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You August 25th 06 08:17 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
In article ,
"digitalmaster" wrote:

"Harbin Osteen" wrote in message
...
http://www.ecorider.us/

--

SeeYaa:) Harbin Osteen KG6URO

!sdohtem noitpyrcne devorppa-tnemnrevog troppus I
-




anybody know of a diesel power 4 wheel atv?



Yea, they call them "tractors" around these parts...

Jere Lull August 25th 06 08:50 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
In article ,
Dave wrote:

On Fri, 25 Aug 2006 14:19:24 GMT, "MMC" said:

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:


Gee, dya think the author of that article might have an agenda? Nah, just
pure scientific fact, right?


If he does, SOMEone will correct it. I've seen a few studies where
researchers have found Wiki to be at least as accurate and unbiased as
the best of the traditional sources, better than most. On the subjects I
know, I found it FAR better than Encarta.

--
Jere Lull
Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD)
Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html
Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/

Harbin Osteen August 26th 06 12:58 AM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
Yea Larry, if you are always tied to a dock in the US, you would not
need somthing
like this, and not being street legal would be revelant, but if you are a
long range
cruiser, say crusising Thailand, and your trawler battaries went to crap,
and you had
to pack new ones back to the boat, I would find this bike a lot more useful
than a
electric scooter, and you could jumper the new boat battires to your
scooter, and
it's still not going to make it back.
You may not have a use for this bike, but I posted this here because
some
might find the info useful.

--

SeeYaa:) Harbin Osteen KG6URO

!sdohtem noitpyrcne devorppa-tnemnrevog troppus I
-



"Larry" wrote in message
...
"Harbin Osteen" wrote in
:

It was
said that
it gets about 130 miles per gallon in one article that I read. It
would also be great
for some boaters that cruise to undevloped areas. You can fuel it from
your own
fuel tanks, and cruise from your ancorage to explore, or restock your
supplies that
you may have to lug for some distance. This has been a problem for
some who cruise the cannals in Europe, where some barges are large
enough to carry a car, some are not.



I wonder how may "miles-per-centrifugal-clutch" it gets on biodiesel?

I remember centrifugal clutches from many small vehicles. "Self-
consuming" comes to mind.

Note to boaters....it ISN'T street legal in the USA. Point moot.

Those concerned with the environment can reduce emissions to zero by NOT
buying one of these and STAYING HOME. How many are towed on a trailer by
some environazi behind their Ford Expedition?....(c;

Yeah, right....

My nuclear-powered scooter works great on the boats. Folds flat for easy
storage and recharging:
http://tinyurl.com/q7hj6

16 miles at 8mph. Also not street legal, but our cops treat it like a
geriatric electric vehicle so you can ride it on the scooter-friendly
sidewalks without harassment...(c; Recharges in about 3 hours from dead.



--
There's amazing intelligence in the Universe.
You can tell because none of them ever called Earth.




Larry August 26th 06 05:01 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
"Harbin Osteen" wrote in
:

Yea Larry, if you are always tied to a dock in the US, you would
not
need somthing
like this, and not being street legal would be revelant, but if you
are a long range
cruiser, say crusising Thailand, and your trawler battaries went to
crap, and you had
to pack new ones back to the boat, I would find this bike a lot more
useful than a
electric scooter, and you could jumper the new boat battires to your
scooter, and
it's still not going to make it back.
You may not have a use for this bike, but I posted this here
because
some
might find the info useful.



So, to answer my question, how many miles DOES it get to a centrifugal
clutch? How many dealers are there in Thailand to fix it while I'm crusing
around from bar to bar? Where do I get parts in the US, even, tractor
dealers??...(c;

Oh, by the way, are YOU involved selling this bike?......

--
There's amazing intelligence in the Universe.
You can tell because none of them ever called Earth.

Larry August 26th 06 05:07 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
You wrote in news:You-918FB8.11182225082006
@netnews.worldnet.att.net:

Yea, they call them "tractors" around these parts...



http://www.deere.com/servlet/ProdCat...620%20RW&tM=FR
Cool! Somehow I don't think, just like Harbin's product, we have a place
to STORE it on the boat.....Maybe we could tow a barge, though...(c;

--
There's amazing intelligence in the Universe.
You can tell because none of them ever called Earth.

Dale Eastman August 26th 06 05:26 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 


Larry wrote:

You wrote in news:You-918FB8.11182225082006
@netnews.worldnet.att.net:


Yea, they call them "tractors" around these parts...




http://www.deere.com/servlet/ProdCat...620%20RW&tM=FR
Cool! Somehow I don't think, just like Harbin's product, we have a place
to STORE it on the boat.....Maybe we could tow a barge, though...(c;


Them weigh upwards to 47,000 pounds. This might fit better:
http://www.deere.com/en_US/ProductCatalog/HO/servlet/com.deere.u90785.cce.productcatalog.view.servlets. ProdCatProduct?pNbr=1971W&tM=HO&link=enav


Larry August 26th 06 09:32 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
Dale Eastman wrote in news:TC_Hg.1792$bM.393
@newsread4.news.pas.earthlink.net:

Them weigh upwards to 47,000 pounds.


Hmm...I may have overestimated how much a 22' sloop can float...(c;

With all those tractor tires hanging over BOTH sides, however, we should be
able to plane her with the 500hp diesel in "road gear"....(c;



--
There's amazing intelligence in the Universe.
You can tell because none of them ever called Earth.

[email protected] August 26th 06 10:09 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 

steamer wrote:
In alt.energy.homepower MMC wrote:
Actually it's a grown up version of the Tote Goat or offroad mini bike.
Lot's of uses, and excuses to buy one for fun;)
http://users.infoconex.com/~ramrod/tgland.htm


--Neat site; thanks for the link! FWIW one of the great things about
the Tote Goat is the box-section frame, which provides a *lot* of real
estate for engine hacking. A friend of mine runs a steam power plant in his
as it's got room on board for Propane fuel, flash boiler and a honkin' big
water tank. Not sure what the range is, but it's decidedly low tech and has
a real third world flavor, heh.

--
"Steamboat Ed" Haas : Proud to be the
Hacking the Trailing Edge! : family crackpot!
www.nmpproducts.com
---Decks a-wash in a sea of words---


Biodiesel is just replacing one type of emission with another - and it
takes a lot of power to harvest/process the stuff. For these types of
purposes, there is an ancient form of power, called human power.
Imagine having a utility bicycle/tricycle on board with appropriate
gearing. ALthough maybe in certain situations probably a bit slower,
it is probably overall faster with no tuning, centrifugal clutches to
maintain, fueling, finding fuel - someone mentioned cruising in far off
places needing to go get batteries. Are you carrying a large tank of
biodiesel on your intercontinental cruises? I reckon a good utility
bicycle would be lighter, easier to stow on board, cleaner, cheaper,
less time consuming, and 98% as useful. Sounds like a good tradeoff to
me.


Eeyore August 26th 06 10:38 PM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 


wrote:

Biodiesel is just replacing one type of emission with another - and it
takes a lot of power to harvest/process the stuff. For these types of
purposes, there is an ancient form of power, called human power.
Imagine having a utility bicycle/tricycle on board with appropriate
gearing. ALthough maybe in certain situations probably a bit slower,
it is probably overall faster with no tuning, centrifugal clutches to
maintain, fueling, finding fuel - someone mentioned cruising in far off
places needing to go get batteries. Are you carrying a large tank of
biodiesel on your intercontinental cruises? I reckon a good utility
bicycle would be lighter, easier to stow on board, cleaner, cheaper,
less time consuming, and 98% as useful. Sounds like a good tradeoff to
me.


No it doesn't.

Graham



DSK August 27th 06 12:00 AM

Diesel powered bike, will run on biodiesel
 
wrote:
biodiesel on your intercontinental cruises? I reckon a good utility
bicycle would be lighter, easier to stow on board, cleaner, cheaper,
less time consuming, and 98% as useful. Sounds like a good tradeoff to
me.


Wrong

"Civilization" can be defined as seeking to avoid any form
of physical exertion, whatever, no matter how productive or
healthy.

DSK



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