I’ve never made this site a “link blog” but I had to share this one:
Top 15 unexpected uses for BioDiesel
Too bad it won’t cure baldness. 😉
goolsbee.org, serving useless content from an undisclosed location since 1997
I’ve never made this site a “link blog” but I had to share this one:
Top 15 unexpected uses for BioDiesel
Too bad it won’t cure baldness. 😉

That is yours truly, muscling a rather valuable bit of machinery around a road course at speed. One of those “once in a lifetime opportunities” that you don’t pass up. I don’t recall what my time was on this run, or any of them for that matter, but I do remember that it was a ton of fun throwing that old car around the track. On one of my runs I called the office and hoped to broadcast my lap on the NOC speakerphones, but was dumped into voicemail instead. Damian, the phone system operator at the time saved the file as an MP3. As you can tell, I was a tad too occupied with the task at hand and was not able to provide a Jeremy Clarkson-style commentary whilst tugging that big steering wheel back and forth through the course.
A fun exercise for my readers will be to ID all the cars pictured here… there is one oddball and it is NOT the RPM tow vehicle dominating the background.

Here are several more shots of that Mini from the other day. You Mini Aficionados can tell us exactly what it is. Once you guys have sorted it all out I will reveal the most amazing thing about this particular Mini.

This should be a fun one. Taken at the New England 1000 a few years back, as we lined up for the morning start.
I just found out that I could be participating in this event again this year as a co-driver.
Great words, written and spoken by a great man, who happened also to be a Republican.
It seems that our current Vice President, also a Republican, has forgotten those words, and their meaning. This stupid, endless war is destroying our economy. Most of the people were against it from the start (myself included), and history has shown that the reasons and justifications for entering it were lies and falsehoods… or if you want to be generous and forgiving, incorrect assumptions and wishful thinking.
“We will be greeted as liberators”
“There is no doubt that Saddam Hussein possesses weapons of mass destruction.”
“The war will finance itself through the sale of oil.”
Of course this is also the man who after having been voted in on the promise of “bringing dignity back to the executive branch” told a colleague on the Senate floor to “Go fuck yourself.”

In the last article in this series I covered washing BioDiesel. Now we move on to drying it.
After you wash BioDiesel it is (mostly) free of particulate impurities, but now it is contaminated with water. Tiny droplets of water remain in suspension in the BioDiesel. Water in your fuel is not a good thing. Removing it is easy, as oil and water naturally want to separate. You can just let it sit and nature will take its course. This is what I have been doing until recently. However sometimes you want to give nature a push. You can bring the BioDiesel into contact with as much air as possible. You can also heat it up. The best is to do both. This step is referred to as “drying”.
I generally let my washed BioDiesel sit for a week anyway, to let as much water fall out as possible. After that I run it through my Drying Tank. The Drying Tank is something I built recently and I’m REALLY happy with the quality of my fuel since I started drying it actively, rather than just letting it sit. In fact I have dried all the fuel I had sitting around for the past few months slowly settling.
When the BioDiesel has been washed, and has water in suspension it looks like orange juice. See the photo above for an example. That is washed BioDiesel viewed through a clear tube. Note how opaque it is.
To dry the BioDiesel, it goes in here:

This is my drying tank. It is basically an inverted barrel with standpipes in the bottom. It has been cut around the rim of the top (formerly the bottom) and had a larger, contoured barrel placed into the hole. This barrel has a set of perforations drilled into the very top, along with a hose from the pump run through a hole in the top, fitted with a wide-angle spray nozzle. The BioDiesel is pumped up to this nozzle and sprayed onto the interior surface of the top barrel. It flows down the sides and then falls into, and collects in the bottom barrel, where it drains through one of the standpipes into the pump again. By recirculating the BioDiesel into this cooling-tower-like structure it is exposed to a lot of air. (You will note a dirty old t-shirt at the top of the tank. I added this to keep the BioDiesel mist from leaving the tank and covering the barn with an oily residue. Air can still pass through it, but most of the mist is contained.)
Over time, the BioDiesel clears up as the water is forced out by the drying process. I suspect that most of the water evaporates out of the oil. I have noticed that it also separates out of the oil and pools at the bottom below the level of the standpipes. The oil clarifies and becomes very clean looking:
Note how clear it is!
Heat seems to speed the drying process up quite a bit. My drying tank has no heater so if it is cold, I can pre-heat the washed BioDiesel inside my reactor.
After it dries, the BioDiesel is pumped into my gravity-fed final settling/filtering tanks, which I’ll illustrate in a future post. Stay tuned for more.
As an ex-goaltender this is painful to watch. In Toskala’s defence these are very tough shots to stop, but I gotta say, he should have got in front of it and not tried to catch. Doctrine says, take it in the chest and then sweep it off to your D with the stick.
Oh well. I bet he never makes this mistake again!
Another view: