i am tired of giving my money to gas company’s i need to know from the very beginning to outfitting a tank to the steps needed to filter the fuel i am not a mechanic i don’t know much about cars so detail would be nice
thank you in advance
Biodiesel is less expensive to make than ethanol, and gives better energy. No one is making biodiesel cars. I think they are missing a great opportunity to exploit a resource that has barely been tapped. Too bad we are so short sighted. It would be much more economical than Hydrogen power in the more near future. We could start in a year or two.
Blue Sun is a biodiesel company that has a presence in Colorado. I see a lot of cars driving around with Blue Sun window stickers, and I would like to support them too. However, I find no information about this on their web site, gobluesun.com.
I have heard how people can get their cars, and even buses, running on vegetable oil. I want to know if I can do that to my car, and how do I go about doing it?
what should i do in winter? what cars can run biodiesel? do i need any modification (rubber lines, separate tank, infector and etc. ? finally, can old VW and mercedse benz run with biodiesel?
Thank you so much i very appreciate.
I saw a news spot on CNN this morning about a shop in Kansas City converting SUV’s and cars to biodiesel, but I didn’t get the name of the shop so, I wanted to know if any of you know of a kit that would allow the same thing?
I am looking to buy a car that runs off of biodiesel and ethanol, but I’m having problems finding what cars are out there. I want them made this year and not personally converted, manufactured that way. Can anyone give me a list of what manufactured cars run off of one or the other alternative fuel listed?
I checked on mapquest for stations that produce alternative fuels and I only found one station in south florida that carries biodiesel fuel. That particular station is far from where I live, so how can we get one in our area? Also, do cars need any modifications for this alternative fuel?
Make your own backyard biodiesel. It’s easy to make a small batch that will work in any diesel engine. You won’t need any special equipment–an old juice bottle will serve as the “reactor” vessel–and on such a small scale, you can quickly refine your technique and perform further experiments.