WHY DONT YOU MENTION TO THE SUCKERS THAT THE BOOK IS 'ONLY' $97 and you havent even proven it works. WAKE UP PEOPLE AND DONT SUPPORT THIEVES LIKE THIS!
if you beleive in this shit then why dont you sell it at the price that most needy can afford. at the current price only the rich or dishonest can affford and the ones that mostly need it are missing out. also a lot to ask without any real proof, just your vid and your say so. think about it!!!
@lyteweaver hahha its best to read more.... makeing oil from algea easy to do at home just need a press and a bucket making plastics and feul (gas)) also easy with household reagents... reason gas at the pump is high has nothing to do with source but our rate of consumption you dont have to be good at math to figure that out, dont buy thier product makeing oil from algea is SIMPLE if you want to help fix the economy then do your part and supply urself w/ green energy ! (then $ drops)
If these vendors are smart, they would allow an open forum on their site so that people can leave feedback to prove that the book actually is authentic. Also, they would give this knowledge away knowing that it will spread their name and reputation around the world quicker. Anyone that tries to sell with no feedback from the public... this is a red flag!
This reminds me of a scam website selling 'super additive' that turns waste cooking oil into biodiesel, selling $70 a bottle -guess what, your car will work perfectly on it, but the 'super additive liquid' is nothing more than white spirit, probably colored into some fancy new color.
Energy crisis is not solved by making an alternative energy and doing things exactly how we are doing them now. It's called being self-suffient. Communities that help eachother within that group of people will solve the problems of shipping products across country, if the products are only a mile or even 50 away. I know how much Americans love eating meat, I enjoy meat myself, but do people know that our excesive meat diet causes more carbon emitions than anything else... Change is different.
What these hippies will never understand is energy conversion and potential/over head. You see 1st off you will only get 1000 watts max energy from the sun on a 1sq meter of surface. You'd be better off using PV to capture that energy. It takes about a gallon and a half of petroleum to make 1 gal of ethanol and I bet it will take 10 gals to make 1 gal of B100 from algae.
If Congress has the authority to prohibit cannabis, how long will it take for them to prohibit home made algae to benefit the oil companies who want to keep you dependent, or to prohibit tomatoes and basil. Their authority is derived from Commerce to which it has no end, when you do not affect or enter into commerce the prohibition can not affect your activity. Study Property law and you will find the only criminals out there are the politicians who violate American Jurisprudence OVERTLY ! ! !
@aloisgault yeah you would think that since this technology is not owned by any one person or group it could just be shared for the benefit of the whole society.
Scam. This is not what I think of when someone mentions algae biofuels, instead I see genetically modified cyanobacterium hardwired to produce large amounts of alkanes from sunlight and fixing CO2 as a carbon source.
The cost and knowledge to make this at home makes this not worth your time and money. Although algae bio-fuel is THE contender to eventually replace fossil fuels.
The brightest chemical engineers have yet to figure out how to make this work. Exxon spent $600 million trying to genetically modify algae for biofuels. Still, no one has made it work. Yet this e-book will show you how. Amazing. (This is sarcasm in case you're from a non-sarcasm country.)
@donsjuand It does "work." In the strictest sense, it is _possible_ to make hydrocarbon fuels from algae. But in an economic sense, no, it is still impossible to create identical hydrocarbon fuels from plant material such as algae. Anyone who has experience with chemistry will confirm that it takes a lot of processing (thus energy) to turn (existing) biomass into fuels identical to those pressure-cooked under sedimentary rock for hundreds of millions of years.
@bobstevefrank123 So my understanding of the reasons you claim are that production process is costly due to high energy costs and reliant inefficient equipment. So the conclusion is that algae production has a need for:
1) Highly efficient equipment to be encouraged and sought from manufacturers
2) Cost control of input energy (ideally renewable sources like wind, sun, clean water source hydro).
With some key understanding and crucial research in those areas, I think algae could work.
@donsjuand Well, the vital point here lies in your second point. There needs to be a great deal of energy put into the process to turn biological lipids into fuels that a combustion engine could use. This is true of any biofuel. The energy must come from someplace, and so long as the grid is using coal, that is what is going to be used to create these novel fuels. Renewables like solar are a good idea, but right now it is still expensive. But then, you say, we should invest in researching...
@donsjuand ...better solar panels. If we do get better solar panels (perhaps with nanotechnology), wouldn't it be a better idea to simply use the solar electricity to charge a battery? But batteries may not be efficient even in the future (due to physical limits)--so using solar electricity to create a chemical fuel sounds like a good idea. That's one place where biofuels could come in. But a frankly more efficient fuel is hydrogen (that is, using the solar electricity to split water)....
@donsjuand ...Hydrogen does not have the constraints that accompany biofuels. You don't need a massive farm or expensive bioreactors. An electrolyzer can fit in your garage. I believe this, or something similar to it, has more promise for the future than algae biofuel. Algae biofuel still has the complication of running CO2 through the closed bioreactor. This is feasible for perhaps placing next to a factory (i.e., run the carbon from the smokestacks through a pipe leading to the bioreactor)....
@bobstevefrank123 The production of Hydrogen requires energy. Hydrogen must be compressed. A readily available Hydrogen infrastructure must be in place before societies use hydrogen vehicles. Bioreactors can be vertical and inexpensive. Genetically modified algae can be made more efficient. A carbon dioxide source can be produced within enzymatic reaction vessels coupled to vertical bioreactors. However, I believe the ultimate source of energy will be anti-matter collision reactions.
@donsjuand ...So algae biofuel will have a future in certain places where its need is simply pragmatic. As a long term and singular solution for the energy crisis, however, algae biofuel will never make the cut.
@bobstevefrank123 Sure it takes energy to make it. I'm not sure what you mean by economic sense. I think with cooperation and common logic this could be or is resolved. The questions are:
What compels interdisciplinary cooperation towards a common goal of sustainable energy?
What are all the options for lipid extraction/production equipment?
Which are the most life-cycle efficient to operate?
What is the most efficient source of clean energy available to power them?
@donsjuand I'm making my judgment on a few assumptions. One is that any "algae biodiesel" plan would use the current technologies for processing biomass to liquid hydrocarbons. The other is that this would be done using a genetically modified strain of algae, and would thus need to be contained in a bioreactor to avoid cross contamination with other species.
On these assumptions, algae biodiesel is so incredibly inefficient. The most efficient biomass to fuel plan is sugar cane (not corn)....
@bobstevefrank123 ... to ethanol. Algae biodiesel is a horribly inefficient version of using electricity derived from solar panels to power your car (which is what we should really be focusing on instead of biodiesel pipe dreams).
@brianng999 That depends how they are processed. With algae, a centrifuge process is used to ectract the oils, so there's not necessarily more grehouse gasses created.
@bobstevefrank123 They could run algae processing on traditional fuel, initially, to create backup algae fuel, then use that for production. This is the trend with non-volume technologies - they cost a lot at first, the demand gradually increases or a large purchase or investment is made, the producers learn how to improve efficiency, work with manufacturers to clarify their needs, manufacturers adapt to needs, producers improve and we start to see efficiency gains. This is normal.
Love IT!!! California needs to invest more in Green Tech!!! Prop 23 is down in the polls, but the Yes on 23 campaign just got a new influx of hot, anonymous cash, so we'll need to fend them off in the home stretch to Election Day.
Hit me back if you'd like to talk Prop 23. We're coming out with a bunch of great No on Prop 23 videos soon!
the same information is available for free. This is just another person who's fallen for the "how to make money online by becoming an expert" bullsh*t.
Doesn't seem to be any info on actually MAKING algae biodiesel. Just a commercial for a book. A PDF file book. Filled with Pictures. Maybe the title of the video should be "A book of pictures on how to make Algae Biodiesel." I'll just get all the info from the other 10,000 FREE You Tube videos filled with actual information. FREE. Oh, and Algae biodiesel- as great as it is- is only feasible with huge farms. A fish tank or even a swimming pool won't cut it.
@circusboy90210 That link is not working. Try this: worldwideweb.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/aquaticbiofuels/docs/0905_FAO_Review_Paper_on_Algae-based_Biofuels.pdf
Nice dream!! You only get OIL from algae...You still need lye and methanol to make biodiesel...I haven't heard any "homebrewers" using algae yet...Maybe in 10-20 years!
Oh, they're out there. Lye and Methanol are easy to come by. Not sure how cost effective this all is (I'd assume larger scale is more cost effective, small scale, not so much). But just like cord-wood houses, used frying oil bio-diesel, and the like, Algae "homebrewers" exist.
@chemo38 I agree with the point you make but as far as the methanol goes you can reuse at least 80% of it and hydroxide is cheap and you only need very small amounts amounts.
But I still think 100$ for a book you can easily loose in a computer crash is no good.
Yeah, $100 book is going to show me how to do something that isn't commercially viable yet. If this book presented a true method, it would be a whole lot more than $100. I hate youtube commercials.
Many things that aren't commercially viable are still useful. Am I saying you should buy the book? Hell no! But what I am saying is that you could easily figure out how to do this on your own, and make it fiscally viable for yourself. It's all in the dedication my good friend, all in the dedication!
Something I'm positive of is that the President can't know that the use of hydrogen by electrolysis has recently been perfected to conclusively produce completely thorough internal combustion engine performance in avarage gasoline and diesel engines using platinized titanium-based hydrogen generators, easily retrofitted to any vehicle with such type of engine. This is the way to turn heads at the Copenhagen summit, with hard science and proven testing by NASA back in the early Seventies.
My 11A Biology teacher has assigned a semester project in which we are required to create some form of experiment and center a presentation around the findings. I was thinking of creating some of this Algae Biodesil, but I dont particularly want to read a 600+ page book in order to do it. Does anybody know of a smaller, more practical, less time consuming way to create a small quantity of Algae fuel?
@ANTIEMO571 alcoholcanbeagas. com David Blume goes into detail about making ethanol so many ways... cattails 10x more than corn per acre, regrows, cleans water ways of all kinds of toxins. SeaWeeds plenty of alcohol. I realize your semester may be over but we live school everyday.
Aircaraccess. com air car books free. Nikolei Tesla was 1/2 way done building air car when Mysteriously his lab was destroyed. .. rockefellar, oil, greed, disposable society won that battle, RAW war's on
@circusboy90210 believe what you want .. illuminaughty is pretty good at hiding truth. Ever seen inside of HAARP or Area 51 or Vimana ? Tesla had over 700 inventions never built anything until he could see it work in his minds eye.... the 3rd of the 5 main pieces to that pneumatic air engine was made then his warehouse was torched. it's been over 13 years since reading the last pnematic manual published in 1936 that had some information on it... Bill Truitts skylark ? C 4 self.
@charukrsnadasa show some proof . then I will believe. tesla worked for a man who was an air expert but was not one himself. (george westinghouse.) much love.
I want that book!!! why don't you market it in Page One so that i can buy it in Hong Kong. I don't want to use credit card online. so dangerous. but i love that book, nobody else made something as good as this!!!!
Well, our peckerwood from east texas that is in the Whitehouse won't do it because it is not as sexy as drilling somewhere and polluting the planet like crazy. OMG! What will the oil companies do with all of the oil drilling equipment, etc. if all of a sudden we went to algae diesel? Oil companies might loose billions,
the b_ _ _ _ _ _ _ s. If you can not fill in the blanks maybe a call to Vana White is needed. LOL
I bought this book. Its a quick start to produce oil. But for the price... Well anyway. There needs to be more info on harvesting algae as that's the only reason that keeps algae from being a practical energy source. At least cover the use of ferric nitrate and cellulose to make it easy to harvest.
@sewings It has to do with people's values. ie: is my own title in office or the money I receive in corporate donations worth risking to help humanity?? Damn right it is.
Holy-Terrorist:>*=* Wow, interesting, of biological process to make biodiesel!
*=* Of algae with trash use for decomposition with algae!
I speak french and little english.
Agentoxedo07 5 days ago
I pressed OK to skip the YouTube ad, only to watch another ad. for the next 2.22min.
oomblikkies 1 month ago
Where can i get the song?
NorCalMediGrower 1 month ago
@lyteweaver not to mention there are four books at a hundred bucks a pop to get all the info you need
dadigitechman 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
See HtK7REGOJM4 For Commercial Algae Production
davidwgair 2 months ago in playlist algae
WHY DONT YOU MENTION TO THE SUCKERS THAT THE BOOK IS 'ONLY' $97 and you havent even proven it works. WAKE UP PEOPLE AND DONT SUPPORT THIEVES LIKE THIS!
lyteweaver 2 months ago
FUck you
Subvert1024 3 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
This worked for me. Thumbs up! I'm making my own fuel, assholes!
MrPavlovscat 4 months ago
if you beleive in this shit then why dont you sell it at the price that most needy can afford. at the current price only the rich or dishonest can affford and the ones that mostly need it are missing out. also a lot to ask without any real proof, just your vid and your say so. think about it!!!
lyteweaver 5 months ago
@lyteweaver hahha its best to read more.... makeing oil from algea easy to do at home just need a press and a bucket making plastics and feul (gas)) also easy with household reagents... reason gas at the pump is high has nothing to do with source but our rate of consumption you dont have to be good at math to figure that out, dont buy thier product makeing oil from algea is SIMPLE if you want to help fix the economy then do your part and supply urself w/ green energy ! (then $ drops)
CaptainZuluGamma 2 months ago
If these vendors are smart, they would allow an open forum on their site so that people can leave feedback to prove that the book actually is authentic. Also, they would give this knowledge away knowing that it will spread their name and reputation around the world quicker. Anyone that tries to sell with no feedback from the public... this is a red flag!
EasternMerchant 5 months ago
ALGIES WORKS.
hrflikk 6 months ago
anyone tried___ w w w diymagneticmotor com ?
70pda 6 months ago
This reminds me of a scam website selling 'super additive' that turns waste cooking oil into biodiesel, selling $70 a bottle -guess what, your car will work perfectly on it, but the 'super additive liquid' is nothing more than white spirit, probably colored into some fancy new color.
VERGIS92 6 months ago
@VERGIS92 methanol most likely.
circusboy90210 1 month ago
MUST WATCH "DEATH AT THE PARK" BY CPFAN445 HILARIOUS HORROR FILM COPY AND PASTE IF YOU LOVE THIS VIDEO
musicgeneration901 6 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Very cool
To see more innovative videos like this or want to share your own ideas visit ThinkStageDOTcom
ThinkStage 7 months ago
It wouldn't be called change if we do it the same way we're already doing it. haha
dzybmx623 7 months ago
Energy crisis is not solved by making an alternative energy and doing things exactly how we are doing them now. It's called being self-suffient. Communities that help eachother within that group of people will solve the problems of shipping products across country, if the products are only a mile or even 50 away. I know how much Americans love eating meat, I enjoy meat myself, but do people know that our excesive meat diet causes more carbon emitions than anything else... Change is different.
dzybmx623 7 months ago 3
What these hippies will never understand is energy conversion and potential/over head. You see 1st off you will only get 1000 watts max energy from the sun on a 1sq meter of surface. You'd be better off using PV to capture that energy. It takes about a gallon and a half of petroleum to make 1 gal of ethanol and I bet it will take 10 gals to make 1 gal of B100 from algae.
esnap 8 months ago
If Congress has the authority to prohibit cannabis, how long will it take for them to prohibit home made algae to benefit the oil companies who want to keep you dependent, or to prohibit tomatoes and basil. Their authority is derived from Commerce to which it has no end, when you do not affect or enter into commerce the prohibition can not affect your activity. Study Property law and you will find the only criminals out there are the politicians who violate American Jurisprudence OVERTLY ! ! !
OrganicDrew 9 months ago
The bullshit book
Mudwiggler 9 months ago
another bleeping commercial. Another "buy this book scam" as well.
aloisgault 9 months ago
@aloisgault yeah you would think that since this technology is not owned by any one person or group it could just be shared for the benefit of the whole society.
circusboy90210 1 month ago
Scam. This is not what I think of when someone mentions algae biofuels, instead I see genetically modified cyanobacterium hardwired to produce large amounts of alkanes from sunlight and fixing CO2 as a carbon source.
sejlefrew 10 months ago
I saw a blog by a teacher who got students to make algae fuel that drove them to Chicago!
donsjuand 11 months ago
The cost and knowledge to make this at home makes this not worth your time and money. Although algae bio-fuel is THE contender to eventually replace fossil fuels.
donsjuand 11 months ago
fuck you!
BallsOnFire83 11 months ago
Stop polluting You Tube. If you want to sell your book for the outrageous amount of money go to E-bay.
Your such a piss off....... Give me money.... so I can cut more trees to print my book.....for GREEN energy
Is there a lack of intelligence in the process or are some people just too greedy.
Welcome to the GREEN world. For you it's the world of green paper....or money
electro1300n 11 months ago
Silly people! $99.99 for a book on how to develop lots of questions about oil algae production is a lure for suckers!
claudius2u 1 year ago
The brightest chemical engineers have yet to figure out how to make this work. Exxon spent $600 million trying to genetically modify algae for biofuels. Still, no one has made it work. Yet this e-book will show you how. Amazing. (This is sarcasm in case you're from a non-sarcasm country.)
bobstevefrank123 1 year ago
@bobstevefrank123 What are the claims/reasons they say it doesn't work? These are the people who already own what THEY need.
donsjuand 1 year ago
@donsjuand It does "work." In the strictest sense, it is _possible_ to make hydrocarbon fuels from algae. But in an economic sense, no, it is still impossible to create identical hydrocarbon fuels from plant material such as algae. Anyone who has experience with chemistry will confirm that it takes a lot of processing (thus energy) to turn (existing) biomass into fuels identical to those pressure-cooked under sedimentary rock for hundreds of millions of years.
bobstevefrank123 1 year ago
@bobstevefrank123 So my understanding of the reasons you claim are that production process is costly due to high energy costs and reliant inefficient equipment. So the conclusion is that algae production has a need for:
1) Highly efficient equipment to be encouraged and sought from manufacturers
2) Cost control of input energy (ideally renewable sources like wind, sun, clean water source hydro).
With some key understanding and crucial research in those areas, I think algae could work.
donsjuand 1 year ago
@donsjuand Well, the vital point here lies in your second point. There needs to be a great deal of energy put into the process to turn biological lipids into fuels that a combustion engine could use. This is true of any biofuel. The energy must come from someplace, and so long as the grid is using coal, that is what is going to be used to create these novel fuels. Renewables like solar are a good idea, but right now it is still expensive. But then, you say, we should invest in researching...
bobstevefrank123 9 months ago
@donsjuand ...better solar panels. If we do get better solar panels (perhaps with nanotechnology), wouldn't it be a better idea to simply use the solar electricity to charge a battery? But batteries may not be efficient even in the future (due to physical limits)--so using solar electricity to create a chemical fuel sounds like a good idea. That's one place where biofuels could come in. But a frankly more efficient fuel is hydrogen (that is, using the solar electricity to split water)....
bobstevefrank123 9 months ago
@donsjuand ...Hydrogen does not have the constraints that accompany biofuels. You don't need a massive farm or expensive bioreactors. An electrolyzer can fit in your garage. I believe this, or something similar to it, has more promise for the future than algae biofuel. Algae biofuel still has the complication of running CO2 through the closed bioreactor. This is feasible for perhaps placing next to a factory (i.e., run the carbon from the smokestacks through a pipe leading to the bioreactor)....
bobstevefrank123 9 months ago
@bobstevefrank123 The production of Hydrogen requires energy. Hydrogen must be compressed. A readily available Hydrogen infrastructure must be in place before societies use hydrogen vehicles. Bioreactors can be vertical and inexpensive. Genetically modified algae can be made more efficient. A carbon dioxide source can be produced within enzymatic reaction vessels coupled to vertical bioreactors. However, I believe the ultimate source of energy will be anti-matter collision reactions.
chroniclerofthe70s 8 months ago
@donsjuand ...So algae biofuel will have a future in certain places where its need is simply pragmatic. As a long term and singular solution for the energy crisis, however, algae biofuel will never make the cut.
bobstevefrank123 9 months ago
@bobstevefrank123 Sure it takes energy to make it. I'm not sure what you mean by economic sense. I think with cooperation and common logic this could be or is resolved. The questions are:
What compels interdisciplinary cooperation towards a common goal of sustainable energy?
What are all the options for lipid extraction/production equipment?
Which are the most life-cycle efficient to operate?
What is the most efficient source of clean energy available to power them?
donsjuand 11 months ago
@donsjuand I'm making my judgment on a few assumptions. One is that any "algae biodiesel" plan would use the current technologies for processing biomass to liquid hydrocarbons. The other is that this would be done using a genetically modified strain of algae, and would thus need to be contained in a bioreactor to avoid cross contamination with other species.
On these assumptions, algae biodiesel is so incredibly inefficient. The most efficient biomass to fuel plan is sugar cane (not corn)....
bobstevefrank123 11 months ago
@bobstevefrank123 ... to ethanol. Algae biodiesel is a horribly inefficient version of using electricity derived from solar panels to power your car (which is what we should really be focusing on instead of biodiesel pipe dreams).
bobstevefrank123 11 months ago
@bobstevefrank123 Take into consideration the amount of potential biofuel each produces per acre per year.
Corn: 370 Gallons of fuel per acre/per year
Sugar Cane: 890 Gallons per acre/per year
Algae: Up to 5000 gallons per acre/per year
Now tell me, how is that inefficient, considering that the processing is roughly the same (in terms of energy input) for each fuel source?
AndrewDeLong 9 months ago
@AndrewDeLong But doesn't the processing of the biofuels also create more greenhouse gases...
brianng999 9 months ago
@brianng999 That depends how they are processed. With algae, a centrifuge process is used to ectract the oils, so there's not necessarily more grehouse gasses created.
AndrewDeLong 9 months ago
Comment removed
TheGecefeneri 9 months ago
@TheGecefeneri Yes, why do you ask?
AndrewDeLong 9 months ago
@bobstevefrank123 They could run algae processing on traditional fuel, initially, to create backup algae fuel, then use that for production. This is the trend with non-volume technologies - they cost a lot at first, the demand gradually increases or a large purchase or investment is made, the producers learn how to improve efficiency, work with manufacturers to clarify their needs, manufacturers adapt to needs, producers improve and we start to see efficiency gains. This is normal.
donsjuand 10 months ago
a waste of time to watch
topograve 1 year ago
waaa video spam
Rotorzilla 1 year ago
Love IT!!! California needs to invest more in Green Tech!!! Prop 23 is down in the polls, but the Yes on 23 campaign just got a new influx of hot, anonymous cash, so we'll need to fend them off in the home stretch to Election Day.
Hit me back if you'd like to talk Prop 23. We're coming out with a bunch of great No on Prop 23 videos soon!
- prop23FAIL
prop23FAIL 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
I just posted your video on VacationValet channel in my playlist for "Re-Newable Energy, getting started" Check it out when you can. Thank you.
VacationValet 1 year ago
the same information is available for free. This is just another person who's fallen for the "how to make money online by becoming an expert" bullsh*t.
ihmesekoilua 1 year ago
@ihmesekoilua And where would one find this Free info???.
myleftnutts 1 year ago
your way better of going to algae-planet(dot)com and buying a strain or 2 of algae and testing this out for yourself.
melrobRTF 1 year ago
Becoming a Hippi: Stage 9
idontknow5858 1 year ago
Yeah , lets see if we can get this past the oil companies !
mikehanoo33 1 year ago
Doesn't seem to be any info on actually MAKING algae biodiesel. Just a commercial for a book. A PDF file book. Filled with Pictures. Maybe the title of the video should be "A book of pictures on how to make Algae Biodiesel." I'll just get all the info from the other 10,000 FREE You Tube videos filled with actual information. FREE. Oh, and Algae biodiesel- as great as it is- is only feasible with huge farms. A fish tank or even a swimming pool won't cut it.
digikill 1 year ago 13
@digikill -
compare land utilization for transport..
[1] growing biofuel to power car
[2] growing crass to feed a horse
[3] growing fruit to feed a human on a bicycle
I bet 3 wins hands down
walter0bz 1 year ago
@walter0bz I don't know, I would want some whatgrass to go with that fruit and take a cow instead of the horse. FodderSolutions. net
Aircaraccess. com convert regular engines to run on air.
charukrsnadasa 4 months ago
@digikill worldwibeweb.fao.org/uploads/media/0707_Wagner_-_Biodiesel_from_algae_oil.pdf look here.
circusboy90210 3 months ago
@circusboy90210 That link is not working. Try this: worldwideweb.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/aquaticbiofuels/docs/0905_FAO_Review_Paper_on_Algae-based_Biofuels.pdf
aherrns 1 month ago
where they get their CO2?
supperstorm 1 year ago
This is definitely a ripoff... You'll need at least 50000k to produce maybe a hundred liters a month...
homien 1 year ago
Nice dream!! You only get OIL from algae...You still need lye and methanol to make biodiesel...I haven't heard any "homebrewers" using algae yet...Maybe in 10-20 years!
chemo38 1 year ago
@chemo38
Oh, they're out there. Lye and Methanol are easy to come by. Not sure how cost effective this all is (I'd assume larger scale is more cost effective, small scale, not so much). But just like cord-wood houses, used frying oil bio-diesel, and the like, Algae "homebrewers" exist.
