![]() |
![]() |
|
Home | Forums | Gallery | Webcams | Blogs | YouTube Channel | Classifieds | Calendar | Register | FAQ | Donate | Members List | Today's Posts | Search |
![]() |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
![]() |
#1 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: North of the South pole but south of North pole
Posts: 15
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
![]()
"The California Air Resources Board has reported that a two-hour ride on a 100-horsepower jet ski emits the same amount of pollution as driving 139,000 miles in a 1998 passenger car! The City's recently amended MND states "... the proposed 2,576 hours of jet ski operations would equate to a total of 36,800,000 vehicle miles over eight days (54% of a single day's existing miles [this is for the whole County by the way]). The percent increase during the eight days of racing seems substantial in relation to the daily baseline condition but, due to the temporary nature of the event, the increase is not significant over a longer term." Duh. Any effect is insignificant if averaged over a long enough term. That sentence actually makes me want to scream. Can anyone offer any outrage advice?"
I was reading this article and thought of this forum, do any of us Massholes care about the NH enviroment, its not like we deal with it during business hours. ![]() ![]()
__________________
"I hate women because they can always find the remote, car keys, the dog, etc." ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#2 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
Is this a 1998 article or something more recent (a URL would help). Back in '98 CARB decided the EPA wasn't being strict enough re: PWC and 2 strokes in general. The numbers you mention above were cited back then. It might be interesting to see, now that the hype has died, how much was truth and how much was hype from both sides on the issue.
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]()
The article is at least as old as this one from 1999.
http://www.sddt.com/Commentary/artic...ode=19990702tz If you've ever resided in California (as I have) you'll know that water and air quality are no laughing matter. The effect on Winnipesaukee's environment of fossil fuels, oils, lubricants, deck-, and dock-coatings, and other petroleum-derived products can be seen and sensed.
__________________
Is it ![]() ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 519
Thanks: 111
Thanked 259 Times in 107 Posts
|
![]()
[QUOTE]do any of us Massholes [\QUOTE]
[Vent on] Why do you have to use names like that. Are you trying to excite those of us who just happen to live south of the NH border? And yes, from your post it seems as though you live there also. So use the name for yourself and keep me and the others out of the group. [Vent off] ToW |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Pitman , NJ
Posts: 627
Thanks: 40
Thanked 21 Times in 12 Posts
|
![]()
Seems as though two cycle sleds could be just as bad as skis. Be glad for spring and fall...you get a break from both
![]()
__________________
Paddle faster , I think I here banjos |
![]() |
![]() |
Sponsored Links |
|
![]() |
#6 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
![]()
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]()
What about boat motors? No catalytic convertor = high HC and NOx emmissions compared to a car........
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#8 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Pitman , NJ
Posts: 627
Thanks: 40
Thanked 21 Times in 12 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
Only of not properly tuned. A properly tune engine will run its best , run its most economically , and run its cleanest. Fuel injection is an improvement over carburation since it analyzes and adjusts itself constantly while running. This goes for both 2 and 4 cycle FI
__________________
Paddle faster , I think I here banjos |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#9 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]()
Actually Cal thats not quite true, yes maintaining the engine a tuned condition does keep emissions down but not to the level of a newer car with a catalytic convertor. Boats could be much better, and as always the bigger the boat and engine, the more pollution. See the link and table below:
http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache...emission&hl=en From the site: Table D-4 Engine Emissions, New Engines ------------------------------HC (g/kW-hr) --------NOx (g/kW-hr) Carbureted ---------------------- 7.8-------------------6.2 Electronically fuel-injected---------4.7 ------------------9.9 Three-way Catalyst, Feedback A/F -1.9 ----------------- 2.0 Fuel injection decreases hydrocarbons but actually increases NOx emissions (smog) without a catalytic converter. From another site (in Australia no less) written in 2000 http://www.bia.org.au/Press/151100.html "Industry Claims Pollution Figures on Jet Skis "Ludicrous" The Boating Industry Association of NSW has come out fighting against claims that jet skis and personal watercraft cause as much pollution as driving the average automobile 223,000 kilometres - or Sydney to Perth and back 27 times! Roy Privett, General Manager of the Association, labelled the claims as "ridiculous" and "bordering on ludicrous". "I've read some nonsense in my time", Privett said, "but this takes the cake". The claims that personal watercraft and the similar Jet Ski are "pollution machines" came from the Federal Government's Coastcare organization. A spokesman for the NSW Environmental Protection Association also weighed in with a share of nonsense, claiming, "Jet Skis, along with outboard engines, are responsible for 10 percent of Sydney's air pollution on summer weekends". "No accurate figures suggest such a situation exists", Privett added, "and to suggest that personal watercraft are "remarkably inefficient", as one report claimed, is errant nonsense, as today's two stroke engines with their direct fuel injection systems have reduced submissions substantially". "In fact, today's two-stroke engines conform to EPA standards through to 2002, and in some cases beyond", he added. According to Heytrack Australia, distributor of the popular Sea Doo range of personal watercraft, the statistics unveiled by Coastcare cited data from tests done on old technology personal watercraft of eight and ten years ago" .. From the same article: Surprisingly, well-known environmentalist and NSW EPA officer, John Dengate, said the authority was "more concerned with pollution form wood fires, diesel engines, and vehicles than it was with boats". So these people criticizing the PWCs are comparing 15 year old technology to newer car technology ignoring the improvements made over the last 5 years. For me this blows their argument right out of the water, so to speak. Just like the people who claimed to have scientific proof that snowmobiles scare bambi, they think with emotion rather than using their brain trying to find the real story. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#10 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#11 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Mass.
Posts: 63
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
![]()
Itd you are actually incorrect about what you have stated. Bigger Boats and bigger motors do not always mean more pollution.
I ask you to look towards a new motor out on the market today, The evinrude ETEC. The etec is a two stroke direct injection outboard, from 100-275 horsepower. Its CO parts per million content is lower than many 4 strokes off considerable size and even less. So ya see with these bigger boat doesnt always come more polllution. It just happens to be the motor. Also you have skipped over the fact that Volvo Marine, is in the process of creating a catalytic converter for marine engines and mercruiser is in the process of testing their 496 MAG HO with a catalytic converter system. Boating industry reports show that these motors with cats in them will actually pollute less than most 4 banger out boards on the lake these days. Also in retrospect to the 2 stroke vs big boat idea, A two stroke motor usually is the highest polluter since 2 stroke motors do not usually burn all their fuel, sometimes only half and the other is put out as exhaust. As for diesel, well with the diesel yes you are promoting more PPM per a burn, however you are burning less since the diesel is much more economical and smarter to run, which not many people gather since all they see is the black smoke which is just the abscence of air in a turbocharged diesel, or blow by which happens to be just an afterproduct of diesel burn. However Common rail diesel injection is working to fix this. My point being that lets not turn this into another "MAN WITH BIG BOAT MAKE BIG POLLUTION" thread. As for the Masshole comment, its been around forever. NH people on a majority usually complain about mass people, they call us "Yuppies" cause we flock to our vacation homes in their areas. Hasn't anyone seen what about bob and how much the nh family hates the doctor for buying that house? Its still the same in most parts. Now while i'm from mass, I look at it this way towards NH people, you can hate me all you want, but when me and my friends leave your lakes and stop boating in our stupid , big, smelly, gas guzzling boats and stop buying gas at your docks, You will have nothing..... Will |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#12 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 5,075
Thanks: 215
Thanked 903 Times in 509 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
__________________
SIKSUKR |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#13 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
__________________
Is it ![]() ![]() |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#14 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 74
Thanks: 4
Thanked 12 Times in 4 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#15 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Mass.
Posts: 63
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
![]()
Isnt it funny how much the real truth hurts? Also as far as keeping my thoughts to myself on a public board, isnt that what this place is all about? Look at the facts everyone, no big smelly boats and you have no economy in the lakes region. HOW MANY PEOPLE in the lakes region have a job that depends on boating? Just look at all the marinas in the area, each of those marinas employs at a minimum, about 10 people. now multiply that by the ten marinas just on the south side of the lake, all of a sudden 100 people have no jobs......interesting isnt it? I mean come on everyone, this is plain and simple economics, loose the customer or the "demand" and you have no income, plain and simple.
Will |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#16 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]()
Will,
I sense a little anger. This thread was on its way to becoming PWCs are the source of all the worlds pollution problems, I just simply pointed out that TODAY'S production boats are not as clean as everyone thinks they are. While there are always exceptions to the rule, a 3 liter EFI four stroke boat motor is going to produce less pollution than an 8.1 liter EFI four stroke boat motor when run the same distance. Notice the chart I posted listed the pollutants as grams per kilowatt hr. This could easily be converted to grams per horsepower hour (sorry about mixing measurement systems). The point is that generally the more horsepower, the more pollution is produced for a particular engine type. Diesel engines are the king of pollution producers as far as I'm concerned, considering HC, NOx, and CO. New injection schemes are an improvement but there is still a long way to go and changes are coming. One of the things that makes diesel more effecient also causes more pollution (high compression). I suspect that one of the technical challenges with catalytic converters is the extreme heat they generate and high temperatures they run at. Not a problem hanging below your car, but an issue in a closed engine compartment. I think catalytic convertors in boats are long overdue, in both gas and diesel applications. Finally I don't agree with your comments on "NH people" except for a small, usually vocal minority, most of "NH people" are neighborly, nice people who have no problem with there MA and other area neighbors. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#17 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 74
Thanks: 4
Thanked 12 Times in 4 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#18 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 5,075
Thanks: 215
Thanked 903 Times in 509 Posts
|
![]()
Ok,Ok,I'll butt out of this one.Just didn't think those were very nice comments that's all. SS
__________________
SIKSUKR |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#19 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Gilford, NH
Posts: 338
Thanks: 0
Thanked 1 Time in 1 Post
|
![]() Quote:
__________________
I fought the Law, and the Law won |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#20 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
The site to which you refer has been "alternatively-described" below, but you know the drill: http//www.theusualGFBL.often-obscene.site.com/forums/showthread.php?t=99009. . Quote:
The technology is already here. Toyota makes a car that has sold over 100,000 cars in the US, gets 60+MPG, and reduces carcinogens by 95%! (See Wired.com) Honda makes a 255HP V-6 low-emission car that gets 30+MPG -- average overall. But the technology to make excess power and excess noise on Winnipesaukee requires an over-rich mixture. (For stoichiometrics, to meet programmed chip performance parameters, cooling and other reasons). Also, the use of aviation fuel, the supplemental addition of lead to the gasoline -- and even oil products from endangered whales! Over-rich mixtures are over-rich in PAHs, particulates, hydrocarbons, NOX, CO2, CO... (ITD has already covered this here -- and he's absolutely right). Especially bad for asthmatics, but shouldn't be inhaled in any case -- by anybody. The "better mousetrap" is already here. But it is ignored -- for Thrills. Here's Lake Winnipesaukee eight inches below summer's low lake level. Explain it: Last edited by ApS; 04-14-2005 at 09:17 AM. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#21 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
OK folks this is a long and somewhat technical one so you're forewarned ![]() The technology may be here for auto's but for boats it's a different question giving you a different answer. First let me presume you're talking about hybrids, in particular the Prius (which, though good, doesn't really get 60 mpg). To understand how a hybrid achieves it's better efficiency you need to understand (a little) of how they work and how the electric motor (EM) and internal combustion engine (ICE) trade on each other's strengths and weaknesses. Hybrid cars use both EMs and ICEs, varying their contribution to motion depending on the task at hand. ICEs work best at, or near, wide open throttle and when the load is constant. EMs work well at low rpm tasks and wouldn't be a bad choice overall if, and it's THE BIG IF, their "fuel" (electricity) could be stored efficiently (wrt to size, weight, capacity). So a hybrid combines the 2 sources and uses each where and when it makes sense. The article below does a better job of explaining hybrids than I can do here so read this http://auto.howstuffworks.com/hybrid-car.htm and I'll summarize the main ways hybrids cars save and why these don't work so well for boats (except for 1 already existing case !). Hybrid cars can be more efficient (only under the right conditions though !) because they use the ICE in it's most efficient mode (constant load, at or near WOT) and shut it down otherwise. The EM can also be used as a generator to recover energy during stopping that otherwise would be thrown away as heat. Thus in stop and go (city) traffic the EM fills in for the ICEs weaknesses and the ICE only runs (and then near WOT) to recharge the batteries when they get low. The only other advantage a hybrid has come from our normal usage of a car. Cruising along, even at highway speed, only requires a small amount of HP (a small fraction of the ICEs potential in your car), perhaps 15 - 20 HP. The reason your ICE has more HP is to provide acceptable acceleration. A hybrid can use the EM as an "electric supercharger" to aid a smaller, more efficiently used, ICE to achieve acceptable acceleration. This is Honda's IMA approach (really more like a quasi-hybrid). So could you make a hybrid boat and realize the same benefits. In a word, no. The difficulty come in 2 main areas. First we tend to use boats (less so PWCs) in an already "ICE efficient" manner. Generally you're up on plane and running at constant throttle so the advantages a hybrid has in stop'n'go traffic don't apply as much in boating. There just isn't as much stop and go such that shutting off the ICE and/or regenerative braking make a practical difference. Second a boat has to push a much thicker fluid (water vs air) than does a car. It's using more of it's ICE's power potential just cruising along than does a car. You could make a IMA type hybrid boat with a slighly smaller ICE that would run at WOT (more efficient) for cruising at the same speed you presently do (the EMs role would be to get you on plane in a reasonable time) but the difference would not be as big as in a car and you'd be limited to a slower top speed (also true in a hybrid car). Remember that a hybrid has the penalty of added weight (due to EM and batteries) which reduces efficiency. The only time hybrids "win" is when they reduce inefficiency more than they lose in a weight penalty. I'd suggest you'd get a bigger boost in mileage (reduce GPH) by using variable displacement ICEs (ala Chryslers 300C Hemi, and others) than using a Honda-like IMA approach in a boat. I'd bet $$ this will happen as the technology filters down from auto to boat. Turbocharging a smaller boat engine would be another semi-good alternative though I'm less sure given today's optimized ICEs. Other things to read re: hybrids and other fuel saving approaches are listed below; http://auto.howstuffworks.com/question262.htm http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-cell4.htm (Note how similar the effciencies are) Personally I've always like the hybrid concept, it has good geek appeal to me being the enginerd I am (though only R. Goldberg would prefer the added complexity). I was amused by the stupidity of California's CARB reg's that (used to) all but barred hybrids in a forlorn quest for a totally electric car. They've now "seen the light" and changed. I've often considered using a really efficient engine, such as a Stirling cycle, in a Stirling-electric hybrid. Big size negated use in cars but I thought, "Hmmm, maybe in a boat ...?" Alas "Andrew" in the following forum posts (scroll 60% down) has made me rethink that whole concept. Thus we're left with trying to improve hull form/efficiency, more so than powerplant efficiency, to make any real difference. Hence my prior noted interest in hydrofoils, and to a lesser extent, hovercraft. http://ideas.4brad.com/archives/000094.html ps - Oh yeah, the one place where hybrids are used in boats. Look at that bassboat trolling along some morning. It's using an electric motor. It's an electric-ICE hybrid boat ! In a car such a coupling between the 2 propulsion systems would be called "hybrid through the road". In a boat I guess we'd call it hybrid coupling through the water ![]() pps - For homework, figure out why hybrids aren't used in race cars. ![]() APS - Two things to ponder .... 1) If the "better mousetrap" was being ignored just for thrills (by the GFBL group I infer) wouldn't we have seen hybrid boats for the rest of us by now ? Since we don't, I think there's more involved than "just thrills". Cost and some of the reasons above perhaps ? 2) As to your black ring being some residue of gasoline usage, why don't you follow up and have it analyzed and prove it. Until then it's just another speculation, like alien visitation, rather than fact, like Apollo moon landings. Who knows you may even be right this time ![]()
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH Last edited by Mee-n-Mac; 04-07-2005 at 07:08 PM. Reason: clarify boost mileage, reduce GPH |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#22 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Littleton, NH
Posts: 382
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
__________________
"Boaters love boats . . . Kayakers love water."
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#23 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
I think the black ring is organic in nature, mold or mildew or something like that........ Nice explaination of hybrid. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#24 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 340
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
![]()
Mee-n-Mac, I seem to recall maybe 2 years ago Motorboating had a feature article in their engine/power section about experimenting with a hybrid for a boat. I recall that it was a somewhat large fishing boat like a Viking, Cabo, not sure. The fuel tank was reduced in size by 50% but did not lose any range & it only lost 2-3 mph hour. Thats all I can remember.
I wish now I kept the article. I tried a search on their website but did not have any success. Do you know anything about this? You seem very well informed about the subject. Maybe someone else remembers or still has the issue, I do not save them. On another note, more in line with what APS was saying. It seems that there is alternative technology that could be refined & developed but is not. Maybe because its not in big oil companies & oil producing countries interest. One example is hydrogen fuel cell technology. I know other technologies have their own problems but to just ignore it & wait for oil to run out(it will happen eventually) seems irresponsible. If something doesn't change in the near future we'll be walking to work or riding horses again. Last edited by PROPELLER; 04-07-2005 at 02:36 PM. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#25 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 7
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
|
![]()
Acres Per Second,
How about including acid rain in your theories on polution at Lake Winnie? Winnie is down wind (read: East) from some of the largest cities in the eastern US and Canada. Detroit, Buffalo, TORONTO, and even Montreal. Detroit and Toronto are THE two largest auto manufaturing cities in North America. All the polution these industrial cities put into the air eventually fall as rain... and unfortuanatly the lakes, rivers, and streams of the American northeast are where this normally happens. We are experiencing the same issues with lakes in the Upper Penninsula of Michigan. Polution from the Twin Cities and Duluth are tainting the lakes there. Fish are dying, water clarity is down, and rings just as you provided a photograph of are present (though much of what you show is probably due more to vegitation such as leaves decomposing on the lake bottom). Also, as Audiofn has already said, performance boats tend to run on the lean side for more power. I've actually blown up a motor looking for that last couple of hp running it a little too lean. I know many other GRBL boaters who have done the same thing....So I guess that blows your performance boat running rich theory right out of the water (pun intended). If you want to point a finger at some kind of motor contributing to the polution more than any other, try all the 2 stroke outboards and PWC's running around Winnie. I'll bet they outnumber the performance boats 50-1 (or more!). You want to talk running rich?? Oily?? Start there and leave the small % of performance boats out of it. There are many lakes here in Michigan that do not allow 2 strokes anymore.... maybe someone should start that crusade at Winnie????? Wizard of Oz |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#26 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
![]() In regard to fuel cells and hydrogen, they another interesting technology though not quite ready for prime time yet. Two big things and a raft of other, probably solvable, issues are stumbling blocks. First you have to store the hydrogen and this is not so easy to do (when compared to gasoline). I like the idea of metallic hydride storage (ala Ovonic's approach) but the weight of the new "gas tank" is an issue for cars, perhaps less so for boats. Perhaps someday we'll see the fabled carbon nano-tube storage but I'm not holding my breath. Because boats are driven in a more "highway miles" type of usage the increase in efficiency is small (see link in above post) though not to be dismissed out of hand. ![]() Second, and for me this is the big one, you can't get hydrogen in a usable format from anywhere local to this planet. Sure it's plentiful in the universe but precious little can be found floating free here on Earth. You need to separate the H from H2O or get it from some other source, ie hydrocarbon fuels (oil, natural gas = methane, ??). This means hydrogen is NOT an energy source (like oil is) but rather a means of storing energy that comes from somewhere else. Depending on where you get this energy you may be doing good or bad things to the global ecology. City dwellers may like hydrogen powered cars (less pollution in town) but those people living near the power plants now working extra, extra OT to make the power to separate hydrogen aren't going to be too pleased ![]() ![]() http://www.issues.org/issues/20.3/romm.html For more on hydrogen storage try these http://www.bellona.no/en/energy/hydr...002/22903.html http://www.ovonic.com/PDFs/fuel_cell...04_toronto.pdf I'm not to worried about running out of oil in the near term. Someday perhaps but in the near term it'll just rise in price and as it does other sources, which at present are too expensive to tap, will become viable. Also as the price rises other alternatives, also presenty too costly, become viable and will be developed. Necessity is the mother of invention and she can be a cruel taskmaster.
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#27 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 1,677
Blog Entries: 1
Thanks: 354
Thanked 639 Times in 290 Posts
|
![]()
The question of priorities became so clear to me as I saw the news this week about the space shuttle being rolled out, and the associated talk about "now we can start our mission of putting people on Mars". It seemed so 20'th century. Without a new source of energy in 30 years, there is a significant chance that there will be a severe and lengthy depression of the economy and quality of life. This would be good for the lake ecology, but bad for the lakes region. The mission to Mars seems like mis-set priorities, and should only be considered after research on hydrogen fuel, fusion, solar and wind power have resolved our energy future. I can't wait for that fusion powered bass boat. Hopefully those afraid of speed won't have the limit set to 45 by then.
![]()
__________________
-lg |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#28 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Pitman , NJ
Posts: 627
Thanks: 40
Thanked 21 Times in 12 Posts
|
![]()
Agreed Lakegeezer , sometimes "charity should begin at home". Our goverment should worry about thinks at hand. I feel the higher cost of energy , particularly if it keeps rising , could set off a recession like we haven't seem in MANY years
![]()
__________________
Paddle faster , I think I here banjos |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#29 | |||||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
The GFBLs can't seem to get away from fouling the air by burning a gallon a minute of gasoline. And who knows how much heavy gear lube gets discharged from those 500-to-1000+HP beasts into the lakewater? (Lakewater, which some -- like the islanders and me -- consume). Wouldn't it be better to improve the subject of the argument, rather than to try to change it? Quote:
Quote:
I suspect that analyses have already been done on Winnipesaukee -- maybe elsewhere. There are analytical folks everywhere. We'll just have to wait for shore things to chime in here. Quote:
A carburated automobile engine -- or, in your case, a truck engine -- with a hugely defective over-rich mixture will run only 75K miles, rather than 100K miles before it wears out. Follow an old pickup up a hill sometime (and some newer, carburated, ones). While you can't see what's stinking up the air, your nose will let you know. ![]() Quote:
GFBL boats need to maximize horsepower to go 82MPH (rather than to go only 81MPH). How they do that throws the "perfect mixture" off the charts -- whether carburated or modified-fuel injection. (To our shared, Winnipesaukee, detriment). Quote:
Quote:
![]() Technoids like Mac and me. ![]() Last edited by ApS; 04-08-2005 at 08:36 AM. Reason: Change a hyphen |
|||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#30 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
![]() |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#31 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
The stuff that appears on my concrete stairs leading into the lake certainly has the qualities described in the link. It's not as dark as shown in the photo but is slippery when wet and not slippery when dry. Hosing it down does not remove it (though power washing does) but it doesn't leave a sheen in the water (like I'd expect some oil based gunk to). You can scrape it off somewhat when dry but it's a bear to do. Interestingly while my stairs have the stuff, it's only above the water line and within the splash zone, it doesn't accumulate on the dock pilings or dock which also get splashed. I wouldn't expect oil residue gunk to be so picky but I guess the algae critters are.
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#32 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]()
I'm kidding with the title of course but we're up against a hard one. Presently we all are living off a legacy of stored energy, accumulated over long periods of time. I don't know if the 30 yr number is correct but eventually we will run out of the stored* energy (well at least the stuff that's easy and cheap to get to) and will have to make do which energy that is more "continual". Nuclear fusion is often considered the holy grail but research into that has been ongoing by really smart people for 40+ years. Perhaps someday something practically useful will result but I don't expect it anytime soon no matter what funds are poured into it. We can relatively easily resurrect the nuclear fission programs, and given the advancements over the last 30 yrs, this may be the least of all evils (perhaps just for the transition time until we find the holy grail in whatever form it takes). Solar and wind just aren't "energy dense" (or constant in our locale) enough to be THE answer but as oil costs rise I'll predict these will begin to become cost comparable enough to supplement the conventional sources. Then the oil stocks can be used for what they are really suited for, use in mobile applications like cars and boats and planes. Fusion power for your home, leaving gasoline for your bassboat !
