Man modifies pickup to run on wood, waste
By DAVE COLLINS –
KILLINGLY, Conn. (AP) — From the first time he saw Emmett "Doc" Brown fire
up the Mr. Fusion home energy reactor in the "Back to the Future" movies,
Dave Nichols has always wanted to make a vehicle run on garbage.
Two decades after the trilogy, the 42-year-old home builder and auto shop
owner from eastern Connecticut
isn't traveling through time in a DeLorean, yet. But he's modified his 1989
Ford F150 pickup truck to run on wood, leaves, cardboard and other "biomass"
with a fuel system that he says expels virtually no pollution.
The technology is called gasification, and it's been around since the 1800s,
when it was used for street lamps and cooking. It even powered some vehicles
during World War II, but faded away under oil's dominance.
Nichols and others say reviving gasification, which can also heat and power
homes, has exciting possibilities, from reducing dependence on foreign oil
to cutting pollution.
"It's a simple science from 130 years ago that can be used today to solve
all of our problems ... and it runs on potentially free fuel," Nichols said.
"This type of technology has to be developed, and it has to be developed
now."
Gasification projects have been sprouting up across the country. Others have
also built car gasification systems, including a team in California that has a video on YouTube
showing its modified Honda Accord.
Middlebury
College
in Vermont
fired up its biomass heating and power plant last December.
The new interest in gasification comes as President Barack Obama presses to
double the nation's use of renewable energy over the next three years, with
$15 billion a year to be spent to develop solar power, wind power, advanced
biofuels, fuel-efficient cars and other technologies.
Gasification works by heating organic materials to high temperatures without
flames. The resulting chemical reactions produce a hydrogen-hydrocarbon gas
mixture in vapor form that is almost as potent as gasoline, Nichols said.
His pickup truck appears to run like any other and easily reached 40 mph and
above on local roads on a recent day, but it has no gas tanks. Nichols says
he can get it up to more than 80 mph. The only noticeable difference is a
contraption, right behind the cab's rear window, that takes up some of the
back and looks somewhat like a wood stove.
A metal barrel, where the heating occurs, extends just above the cab's roof.
The gas is captured from the barrel and a vacuum system sucks it through
piping that runs under the truck to the engine.
Nichols says he's driven it 10,000 miles without gas, including a trip about
three months ago when he loaded up the back with about 400 pounds of wood
and drove some 600 miles across Connecticut,
then to New Hampshire and
Boston
before returning home. A pound of wood or other material will fuel his truck
for 1 to 2 miles, meaning that the truck costs about 8 cents a mile to fuel,
compared to roughly 19 cents per mile if it used gasoline at today's prices.
"This is real. This is no game," said Nichols, who lives in town with his
wife and two daughters, ages 15 and 11. "The mechanics at the garage thought
I was crazy. They're not laughing anymore."
He started the project about seven years ago, after reading an instruction
book about lamp gas technology in the 1800s.
Nichols has been trying to perfect the system ever since, with a few
stumbles along the way, and says he's close. One of the final parts is an
electronic system that would allow drivers to push a button, instead of
having to start it with a propane torch like Nichols does now. He's applied
for a federal grant to help with the electronic system and other
improvements.
Nichols, a thin, mustachioed man whose hands are very active when he talks,
had the "reactor" filled with slicked log pieces about 5 inches in diameter
and 1 to 2 inches thick. That's where the gasification starts.
The organic materials in the reactor are exposed to extreme heat, which
breaks them down into vapor gases. Then a startup vacuum system (using an
old wet-and-dry shop vac) is turned on to get the gases flowing to the
engine.
The temperature inside the reactor reaches over 2,000 degrees, but the gas
cools to about 150 degrees about 5 feet from the reactor. Passengers in the
pickup's cab don't feel the warmth.
Gases are drawn from the reactor by the vacuum at first, and later the
engine itself. The gases are pulled through pipes and filters to cool and
clean them, and they end up at about air temperature when they reach the
engine's air intake. The startup process takes a few minutes.
Nichols says the hydrogen-hydrocarbon gas mixture is then mixed with air in
the intake manifold, then goes into the cylinders just like gasoline and is
ignited to power the engine. He says the only thing he did to the engine was
take off the air filter and hook up the gasification system to the air
intake valves.
"It's a complicated version of easy," Nichols said.
The end products of the process are a little bit of ash, carbon dioxide and
water, he said. He also claims there's little or no carbon footprint.
Nichols has started a company, 21st Century Motor Works, to work on and
market gasification systems, but doesn't have a patent yet.
Larry Baxter, a chemical engineering professor at
Brigham
Young
University
in Utah,
said gasification for vehicles is a scientifically proven process, but it
has several drawbacks that have prevented commercial success.
One of those problems, he said, is that the process typicallynes. Another is that
people would have to be loading up their cars produces particles and other
materials that can damage engi and trucks with wood or other
materials, making it impractical. And, he says, the technology is really not
much better for the environment.
"It's fantastic people are doing these kinds of things, but they'll never be
more than a niche or novelty," Baxter said. "It's a scientifically sound but
practically difficult process. It would be wrong to think of these as
efficient or practical."
Nichols disagrees, saying he's found a way to produce a clean-burning fuel.
He says the technology could save people thousands of dollars a year in
gasoline, electricity and heating costs.
"This could be Obama's ultimate stimulus package," he said.
Nichols said he eventually wants to patent his reactor core, but his focus
right now is educating the public and getting a product out on the market.
He also wants to build a smaller version of the vehicle fueling system, so
it could be more practical for cars.
check out other energy savings ideas
"Now if I could get a hold of a DeLorean," Nichols said.