Před 6 lety +132

    Get some PTFE tubing. It's the most temperature resistant material that's flexible. You need specific connectors for it, but it will work up to 500F.

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  Před 6 lety +16

      Great tip!

    • @flavioleo1055
      @flavioleo1055 Před 6 lety +6

      Or lab rubber tubing, a lot cheaper, from amazon or eBay is easy to find

    • @sparkyprojects
      @sparkyprojects Před 6 lety +21

      Silicone tubing would work
      You could put the inlet into the bottom tank, but you still need a small amount of flexibility
      A gasometer normally has 3 walls, the middle one being the top, the cavity is normally filled with oil iirc
      If you fill the main chamber with water initially, then when you get sufficient gas you could drain main chamber (bottom inlet would help with this), that would give you more room for gas, and lighter to carry

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před 6 lety +11

      PTFE is not THAT flexible and not THAT temperature resistant, it starts to slowly give up around 250°C. Silicone beats PTFE on both accounts.

    • @USWaterRockets
      @USWaterRockets Před 6 lety +3

      PTFE is perfectly flexible and suitable for the application shown in this video. It will hold significantly more pressure as a result of the increased stiffness, which could prove useful if weight is added to the gasometer to compress the wood gas. Additionally, the melting point of PTFE is 327 degrees C compared to the lower 300 degrees C of silicone rubber. Either one is better than the vinyl(?) tube in the video.

  • @trulyinfamous
    @trulyinfamous Před 6 lety +136

    You should try using the wood tar for something. Maybe make a 14th century ship with it. ;)

    • @gyrgrls
      @gyrgrls Před 5 lety +14

      It's creosote. A few decades ago, it was used to treat utility poles, railroad ties, etc. Here in the USA, general sales of creosote was banned by the EPA in 1986.

    • @bilbo_gamers6417
      @bilbo_gamers6417 Před 5 lety +8

      @@gyrgrls damned epa

    • @ThatOneFriendlyDude
      @ThatOneFriendlyDude Před 5 lety +8

      John Bond why was it banned? Just curious since I honestly don’t know anything about it.

    • @robertotarter7839
      @robertotarter7839 Před 5 lety +15

      @@ThatOneFriendlyDude It's extremely carcinogenic. It's roughly thethe same as cigarettes' tar, just more concentrated, it'll give you all sorts of nasty cancers. Also, every kind of heavy metal found in low amounts in the starting wood will be concentrated in it.

    • @operator8014
      @operator8014 Před 5 lety +5

      @@gyrgrls Nastiest splinters you will EVER have in your whole life.

  • @Kineth1
    @Kineth1 Před 3 lety +11

    I really liked this video!
    You can get around the flexible tube by having your inlet and outlet pipes enter the BOTTOM of the water chamber, and then rise through the water into the headspace of the floating chamber. Gas will come in the bottom, rise through the tube in the water (or you could have it bubble through the water, but your gas generator would have to be above the water line) then it would either float the upper chamber, or pass out through the outlet pipe (depending on gas demand).
    This is the first wood gassifier that i have seen with any type of accumulator, and I must say, it has given me a lot of ideas!

  • @ravelkoff3549
    @ravelkoff3549 Před 4 lety +5

    The smile in your face when lighting the torch - priceless :)

  • @passalapasa
    @passalapasa Před 6 lety +33

    im amazed on how dedicate you are, amazing job!
    you improved the desing a lot this time

  • @CreatorCade
    @CreatorCade Před 6 lety +16

    I love the wood gas content it's fascinating how something so simple could be used for just about anything.

  • @calysagora3615
    @calysagora3615 Před 5 lety +9

    Using that double walled pipe and end cap is brilliant!
    I was looking for a light weight solution, and this seems very suitable!

  • @tmarcus988
    @tmarcus988 Před 5 lety +12

    A really good system, producing two fuels: the gas and charcoal. Nice!

    • @professorfukyu744
      @professorfukyu744 Před rokem

      There's methanol being produced as well, hes just not collecting it.

  • @sgibbons77
    @sgibbons77 Před 6 lety +10

    I love how you are able to make simple, easy to reproduce designs in your projects. You are my favorite CZcams content provider!