![]() In regards to solar and more specifically photo-voltaic (converting solar light to electricity) NASA has been in the forefront due to necessity (solar panels for power) and if we don't find an earth bound holy grail then perhaps a space bound one will become viable. Science fiction writers years ago imagined orbiting solar power collectors beaming energy back to Earth. Some more practical thought has gone into it and who knows, may turn out to be useful. IMHO if the option of solar power satellites is ever going to be possible we'll need to get the raw materials from the Moon, as lifting that much stuff into orbit from Earth is just too costly in numerous ways. The 1'st part of NASA's "Mission to Mars" is finding out just how much, indeed if at all, the Moon can be used for space endevours. Frankly I don't see people going to Mars in my lifetime for just the reasons LG and Cal cite. The president's vision statement is like all these type of things, good PR and some vague direction but please don't come asking for the $$'s to do it. Still the work being done to explore how (if) we can use the Moon is not only good research but has practical implications as well. I say "Strip mine to Moon", but just the backside so you don't ruin the view ![]() http://www.spacefuture.com/archive/s...has_come.shtml On a more immediate time scale I wonder if geothermal, and I mean drilling deep "wells" to tap into the Earth's residual heat, couldn't be used. I've read such things are pretty inefficient (see Stirling cycle in prior post and/or google OTEC) but still if it's cheap and can be done on a large scale, why not. Hmm, now I've got another thing added to my "figure it out" list. ![]() On another note people have been looking to harness tidal power and wave power. One interesting concept was generators that floated on the surface while being tethered to the bottom. As waves pass the float goes up and down and the relative motion (float vs tethered part) is used to make electricity which would be sent back to shore via the bottom cables/lines. Imagine if you can, a feild or doubled/tripled/?-up line of these things stretching from 1 point on shore to another. If en-masse they extracted all the energy from passing waves the water surface behind them would be calm. APS, perhaps you should look into this ! Then you could profit from the large cruisers and GFBLs passing your way and keep your shoreline to boot ![]() ps - The national labs (the old nuke people) have been working of a variety of "energy issues" including the much balleyhoed (?) super battery powered car (of the early 90's). No breakthroughs yet, that I'm aware of, but who knows. *stored - OK, OK I realize that all the energy is in a sense stored energy. Geothermal & fission are stored from the super-novie that made the radioactive materials and solar & fusion are stored from the materials leftover from the big bang and wind, biomass and most other stuff is derived from solar. We don't ever create energy, we just liberate from it's present form. So please no lectures from the physics buffs.
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#33 | ||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
I remember the article too. It was an experimental one-off SAAB. (SAAB always appears as all caps). Perhaps if they'd put graphics on the hose and polished the car...people would have liked it? Quote:
Note that the photo is preceded by the phrase ""Explain this:". I'm not positing an explanation, although shore things could -- when he/she gets back on the Forum. The black color does suggest petroleum products -- particularly since the boating season had ended about ummmm, 8-inches above...which puts the black ring above "late-summer tide" on Winnipesaukee. Hmm...those early postcards of Lake Winnipesaukee might shed some light on this darkness ![]() Quote:
Wind is solar energy -- clean energy. (And why sailing is a pollution-free use of our recreational waters and spares the release of carcinogens into the air). It is otherwise free energy -- going to waste. As for our domestic needs: The US has enough coal energy for 100 years. Unfortunately, the cleanest-burning coal (Utah) is now out of reach -- due to political considerations made ten years ago. Hydrogen can be made from our coal reserves, but our present domestic consumption is already controversial due to mercury, acid rain, and other pollutants, as Wizard of Oz pointed out. Wizard of Oz also wanted to change PWCs. Bombardier makes ATVs, Ski-Doo and Sea-Doo products and, due to overwhelming US sales, is poised to overtake America's Boeing as the largest manufacturer of commercial aircraft. Bombardier is a Canadian company -- with all THAT implies. Follow your money. The good news is that the solar promoters have stated that a solar grid measuring 10 miles by 10 miles would provide the US with all of its domestic -- non-transportation -- energy needs. ('Course, that's an immense area to cover with silicon panels). I was surprised to read that the US has over 1100 operating modern windmill-generators today. EDITED #1: Make that 5000. EDITED #2: The individual living in San Francisco's Presidio district -- and driving a $50 Billion California solar initiative -- is none other than...Mikael Gorbachev! One hundred years ago, there were 77 US manufacturers of windmills -- and the US was a windmill exporter! (We import our windmill technology today -- from Denmark). Oil is converted to manufacture plastics and fertilizer to feed the masses: Too bad we've been wedded to oil for transportation -- it just goes up in smokey pollutants, whose long-term effects on health are sometimes immediate (asthma) sometimes delayed (emphazema, cancer), but nearly always dire. The money we pay for oil goes to fund madrasahs, which are: Quote:
The technology is already here. We pay too great a price for: 1) Image 2) Convenience IMHO. ![]() Last edited by ApS; 04-09-2005 at 07:51 PM. Reason: Add: Improve readability (try to, anyway). Make "green" greener. It's no use -- it can't be seen on a blue background. Try to figure out HTML. |
||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#34 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
Actually I did notice the vagueness of "Explain this" in your first post and waited until MEE suggested you think it's of a petroleum origin before I commented. Your post above shows that we were correct in your supposition. Actually the location of the "Black Line" corresponds with what the article says: "The black zone generally occurs on stable boulders and other hard surfaces near the high tide line. This zone is hardly ever submerged by water, but may get wet from spray of crashing waves.". I get mildew on my house, its usually on the side that doesn't see much sun. Rocks that don't see much sun aren't very good subjects for old postcards.... Now the question is shifted to the "clean" area of the rock. Let me be a little vague here, does the wake action from boats cause stones to become rounded and smooth? Why I don't know, I "suppose" it could. But the clean area could easily be explained by the article I posted also. If you know something we don't, please elaborate, you've peaked my curiosity. The discussion on alternative sources for energy is interesting also. One statement intrigues me: Quote:
Sources such as windmills also have down sides, noise, lethal to migratory birds. http://www.ncpa.org/~ncpa/studies/renew/renew2d.html Hydro electric requires massive dams and disruption of ecosystems, look at what happened to the wild salmon population in NE after all the rivers were dammed up. Problem is dollar for dollar, pound for pound, petroleum is the best, easiest, most cost effective source of energy we have right now and the technologies out now and near commercialization still rely on gasoline. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#35 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 1,677
Blog Entries: 1
Thanks: 354
Thanked 639 Times in 290 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
You are right, sort of - Oil is the easiest and we still rely on it - but we tend to not look at the big picture. First, there are strong signs that the price part of this equation won't last. Second, US taxpayers are spending $10's of billions and thousands of lives in the middle-east to secure the flow of oil - on top of the per barrel cost. How should the cost of lives factor into "best, easiest" true cost of oil? There is a lot of money being spent on the military that could be eventually redirected to research for new energy sources. A century from now, it is very likely a new energy source will be well on its way to being adopted. The main question is, will the new source be phased in gradually, without economic disruption, or will it be adopted as a response to a crisis? This is the same question asked 30 years ago, in the 70's, and the answer was "let's just wait a while". What will we be saying 30 yeras from now, in 2035? Economics will drive the answer, but if "we the people" make the right choices, future Government leaders could redirect funds to soften the blow.
__________________
-lg |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#36 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]()
lg,
I hear you and agree..... ITD |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#37 | |||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Lastly I'd bet beaucoup $$ there would arise various conservation groups claiming that blocking the sunlight was adversly affecting the flora and fauna underneath the array (probably with some degree of factfulness too). Even in the desert there would be SOS (Save Our Scorpians). I guess they never read Heinlein .... TANSTAAFL. Lastly I also agree with lg, especially about the "phasing in gradually". I find it's the "jerk" of rapid change that causes so many problems. Give people time to find strategies to adapt and it doesn't hurt so bad. The problem is that this issue doesn't have any really easy, clear, practical answer. Neither party this last election had any real energy policy rather than the usual platitudes. We the people don't know the answer and aren't really asking for one. I think the present "high" prices for gas and oil have a silver lining. If the prices stay "high" for longer than the usual peak, if people begin to believe this is the way of the future, here to stay, perhaps they'll begin to think more about such things.
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
|||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#38 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 518
Thanks: 19
Thanked 62 Times in 15 Posts
|
![]()
I'm just curioius Will..what do you think those people who work for the marina's do during the other six or seven months of the year? Marina's are employed by a "few" full timers..the others are seasonal help.
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#39 | ||||||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
![]() Quote:
Math and spatial relationships are my weakest suit, and I admire those who can engineer our future through Physics. Don't the "auto-tracking" capabilities of solar arrays need to enter this equation (hopeless as it would appear from your figures)? The photovoltaic obstacles are being overcome. Lately, panels are being produced as ribbons, which should increase production speed of photovoltaics -- and their applicability. Nor is Earth-based solar energy the limit. There are energy-transmitting devices that can be put into Space with their output transmitted and distributed on Earth. Quote:
California environmentalists prepared a study on bird-kills at windmills and found an embarrassingly-low (to them) rate of bird-kills. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Who wouldn't fully expect a 2-cycle outboard exhaust port to be black? They are the world's worst polluters. Carbureted performance-tuned GFBLs shouldn't expect to have beige (clean) exhaust ports. F.I., if stock, and tuned for the street vehicle from which they were derived, should NOT be black. If it's black -- it's not meeting America's better pollution standards. (And wasting gas -- if that matters). Quote:
"Wanna see my bilges? Huh? Huh? Wanna see?" 2) If you're so "clean", why are Federal-emission standards being proposed for GFBL boats? I'd prefer that the air I breathe at Winnipesaukee is clean. Remember, all this domestic energy saving (wind, solar) would assist in more fossil fuel for recreation. It's not just "fun". Being a news-junkie often pays off with revelations such as below. This is a solar-collector array in Bavaria. The panels turn to face the sun automatically. "Small" as it is, it produces 10MW. With some irony, I note that it is American-made! |
||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#40 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]()
.... that's over the white ring.
"Three to five million birds" equals 1 to 2 billion birds per year, I don't know, someone took the time to write it, so it must be true..... one way to put a crimp into Tabby's hunting habits is to put a bell on its collar. MnM gives a good dissertation on solar power, I have nothing to add there. Powerboat emissions, they all pollute, pwcs are getting in line with pontoon boats and runabouts, they can get better. Economy, I'm not sure present hybrid technologies are capable of keeping up with the high power demand of pushing a boat, and if it is will it be more efficient? But that black ring over the white ring (BR/WR), I'm still curious. ![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#41 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
![]() ![]() Last topic from me - How about residential cogeneration plants ? Natural gas is available on a lot of streets so why not have "every" home make it's own electricity from NG ? The waste heat could be used to heat water and/or the house and/or cool the house ? It's done on larger scales but why not small, household scales ? I think we have a power plant person who visits this forum, maybe he/she can comment ?
