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I am going to trap enough feral hogs to build my own barter town.

I just need a midget called "Master" to do the technical stuff.🥹
Is aunty Entity going to be there?

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Prepper problem solving 101:

Zoomzoom is coming to my house for SHTF. He gets a feed of raw onions an hour before meal times and produces enough methane to cook the liver and onions for the rest of us.

Does anyone have plans for burning methane on their list?
I have some third world methane generator plans stashed...I am surrounded with fire wood but a methane powered tractor might be nice........
 
Is aunty Entity going to be there?

View attachment 173281
I hope so. Her character was pretty cool.

I loved the ending where, rather than inflicting revenge on Max.......she just accepted there was no longer any point in that.....smiled and fare welled him.



Well....aint we a pair....raggedy man.......goodbye soldier.

Classic line right there.
 
I hope so. Her character was pretty cool.

I loved the ending where, rather than inflicting revenge on Max.......she just accepted there was no longer any point in that.....smiled and fare welled him.





Classic line right there.

I have to watch that again. Its been years since I saw it.
 
How about a large low pressure gas bag on a lightweight trailer towed behind the small tractor.....
I was a grad student on a methane production study. We used a manure digester on an actual farm. We fed the heated digester with swine manure. The methane produced was used to heat the digester. Excess methane was stored in a huge rubber balloon/bag about the size on a 2-car garage. The excess methane was used to run a large four cylinder electric generator. The generator emptied the stored methane in about 30 minutes. It took another day to refill the storage bag.
 
I was a grad student on a methane production study. We used a manure digester on an actual farm. We fed the heated digester with swine manure. The methane produced was used to heat the digester. Excess methane was stored in a huge rubber balloon/bag about the size on a 2-car garage. The excess methane was used to run a large four cylinder electric generator. The generator emptied the stored methane in about 30 minutes. It took another day to refill the storage bag.
so how long would it have powered a small, inverter, one cylinder generator? Or a small simple mini tractor that could mow a field of grain...
 
so how long would it have powered a small, inverter, one cylinder generator? Or a small simple mini tractor that could mow a field of grain...
dont know about here but in other countries they sell kits to do this...its the inground digester and everything.

way back in an issue of coutryside and small stock journal a guy wrote up article with pictures of his system. he used barrels to hold manures and used inner tubes to hold the gas and it was pipped into his kitchen for a single burner eye he cooked on.
 
Way back in the 70's when mother earth news was a real how to magazine I would sit around in my geodesic dome and read about methane generators and uses....Or like the early settlers on the American prairie did...burn buffalo chips for heat and cooking.
there was a stove that burned grass...i told about it in my treeless survival thread...it has two chambers that had spring things on it and you pack dry grass and it compacted into bale like and pushed it forward into chamber...or thats how i think it worked...only ever see one picture in a pdf and i cant screenshot a pdf for whatever reason.

also i read old settlers diary stuff talking about cutting grass and twisting it up for burning in tight bundles.
 
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Early settlers on the prairies didn’t have much wood available,
so they burned what they had, whether buffalo chips or cow
chips. In many areas, prairie hay became an important fuel
source.
A c c o r d i n g t o t h e
Nebraska State Historical
Society, the practice was
especially common in the
central and northern parts
of that state.
Burning loose grass
required constant attention
as it was fed into stoves.
Twisted grass provided
more concentrated heat.
In 1876 a patent was
g r a n t e d t o a D a k o t a
Territory resident for a machine to twist hay or straw for
fuel. Such machines twisted the stems and cut them to length.
Special stoves were designed just for burning hay, with
patents issued for at least 5 hay burners between 1877 and
1882. The first of these, the 1878 vintage hay burner shown
above, was donated to the Society in 1934. It used removable,
spring-operated, cylindrical magazines to feed hay into the
stove. A supply of packed cylinders would be kept on hand
to be quickly inserted as needed.
Another common design was the wash boiler stove. A metal
container stuffed with grass was turned upside down over the
firebox and connected to the stove. Reportedly, it could hold
a fire for 2 hrs. if tightly packed.
The cylinder stove and the wash boiler stove were multi-
purpose. In addition to being space heaters, they served as
cooktops and ovens.
According to one early settler, burning grass was superior
to wood. In an 1877 letter to his brother, Daniel Oaks said,
“Now D.B. I would like to tell you about how we get along
without wood for fuel. Instead of working my team to death
hauling wood from 20 miles away, I just take my mower and
horses and go down to the Sioux bottom. In two days I can
cut and put up enough hay to last me one year.”
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Nebraska State
Historical Society, P.O. Box 82554, Lincoln, Neb. 68501
 
Trivia.... There is, was one of the South American countries that produced so much sugar cane they ran all there vehicles on almost pure ethanol.. This since the 1960s (?).. So that is likely a quicker cheaper alternative than some..

Question.... Can corn oil be used in a diesel motor, some diesel motors ?? How about canola oil ?? I believe an old Lantz type hot bulb motor tractor will run on used motor oil or any other fuel..
 
Trivia.... There is, was one of the South American countries that produced so much sugar cane they ran all there vehicles on almost pure ethanol.. This since the 1960s (?).. So that is likely a quicker cheaper alternative than some..

Question.... Can corn oil be used in a diesel motor, some diesel motors ?? How about canola oil ?? I believe an old Lantz type hot bulb motor tractor will run on used motor oil or any other fuel..
look at the old hit and miss engines.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hit-and-miss_engine
 
Another thing happened and to me, it reiterates my position about being prepared.

Just had a pretty much total septic system failure.
First tank from the house got clogged up. Caused septic flooding in the house. Thankfully, it was clothes washer water and not poop.

Full examination also showed float switch in tank 2 failed causing overflowing.

Went outside when it was 16° this morning and started fixing things. Had to dig a big pit to access the one tank.

Within 6 hours and no trips to the store, I had the septic system back up and running.
This included:
Replacing the float switch. Had one on the shelf!
Digging the pit. No problem with the tractor.
Unclogging the septic tank. Manual labor.
Installed riser on septic tank (again, it's on the shelf) so I don't have to dig a big pit again.
Re-covered the hole.

The water back flowed into a lower bathroom. I'll need to remove the toilet, vanity and replace the floor. I have the parts/supplies, including new, matching flooring so it's a remove and replace.

All I'll need from outside of my stock is:
A pumper truck to clean a septic tank.
A new wax seal for the toilet. I do have some on the shelf but they look old and not as flexible so I'm going to spend the $8 to just get a new one.

Be prepared!
 
Another thing happened and to me, it reiterates my position about being prepared.

Just had a pretty much total septic system failure.
First tank from the house got clogged up. Caused septic flooding in the house. Thankfully, it was clothes washer water and not poop.

Full examination also showed float switch in tank 2 failed causing overflowing.

Went outside when it was 16° this morning and started fixing things. Had to dig a big pit to access the one tank.

Within 6 hours and no trips to the store, I had the septic system back up and running.
This included:
Replacing the float switch. Had one on the shelf!
Digging the pit. No problem with the tractor.
Unclogging the septic tank. Manual labor.
Installed riser on septic tank (again, it's on the shelf) so I don't have to dig a big pit again.
Re-covered the hole.

The water back flowed into a lower bathroom. I'll need to remove the toilet, vanity and replace the floor. I have the parts/supplies, including new, matching flooring so it's a remove and replace.

All I'll need from outside of my stock is:
A pumper truck to clean a septic tank.
A new wax seal for the toilet. I do have some on the shelf but they look old and not as flexible so I'm going to spend the $8 to just get a new one.

Be prepared!
Our septic system is all gravity, no pumps or electricity needed. With that said, I suppose it could still get plugged or frozen. We have it pumped every four years. Last fall, I installed a manhole riser with an insulated cover (or so they say it's insulated, it's about 4 inches or so thick. I still covered it with leaves)

What kind of cover/lid did you install on your manhole?

What caused the blockage in your system?
 
I wouldn't worry about freezing. Pumped every 4 years is right. Not sure what's going on but we went 15 years before our first tank cleaning, then 10 years, now I have to do 4 years. I last had it pumped in 10/2020 and it's needed again.

What caused the blockage:
I'm going to say it's twofold. Since the float switch failed, effluent in that tank was at max and didn't accept anything from the other tank. Not my exact system but the tank on the right of the below pic gives you an idea. Right side tank is full and that's where there was a switch failure.

Looking at this pic, because the tank on the right wasn't being drained, the left side tank kept collecting solids and not draining. It shows scum and wastewater in the left tank. My wastewater area in that left tank was gone and it was almost all scum/sludge. The red arrows from the left side is normally trying to push into water. It wasn't water, it was sludge so it couldn't push. That elbow on the left where it's coming from the house then got clogged.

I cleaned out that elbow, stirred the left side tank and now it's "enough" to keep things going until I get the tanks cleaned next week.


1739584899417.png





Here's the riser I used. Times 2 to get me 24" up plus the lid.
https://www.amazon.com/24X12-Tuf-Tite-Septic-Tank-Riser/dp/B00IEC9QU6/
1739584446755.png
 
Trivia.... There is, was one of the South American countries that produced so much sugar cane they ran all there vehicles on almost pure ethanol.. This since the 1960s (?).. So that is likely a quicker cheaper alternative than some..

Question.... Can corn oil be used in a diesel motor, some diesel motors ?? How about canola oil ?? I believe an old Lantz type hot bulb motor tractor will run on used motor oil or any other fuel..
The compression ignition engine (Diesel) was designed to run on plant oil, you can run a mechanical injection engine on preheated (to lower the viscosity) plant oil. but it takes work. the Hot bulb engines will run on just about any oily substance.
If the world ever crashs to that point you can be sure that I will still have a tractor of some kind running on something. they save so much labor. there is always the wood gasifier. that will run a spark ignition engine.
 
I think a prepper is about keeping it simple, too many preppers in the UK are more concerned about having technology and fail to plan for putting food on the table.
I spent many years living alone and quite frankly I can live without technology having grown up in the days before supermarkets, mobile phones and social media so I know it can be done.
 

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