  • @voidex136
    @voidex136 Před 6 lety +62

    His face so friendly, especially when he smile :P

  • @StaggeredLife
    @StaggeredLife Před 5 lety +4

    Your videos are my favorite to watch. I was inspired to make a storm glass using your methods and did so. I gave it as a gift to my dad using a nice glass jar that I found in a grocery store. Thank you for your for everything you do and i'm always excited to watch more of your content. Cheers from Seattle.

  • @pa7333
    @pa7333 Před 2 lety +2

    That was the best design and explanation I have seen about gasifiers and a gasometer. Very well done! Thank you!

  • @free_spirit1
    @free_spirit1 Před 6 lety +14

    I believe every single commercial should have the person explain the product while playing with a parrot in the foreground.

  • @GadgetPonyGal
    @GadgetPonyGal Před 6 lety +39

    It's really awesome seeing you doing so much experimenting with wood gas. Like I said last time, try using ordinary trash, like paper, cardboard, cereal boxes, old rags, etc. as production fuel at some point. It may be a bit harder to use with your current setup, but I think it would be worth it to see how much gas you could produce from it compared to regular wood.
    And on that subject, it might be interesting to see how much you get from fresh wood compared to dead and dry wood.
    Also, bringing your adorable bird in to give us incentive to watch the sponsor bit of your videos is really clever, and I don't regret watching it one bit. I'd love to see an off-topic video just about your bird at some point. It's super cute, and it looks like you take very good care of it. ♥

    • @alaric_
      @alaric_ Před 6 lety +4

      I think the amount of wood gas produced is equal in fresh or dry wood, if the wood is otherwise the same. The potential for gas produced is not ruled by freshness, it just means it has more water. At least that's what i have always thought. Before the wood will pyrolyze and gasses will exit the wood material, water has to dissipate from it and that takes time and energy so the process is just slower.
      That could actually be a test in itself; how much dryness affects before the wood gas starts to produce.

    • @brucecowles9265
      @brucecowles9265 Před rokem

      And vinegar

  • @austin503
    @austin503 Před 5 lety +1

    Why is it so satisfying to hear him pull apart the two cylinders at 1:49?

  • @Trebeany
    @Trebeany Před 4 lety

    Hi I'm Troy from Australia I'd like to say thank you im unable to work full time so I have little money I'm renovating my tiny home . every little bit helps . thanks you.

  • @motormaker
    @motormaker Před 6 lety +10

    If you run your gas line in the bottom it can bubble up through the water to help clean the wood gas. It would also leave the top of the moveable sleeve unobstructed. In the late 80s or early 90s I saw an article in Mother Earth News. A farmer was running a methane digester with manure. He was using a similar gas collection device only massive. It was so big it had a pulley and counter weight system to make the inner bell neutrality buoyant. I believe his outer tank was concrete. I seem to recall it was as big around as a silo. With a system like that you could change the counter weight as a way to adjust the gas pressure.

  • @dalsio
    @dalsio Před 6 lety +9

    Braided steel cables (the ones meant for hot water hookups) or PEX (polyethylene cross link) tubing can't handle combustion temperatures but they are at least more heat resistant than vinyl and should have common links with standard plumbing fittings.

  • @sandstorm6605
    @sandstorm6605 Před 3 lety +1

    I’m so happy I stumbled across this channel, DIY on topics right up my alley.

  • @JohnDoe-ib3hr
    @JohnDoe-ib3hr Před 11 měsíci +4

    I'm obsessed with this! I already make charcoal from willow on a small scale and it never occurred to me to catch the gas for later, could you possibly do a short video on a diy way to clean and condense the gas into methanol and maybe it's potential uses too? Thank you for all you do on this channel it's amazing to sit and watch through it all.

  • @lednekcrafting5598
    @lednekcrafting5598 Před 6 lety +253

    WOOD -GASS POTATO CANNON!!!!WOOD -GASS POTATO CANNON!!!!
    WOOD -GASS POTATO CANNON!!!!

    • @richardgerbes7509
      @richardgerbes7509 Před 6 lety +17

      LedNek Crafting my good sir, I think your suggestion is by far the best comment on here...... Thank you.