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#42 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 1,677
Blog Entries: 1
Thanks: 354
Thanked 639 Times in 290 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
The same picture as posted is shown, with the caption: Bavaria Solar Park: The 1.9 MW system in Günching is one of three PV systems with a total of 10.1 MW. http://www.pvresources.com/ is also interesting, including a shot of a photovoltaic plant built in Tucon, AZ. Flying over the desert in the Western US, there sure seems to be hundreds (thousands?) of square miles of sun drenched land that could be used for solar collectoring. Transmission loss over long distances may be a problem, but a professor in a class, taken over 30 years ago, predicted this would come, and the power would be transmitted as direct current (DC) to reduce losses. His theory was that only one wire would be required, and the earth would be used as "ground". We'll see...
__________________
-lg |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#43 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,943
Thanks: 23
Thanked 111 Times in 51 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
![]() For more than you care to know http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_Currents ps - Aaah yes all those 10's of thousands of $$ and years of graduate and undergradute electrical engineering schoolin are really paying off now. Yup I can spout off useless boring 'lectrical trivia to no end. Hoo boy can someone please refill my scotch glass ... ![]()
__________________
Mee'n'Mac "Never attribute to malice that which can be explained by simple stupidity or ignorance. The latter are a lot more common than the former." - RAH |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#44 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Moultonboro, NH
Posts: 2,925
Thanks: 476
Thanked 691 Times in 387 Posts
|
![]() Quote:
http://www.hydroquebec.com/transener...ristiques.html "Another specialty of Hydro-Québec TransÉnergie is direct-current (DC) power transmission, used to facilitate the transmission of large quantities of power over long distances at high voltages (e.g. 450 kV). This technique enables interchanges with neighboring grids; power can be transferred between two asynchronous alternating-current (AC) systems. "This is notably the case with its multiterminal DC system (MDCS). Hydro-Québec TransÉnergie's MDCS link includes the first converter substation of its kind in the world. This link begins by transmitting direct current along some 1,200 km between James Bay and Nicolet substation, in the heart of the inhabited part of Québec. Nicolet substation also receives alternating current from the Manic-Outardes complex and Churchill Falls generating station in Labrador. An energy hub, Nicolet substation plays an important role in securing the power supply. In addition to helping meet the demand of several large urban centres, the substation is used to export and import electricity due to its ability to transform AC into DC and then back to AC." *** Color and bold added for emphasis.. Asyncronous AC power plants connected via a wire without compensation must be quite a (short lived) sight. ![]() Last edited by ITD; 04-14-2005 at 06:30 AM. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#45 | ||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 5,937
Thanks: 2,205
Thanked 776 Times in 553 Posts
|
![]()
A retired British oil expert (with no ax to grind) should give us pause:
Quote:
Quote:
OTOH, hydroelectrics take up huge amounts of land, and the effect on Earth's stability can be calculated. (Due to most hydroelectrics being north of the Equator). Quote:
Even AC transmitted over long distances loses "oomph". "Standing waves" emanating from those overhead wires are another question mark in health/cancer issues. I recall that DC requires huge diameter copper wire to transmit over long distances. Maybe it's time to buy copper "futures" -- if there is such a thing? "Sudden wealth" in cattle-futures has resulted for some.... Quote:
"Running on the lean side" is a desirable trait of engines -- for economy. If you're running lean for performance AND economy, you reap what you sow. (If you failed to observe the obvious signs of your "lean side", then of course your motor will blow up). Did you try sodium-filled valves? Do you have past experience with a "Wheatstone bridge"? I don't want lead added (post-fillup) to gasoline burned on a freshwater lake that the residents draw their household water from, either, so I won't address that "fix" for your blown performance engines. Or the wide burning of leaded "Av-Gas" -- another favorite of GFBLs. And still another concern of those who suspect that GFBLs fill their tanks with Av-Gas before arriving at a freshwater lake. Go to NHIS (or any auto racetrack) and check the long-term results of racecars' tuning by observing the interior-color of their exhausts. You won't find any that are beige -- or even dark brown. They will all be black: The cost of performance cars -- and performance boating. OTOH, simply idle your boat and determine if there's unburned gasoline in the exhaust odor. (They don't call them "stinkpots" for nothin'). As I indicated in my earlier "Church crowd applauding the boater finally shutting off his engine" quote, the hydrocarbons (and everything else bad for Life) will announce themselves for you. Multiply that times <10% of the boats on a Winnipesaukee weekend, and you MAY see our "Residents' Angst" regarding GFBLs. Last edited by ApS; 04-21-2005 at 07:26 AM. Reason: Oil quote added |
||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Bookmarks |
|
|