Jesus gs, you are ancient.
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You should endeavor to live so long!
Reminds me of one of my kids while in college being asked how old the dad was and the reply; "My dad isn't old, he is ancient."
Thank God for small wonders;
Idaho, Montana Wolves Delisted by Congress | New West Network
A rider in the budget bill, sponsored by Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana, returns the legal playing field back to 2009 when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had delisted the wolves in Montana and Idaho. Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho, chairman of the House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee, attached a similar measure to the House version of the budget bill.
Bet that hacks of the Obama radicals!!
The U S Fish and Wildlife Service has also stated that the wolf population of Minnesotta, Wisconsin, Michigan and one other state should also be delisted as wolf endangered specie area, saying there were over 400 wolves.
It isn't necessarily abundance that is the issue, it is the state at which it exists, primarily.
If, and this may be untrue and am only using as an example, the majority of Hydrogen exists in a stored state, such as water, then there must be a process by which the hydrogen is released to either free hydrogen or H2.
The problem is doing this efficiently enough. If the energy requirement necessary to remove H2 from the oxygen in water is equal to or greater than the energy gained from utilizing the liberated H2, then the system is inefficient.
We must further have a form of energy necessary to provide for the release of H2. Use of photosynthetic organisms modified for this very process would allow us to use the energy stored within sunlight to achieve the release of free hydrogen or coupled hydrogen.
So, I don't see abundance as the issue. I see the state at which hydrogen exists as the issue. And if the majority is bound to other elements, then the hydrogen must be oxidized.
If a farmer with a six grade education can do it then why not anyone else?
I think the trick is to focus on small outfits that work for one dwelling or a few, not huge mega facitities.
The farmer in question got his initial energy input free through the use of small homemade windmills and stored that energy into homemade batteries, (that had been used since 1917), he then captured hydrogen from water and ran everything in his house with the free hydrogen, and also used the hydrogen in his old truck to triple his milage.
One college professor who toured his operation said Lorenzen hadn't invented anything new, he had just put it to practical use.
GS- Was the no outside energy home using geothermal heat pumps?
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Not exactly, depends on what you call geothermal heat pumps.
This homemade outfit was 100' of 3" pvc pipe that was buried 18" and ran horizontally to an inlet that was capped with a cone shaped roof to keep out rain and wire and screen to keep out varmits and insects.
He said it would have been a lot better if he had installed 200' but didn't have the time.
On the inside of the building the pipe came up about 6" and the natural process of heat rising in the building brought in all the air that was needed.
At first I asked what size fan did he use and he explained it was natural circulation, try putting my face over the inlet, when I did, it not only blew my cap off, it blew it about 5' up in the air.
From what I know of geothermal heat pumps being installed now and given tax credits, I think the design is poor and overly expensive.
The ones I'm talking about have a well digger install a hole in the ground several hundred feet deep and then pipes are installed and water is pumped in a close circuit. I assume it works but you are talking about an investment of over $10,000 and there are lots of ways of doing the same at far less than half the cost of what the government is sponsoring by giving tax credits as far as I know.
I read an article in Popular Mechanics many years ago that featured a half dozen working systems that were manufactured by those who were using them.
One house in Maine used very little elctrical energy and had to bring in outside air until the outside temp dipped to 5 degrees.
It was designed like this. On the east and south sides of the house there were greenhouses with lots of plants which generate heat as well as the solar effect also doing the same.
To heat the house and store that captured heat, the air was circulated from the greenhouses into the house and then up to the attic. The attic had clear panels to gather more solar heat and there were double studs in the walls and double joists to support 30 gal clear water bottles that were filled and which absorbed and stored the heat.
Then the air from the attic was pumped down one of the walls through 4" pipes by electrical fans. This was the only thing in the system that required energy being used from outside the system.
Underneath the house and greenhouses there was 4' of pea gravel and the attic air was pumped to the bottom of that and the gravel trapped and held heat also.
Then it naturally circulated back into the greenhouses to repeat the cycle.
I have a friend who is a builder and did something similar, although not so elaborate. He would circulate air one way to heat and the other to cool and figured he had cut his heating and air conditioning costs by 50%.
Gourd? They was backin up trucks with 55 gallon drums from wall to wall.
Heard most were locals from the Joelton Scottsboro area.
Wonder if it already had the additive that keeps one from drinking the stuff??? :unsure: