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I know that pig farms in some parts of the world use huge, industrial bio-gas generators to turn pig poo into electricity to help run equipment on the farm. Scale this down to an urban home level and run it off septic tanks.
Probably won't generate much, but if your home already has the infrastructure
- a septic tank - the generator may pay for itself.
Build Your Own Biogas Generator
http://www.re-energ...iomassbuild-1.shtml [phoenix, Oct 21 2004]
U.S. Department of Energy Biopower page
http://www.eere.ene.../biopower/main.html [phoenix, Oct 21 2004]
[link]
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Sorry, couldn't resist. I do think that the smell might be a problem. The gas that is burned is really odorless, it is the other byproducts that create the smell. Also, I'd assume there would be some health regulations that would prevent having the bacterialogical process that normally goes on under the ground being moved somewhere you could tap the gas off of it. |
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Bun for you as I think these don't prevent the idea, but make it a bit harder. |
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Actually, the gas is "bled off" via the "candy cane" where the leach(sp?) field is (IIRC) located. At least what gets out of the tank. None of the "process" needs to be relocated or exposed (I would think). Once perfected, I would want to see a portable unit which I could attach to the backend of my dog and, at least, get some benefit from the gas which escapes *that*. |
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I wonder if septic tanks, landfills and other producers of biogas might be seeded with a bacterial culture optimized for biogas production. It seems to me that as these things usually are set up, they count on good luck to get the right microbes to do the job. Sort of like the Belgians opening the windows and hoping the right yeast blows in to inoculate the beer. Although actually I gather that works well for them. |
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Not an invention, it's a [let's-all]
scale down and use an existing
technology. Even at home scale,
it's not new. |
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