    • @lednekcrafting5598
      @lednekcrafting5598 Před 6 lety +5

      Richard G you are very most welcome

    • @CaptCorgi
      @CaptCorgi Před 6 lety +14

      Although I dislike all caps, I have to agree, "WOOD-GASS POTATO CANNON!!!!!"; Mighty fine Idea that one.

    • @trap9388
      @trap9388 Před 5 lety +2

      I was thinking that today when i first came across it, seems i wasn't the only one :p

    • @GOAT_GOATERSON
      @GOAT_GOATERSON Před 5 lety +2

      *GAS

  • @rockingupthewrongtre
    @rockingupthewrongtre Před 6 lety +10

    You could put in a dirt pocket or drip leg (used in the piping trades) to collect the tar as it goes through the tube, then you could just blow off the tar and condensate to keep that tube from getting clogged over time!

  • @beplantastisch5280
    @beplantastisch5280 Před 5 lety

    Great video! I'm currently conducting a research project on the potential of biomass energy around the world and stumbled on your video. How great to know anyone can learn how to make these things!

  • @darylldavis2846
    @darylldavis2846 Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much and an amazing video. We have started our engineering project on alternate fuels and have taken this as a guidance. Keep it up. And thanks a lot

  • @GREENPOWERSCIENCE
    @GREENPOWERSCIENCE Před 6 lety +62

    Fantastic work. You did a great job on this build and video!!

  • @TM4CHII
    @TM4CHII Před 6 lety +3

    He always has a little smile. It's so cute, really brightens my day.

  • @DidntKnowWhatToPut1
    @DidntKnowWhatToPut1 Před 5 lety +1

    Around northern towns in the UK you will often still find huge gasometers. They are all unused now but the structures are still around.

  • @ronaldcheatham7242
    @ronaldcheatham7242 Před 2 lety +1

    Nicely done.
    Thank you.
    Very informative.

  • @ratgreen
    @ratgreen Před 6 lety +20

    Now you need to make it fuelled by a solar concentration lens so that you dont have to waste the wood to heat the fire, it can all go into making gas. Then you need to compress it and store it and run an engine on it.

    • @TheAnantaSesa
      @TheAnantaSesa Před 4 lety

      Or connect it to a furnace that is already going to be producing pyrolysis capable heat.

  • @Grim-R34p3r
    @Grim-R34p3r Před 6 lety +16

    THIS IS QUALITY CONTENT...... Marvelous work.. bro .... And very educative...

  • @felmlee1876
    @felmlee1876 Před 4 lety

    I live in the San Luis Valley of Colorado where many of the shallow artesian (free flowing) domestic wells also produce a quantity of methane. I know a fellow who made a giant gassifier. He took a 1000 gallon stock tank and plumbed the output of his well into the center bottom of that tank. He then inverted a slightly smaller stock tank into the 1000 gallon tank. A valve was brazed in the center top of the inverted tank. Stock tanks of this size are heavy, but once the inverted tank had lifted several inches, he had enough pressure to do all of his cooking and heated a small room. The artesian overflow watered his livestock and his domestic water had slightly higher pressure and tasted better. He says he learned this from oldtimers in the neighborhood.

  • @scottscontracting
    @scottscontracting Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the heads up on the wood gas storage.

  • @telephotorocket
    @telephotorocket Před 6 lety +5

    As always it is great to see your progress and learning about this process, but best of all is your beautiful black headed caique, they are my favorite bird to ever have had as a part of my life.

  • @MRPLAYDOH100
    @MRPLAYDOH100 Před 6 lety +3

    I loved how proud you looked when it worked.

  • @petetrembath2537
    @petetrembath2537 Před 5 měsíci

    That was by far the easiest cleanest woodgas filter I've seen

  • @markuswade2158
    @markuswade2158 Před 5 měsíci

    The smile, when you lit the gas, is contagious. Ty 🙂

  • @TheCommentAcc
    @TheCommentAcc Před 6 lety +8

    I work with systems that measure exhaust gases from combustion engines. Those gases are hot and need to be kept at temperature to avoid condensation. To keep the gases heated we use so called flexible heated lines which use PTFE or PFA tubing inside, PFA being more chemically resistant (as far as I know). As you don't need to keep the gas heated, the tubing itself should be sufficient. It's not as flexible as vinyl tubing, but I'm confident you can figure something out.

    • @SundownMarkTwo
      @SundownMarkTwo Před 6 lety

      NightCaiqueInLight
      Bingo, new subchannel name for bird antics.

  • @Evoleaper
    @Evoleaper Před 6 lety +3

    You're still My favorite DIY/Science Channel. Keep up the good work.

  • @erikrowell1215
    @erikrowell1215 Před 2 lety +4

    the build is really informative. i have some ideas for improvements though like i didnt see a pipe leading into the water i dont think your filtering the gas all that much without it going into the water first. if you do put the pipe on it and you want the cleanest gas you can get i would recommend a diffuser of some kind at the end of the pipe which will increase the surface area of gas touching the water. i was looking for a way to contain some gases i intended to make soon i love this idea thank you so much for posting it i love your content.

  • @dagthewog6290
    @dagthewog6290 Před 5 lety

    You look so happy. I'm happy for you. Great video.

  • @LoneWolfsVoice
    @LoneWolfsVoice Před 6 lety +31

    I know this was part of my suggestion on the last video and apologize for the repeat. If you add a copper coil and an intermediate collection can right after the coil but before the tubing you will cool the gas significantly before it hits your tubing thus increasing its life span and you get the added benefit of collecting the condensate before it hits the storage container. Similar to how alcohol is condensed in a still.

    • @IonutJaR
      @IonutJaR Před 5 lety +2

      cooper and brass can be considered as catalyst as well and purify the gas

    • @johnjulie6657
      @johnjulie6657 Před 4 lety +3

      But the tar by-product would condense and cool within the condenser coils, whereby clogging the system and eventually causing a back pressure into the gasifier can... please tell if I have this wrong?

    • @MrNeboff
      @MrNeboff Před 3 lety +1

      @@johnjulie6657 yes you are right , i had the same problem with ,mine . the solution was a cyclone filter and wood chips and shavings.

    • @dimesonhiseyes9134
      @dimesonhiseyes9134 Před 3 lety +3

      @@johnjulie6657 a very low tech way of fixing that is putting a longer outlet pipe from the furnace. And taking a cue from natural gas piping place a T fitting with a pipe going down. Place a cap or preferably a valve at the end. Anything heavier than the gas will sink into the down pipe. Every now and then crack open the valve to empty it out.

  • @kbee225
    @kbee225 Před 3 lety +1

    It'd love to visit this guy one day. It's be amazing to see all the stuff he'd built and have a stimulating conversation.

  • @Denver_Risley
    @Denver_Risley Před 5 lety

    Wow, that burns cleaner than I expected. That system is worth refining and scaling up.

  • @TrollFaceTheMan
    @TrollFaceTheMan Před 6 lety +34

    5:18, the tube I would suggest using would be 100% Silicon. It should be rated for at least 450 F vs Vinyl Tube's 150-175ish F. It's also non porous so in theory it should be easier to clean all the soot buildup off of too. Oh and it's very flexible.

    • @rileymcdowell2889
      @rileymcdowell2889 Před 6 lety

      TrollFaceTheMan could he also use some metal braided lines? He could probably get some at an auto parts store

    • @TrollFaceTheMan
      @TrollFaceTheMan Před 6 lety

      Riley McDowell, good question there are two big factors I would consider with that. The first being because they are opaque it would be much harder to tell what is going on inside them so visual assessment of gas production would be impossible for the tubing.
      The other concern I'd have is though many are made to be rust resistant would the heat or even the byproducts like soot, methanol or things like potassium/sodium/calcium carbonate that accumulate over time in the tube affect that?

    • @IaCthulhuFthagn
      @IaCthulhuFthagn Před 6 lety +1

      Polymer tubing for laboratory glassware use, Tygon for instance, might be pretty good contenders as well, if a little more expensive, assuming one can strike a good balance between flexibility and resistance to heat and chemical attack.

  • @3karus
    @3karus Před 6 lety +9

    If you want fixed metal pipes you could just install a thin U shaped metal tube that goes down trough the water and up above it. It's essentially filling the tank from the inside, not trough a valve.

    • @rfldss89
      @rfldss89 Před 6 lety

      I'm not sure how well that would work, since the pressure from the wood gas production would have to push the water out of the U shaped tube.

    • @Electroblud
      @Electroblud Před 6 lety

      @Rafael Dos Santos
      That's what it is doing with the current setup too. So it should be fine. I'd go with the internal tube.

    • @3karus
      @3karus Před 6 lety

      Rafael has a valid point. A long Tube surrounded by water will pretty much act as a condensator and collect moisture from the wood, just like the PVC tubing, but worse.
      Attaching a small reservouir at the bottom would solve that problem easily and with no big effort.

  • @karlallspach5309
    @karlallspach5309 Před 3 lety

    What a great video. Loved the simplicity. Brilliant sir!

  • @somebody4217
    @somebody4217 Před 4 lety

    I'm very impressed. Bravo!

  • @Gagy
    @Gagy Před 6 lety +7

    I'm loving these wood gas videos! keep em coming!

  • @piranha031091
    @piranha031091 Před 6 lety +26

    Maybe you could add a three way connector with a collection vessel to recover the liquid that condenses out of the wood gas? It's going to be mostly water at first, but should also contain a variety of hydrocarbons and aromatic compounds (wood-tar creosote). These having low miscibility with water, they should separate and could in principle be easily recovered.
    Creosote is a cool substance, with some interesting uses, like treatment of wood.

    • @laharl2k
      @laharl2k Před 6 lety +2

      or also burn it if you atomize it like with kerosene or most oils.

    • @benjaminmiller3620
      @benjaminmiller3620 Před 6 lety +1

      Terpenes as well if gasifying pine wood.

    • @johnjulie6657
      @johnjulie6657 Před 4 lety

      A water trap.

    • @bobbaird8744
      @bobbaird8744 Před 2 lety +1

      The brown liquid can be fractionally distilled to recover the methanol in it.

  • @Blazingstar75
    @Blazingstar75 Před 5 lety

    what a gem of a channel, subscribbed!!!!

  • @austmass725
    @austmass725 Před 4 lety

    Very beautiful process
    Thanks

  • @JustinTopp
    @JustinTopp Před 6 lety +5

    Dear NightHawkInLight,
    I have come up with a few cool things you could make a video on using wood gas.
    1. Compress cleaned gas into a tank and use it in a grill or gas lantern.
    2. You could run a small generator off of it and/or see how big of a generator it can power.
    3. Make oil and purify it into gasoline/ diesel fuel.
    4. Run a propane fridge off of the gas
    5. It would be more work but a go kart running off wood gas would be cool. It could use compressed gas.

    • @ellenorbjornsdottir1166
      @ellenorbjornsdottir1166 Před 3 lety

      I don't think a propane fridge will work. Any stove will though with an appropriate jet.

  • @mslindqu
    @mslindqu Před 6 lety +5

    Really like this series and can't wait to see what you have planned for the wood gas.

  • @kjvacp
    @kjvacp Před 5 lety

    This is unreal! Love it

  • @albertventer9296
    @albertventer9296 Před 2 lety

    Stunning video, very informative and done with a great understanding. Well done !!

  • @vastyesaltydog
    @vastyesaltydog Před 6 lety +16

    Cool video man! You might try adding a scale in inches with a permanent marker down the side of the inner chamber to help gauge the amount of gas being produced or used. It’s great to see that people are still interested in this kind of tech.

  • @errolfoster1101
    @errolfoster1101 Před 6 lety +9

    Not sure if this has been mention but a small heat exchanger before the tubing would stop any danger of it melting the tube I have used similar distilling lavender oil just a tube the same as the top tube with a water jacket fitted around it you can either have a pump set up to move the water around or just make a water bath and just top up with cool water occasionally to keep it cool. This is also a great idea for storing hydrogen from a solar electrolysis unit as well. Thanks for some great ideas

  • @joelnobles1682
    @joelnobles1682 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for your time. I enjoyed your video.

  • @RobMacKendrick
    @RobMacKendrick Před 5 lety

    Genius! And all with hardware store materials. My kind of video.

