The last post was on the electric vehicle project, now time to move on to the SVO Golf project.
On this project things have been slowly moving forward for the same reasons as the EV, life, work, winter, skiing and things like that have slowed a lot of the progress. In the last post I said the SVO system is under test with normal petro-diesel, this has been a good thing to do before diving right into SVO/WVO because there were a number of times I forgot to switch back over to diesel. One time I even left the purge on and pumped down the diesel tank. It is important to point out that the purge mode on some systems (including the greasecar kit) runs the engine on diesel but the return line is connected to the SVO system. This means that if you leave the purge mode enabled you are draining the main tank into the SVO tank. If the SVO tank is close to full I can only imagine what would happen in the trunk of the car! Thankfully when I left the purge on both tanks were almost empty, which wasn’t a problem, other than “running out of gas” right next to a gas station with diesel (lucky lucky).
While the system works well, getting SVO and filtering it has been a little difficult. My first approach to getting used oil from restaurants was to explain that I had some projects that required vegetable oil and “could I have some of their waste oil”. Some of the restaurant managers didn’t really understood what I was looking for, some just said “No”, others had contracts, some even said they sell their oil, :-/. Eventually I found a little burrito shop and told the manager “If you have used cooking oil, I’ll get rid of it for free” . I guess free was the magic word (that and they were just starting with a fryer) because they were ecstatic I would take it; they even said they would coarse filter it first! Even before I secured the oil I had a basic filtering setup using dual water filters (this will be the topic of another post), so I was pretty sure I was set for finally running SVO. When I got a cubie I let it sit in the garage for a while to let any water separate out, but even after 3 weeks there was no separation. This means either two things, the garage was too cold for separation, or there was no water in the oil. Needless to say, I was hoping for the latter, but as life goes the problem seams to be the former because I did a hot pan test and it totally failed. Over the past few weeks I have been scratching my head about the best method to warm the oil with the least cost and equipment. As of now I am testing a few methods to warm a full cubie of oil to promote separation.
A quick note on the warming and filter setup, my main goal for running vegetable oil is to decrease the cost of fuel, thus an expensive filtering setup is counter productive. There are a number of people who spend hundreds of dollars on filters and heaters, I want to make a filtering setup that can be made from items found at local hardware stores and doesn’t take much space. My current filtering setup requires a post in itself (maybe even a dedicated page) so check back soon for a post on the “Hardware Store WVO Filter”
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The latest round of parts came in Friday (4/24) and are down at the engine shop. Now is when the fun begins and the end nears.