  • @martandrmc
    @martandrmc Před 6 lety +3

    I really like your recent wood gas projects!

  • @pierreuntel1970
    @pierreuntel1970 Před 6 lety +5

    I think you can use a coil of copper pipe to cooling off the gas a little before it enter the plastic pipe? That way the gas will not too hot to melt the tube

  • @hugo511
    @hugo511 Před 5 lety

    Absolutely amazing work! Keep up the bio fuel videos, I love them!

  • @go-wycowboys5018
    @go-wycowboys5018 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks that was very well done and a good insight tutorial. I can see some cool off grid uses.

  • @NoviSavvy
    @NoviSavvy Před 6 lety +17

    It would be a great idea to compress all of collected and filtered gas with an old refrigerator compressor or a modified bike pump (I've seen people making pumps out of pvc pipe that are able to produce more than 100psi) into some pressurised container for later use. Your low pressure container is great for collecting gas before it could be compressed

    • @tedf2
      @tedf2 Před 3 lety

      Compression rates are not good. I had the same thought. I found that a propane tank would only get a car 2 miles on the road.

    • @MrNeboff
      @MrNeboff Před 3 lety

      @@tedf2 sad but true

    • @Solnoric
      @Solnoric Před 3 lety +1

      @@tedf2 either you used a little camp bottle, or your car gets 20 rods to the hogshead

    • @ellenorbjornsdottir1166
      @ellenorbjornsdottir1166 Před 3 lety

      @@tedf2 dude what a 20lb would take my truck (petrol only atm) 20 km

    • @tedf2
      @tedf2 Před 3 lety

      @@ellenorbjornsdottir1166 I'm not sure what you're asking. But form the various websites describing vehicles running of wood gas it seems that the production of the gas was produced on sight directly feeding the engine. Also, the efficiency was equivalent to gasoline efficient vehicles, including transportation of the wood fuel.
      p.s. I'm no expert on this subject, although I'm indentured by it. Having said that, I don't think this is an alternative as a replacement of the gasoline engine i.e. "The Green Deal." There's just not enough of the feed stock around, just like ethanol. There are some plants worldwide operating on this fuel because they have a feed stock of waste from the products they harvest. Also FEMA has designs for producing wood gas for generators. but it's not meant as a replacement of the electric grid, rather it's to compliment it during emergencies when the grid is down.

  • @EnjoyerofYoutube
    @EnjoyerofYoutube Před 6 lety +4

    awesome job as usual, ben!

  • @sNoBeAsTo1
    @sNoBeAsTo1 Před 3 lety

    Use bungie to compress it and put a hardline into bottom of your gasometer with a line running inside the inner tube to eliminate the need for a flexible line. Also put a box inline between stove and gasometer to collect tar. This is awesome. Thank you.

  • @flash001USA
    @flash001USA Před 5 lety

    The gas will self clean with or without water. I build gasifiers and I use a design that I came up with that I call a expansion tank that works on the same theory as air conditioning and Refrigeration where you have gas passing through a small tube into a large chamber where it cools down due to the expansion of the woodgas and while it's cooling down it's losing humidity in the gas along with other contaminants that will flow to the bottom of the expansion chamber. I also use a traditional method a passing it through filter media but I use a tri-filter setup to further capture water and humidity along with other contaminants in the gas. What you built works really well especially for a demonstration but it would be impractical for running an engine because you'll need a larger volume of steady wood gas for power production even for a home setup. You made a really good demo video. Thanks for the Post

  • @therandomchannelchilliepep7786

    Please make a flamethrower with wood gas

  • @miguelrios9078
    @miguelrios9078 Před 6 lety +3

    You make the coolest stuff

  • @abcstardust
    @abcstardust Před rokem

    Thank you for posting this informative video! Your system would be great for people living off the grid.

  • @misterfantastikscienz390

    Ciao dall' Italia ,ogni volta che guardo questo ,mi piace sempre di più

  • @roboactive
    @roboactive Před 6 lety +3

    This is so awesome!

  • @faoladh5177
    @faoladh5177 Před 6 lety +14

    Could you put a condener coil(similar to a reflux alchohol still) on the upright brass pipe, to lower the temp of the gas. Having it on the upright would also hopefully allow any tar to fall back into the gasifier, maybe.

  • @budsbustbi6339
    @budsbustbi6339 Před 4 lety

    i like how you alwas seem so happy when you do things!! its like you not sure if it will work that just happy as heck it did!!

  • @JIMN26
    @JIMN26 Před 5 měsíci

    Genius, I've been watching all your videos to get prepared for when the Grid goes down. Lol

  • @Freizeitflugsphaere
    @Freizeitflugsphaere Před 6 lety +12

    Great video! I love your style of making videos!
    I am working on something really similiar for my oxyhydrogen generator. However, I am also trying to store it under a slight pressure by placing a 10 kilogramm weight on top of the tube, so that more gas fit's inside.

    • @Nighthawkinlight
      @Nighthawkinlight  Před 6 lety +10

      Make sure that you separate the gasses and store them in separate containers. Storing oxyhydrogen together in a tank like this would be an explosion waiting to happen.

    • @vcokltfre
      @vcokltfre Před 6 lety +1

      There are a few videos on youtube where people explain how people died because of compressed oxyhydrogen being so volatile and exploding

    • @Freizeitflugsphaere
      @Freizeitflugsphaere Před 6 lety

      NightHawkInLight Of course I know that, and I already made a lots of experiences with oxyhydrogen in the past. Storing about 5 liters is really no problem, its not that huge explosion, compared to other explosives. Seperating the gases using gravity works a little bit and reduces the amount of oxygen in the mixture, however, there is still enough left for a slow combustion.
      So I am going to find another way of doing it🤔☺️

    • @James02876
      @James02876 Před 6 lety +2

      Freizeitflugsphäre it's pretty easy to separate the two gases if you're generating it through electrolysis. You use a wide basin of solution, and use separate catchment containers above the anode and cathode. You can even use two separate containers if you have a solution-filled tube connecting them. The hydrogen reservoir will need to be twice the volume of the oxygen one.

    • @Freizeitflugsphaere
      @Freizeitflugsphaere Před 6 lety +1

      James Petersen But thats efficient as hell

  • @NckGarage
    @NckGarage Před 6 lety +3

    Not sure on other tubing you could use but if you extended the metal pipe after the 90 degree bend it will move your current pipe further from the fire and also let some of the heat the metal conducts to dissipate as well. Maybe extend it close to a foot but I figure any distance will help the further the better. Also what about letting a damp rag lay on the pipe for even more cooling would also help i would think

  • @jeffrey5464
    @jeffrey5464 Před rokem

    Have to say, the bird kept me around for the square space ad!

  • @Boomhower89
    @Boomhower89 Před 2 lety

    Great demonstration

  • @Grizzly_Lab
    @Grizzly_Lab Před 6 lety +7

    Those experiments are awesome, and I can't wait to see what will happen in the future, indeed 😍
    About tubing, I know there are some kind of silicone pipes which are capable of dealing with some high temperature (up to around 300ish C, which is about 500ish F), so you should be able to find something (but I see also a lot of comments in that sense): but I live in Italy so I can't tell for sure where to find those things in USA (except something like ebay, amazon or similar)
    More than that, have you considered putting a longer piece of tubing (like 4-5mt/12-15ft) which a part is submerged in some cold water? This might help both with condensation and lowering the overall temperature of the outgoing gases.

  • @MrFmiller
    @MrFmiller Před 6 lety +5

    I love your collector.
    I'm wondering about the chemistry of the water over time as it becomes saturated with tars and other combustion byproducts. The viscosity must be increasing and at some point will need to be exchanged. After a number of runs check to see if there is stratification or settling of particulates. It might be evaporated to reduce the volume. The byproducts may also be environmently detrimental if not hazardous. Then again if in fact there is a substantial solid component when dried it might be combustible and used in subsequent cycles.

    • @MarkProffitt
      @MarkProffitt Před 3 lety

      It's combustible and it can be broken down ( cracked ) to make liquid fuels similar to diesel & gasoline.

  • @joetorres7052
    @joetorres7052 Před 5 lety

    Absolutely amazing!!

  • @rickey5353
    @rickey5353 Před rokem

    love the efficient water-seal below the gas.