AndrewDeLong 1 year ago
@chemo38 I agree with the point you make but as far as the methanol goes you can reuse at least 80% of it and hydroxide is cheap and you only need very small amounts amounts.
But I still think 100$ for a book you can easily loose in a computer crash is no good.
tomliordos 1 year ago
please explain and compare and contrast today usage with usage during the mesopotamian era. be specific and use examples.
datzfast 2 years ago
i think its wrong to use a human fertile egg for research and i think is fair to use living thigs as fule.
datzfast 2 years ago
you eat and drink and breath living things
giant648 2 years ago
@xntyghb where do you think crude oil comes from? essentially broken down plants and animals
bmtimv 2 years ago
@xntyghb this is how the original form of crude oil was developed.
FishyMoe 2 years ago
is 'nature' anything more than metabolism?
otacon451 2 years ago
Are you serious?.............
axe863 2 years ago
ORIGIN OIL = GREEN GOLD!!!!!!
vtdom1 2 years ago
Someone pirate and torrent, plz?
RobotBadger 2 years ago 2
Yeah, $100 book is going to show me how to do something that isn't commercially viable yet. If this book presented a true method, it would be a whole lot more than $100. I hate youtube commercials.
clytle374 2 years ago 79
@clytle374
Many things that aren't commercially viable are still useful. Am I saying you should buy the book? Hell no! But what I am saying is that you could easily figure out how to do this on your own, and make it fiscally viable for yourself. It's all in the dedication my good friend, all in the dedication!
AndrewDeLong 1 year ago
@clytle374 search "An Algae Bioreactor from Recycled Water Bottles" here on youtube.
Swansen03 1 year ago
@clytle374 . But you can have a felling of satisfaction, the sameas believing in Santa Claus or Deepak Chopra.
miguelmouta 1 year ago
@miguelmouta wait a minute. Santa is not real???
tomliordos 1 year ago
@tomliordos. Indeed, if you accept that Imagination is real, as Aleister Crowley used to say.
miguelmouta 1 year ago
I don't know about the book but it's actually not as hard as you think to produce algae biofuel.
soporificcvg 1 year ago
@clytle374 Can you explain why it isn't commercially viable? I would like to see the arguments.
donsjuand 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Something I'm positive of is that the President can't know that the use of hydrogen by electrolysis has recently been perfected to conclusively produce completely thorough internal combustion engine performance in avarage gasoline and diesel engines using platinized titanium-based hydrogen generators, easily retrofitted to any vehicle with such type of engine. This is the way to turn heads at the Copenhagen summit, with hard science and proven testing by NASA back in the early Seventies.
ThePresidentialTouch 2 years ago
this was just a commercial
kkezir 2 years ago
so you extract the oil and use the remaining organic matter as compost/animal feed?
i guess DIY algae biofuel could be a really usefull component of a self-sufficient smallholding ?
walter0bz 2 years ago
algae dumplings hahahah wtf
not sure about the book, but this seems like a great concept. why pay for energy when plants can give it to us for free :-)
barrentree 2 years ago 2
dude, who said your going to gas up for free?
datzfast 2 years ago
My 11A Biology teacher has assigned a semester project in which we are required to create some form of experiment and center a presentation around the findings. I was thinking of creating some of this Algae Biodesil, but I dont particularly want to read a 600+ page book in order to do it. Does anybody know of a smaller, more practical, less time consuming way to create a small quantity of Algae fuel?
ANTIEMO571 2 years ago
yes, get a cheap 6000 gallon swiming pool, fill it with water do not add chlorine.
when the water turns green and it always will filter the algae out dry it and dry press the oil out.
datzfast 2 years ago
and don't you have to then add achole to the oil, some chemical reaction happens?
TheEcoGeo 2 years ago
@ANTIEMO571 alcoholcanbeagas. com David Blume goes into detail about making ethanol so many ways... cattails 10x more than corn per acre, regrows, cleans water ways of all kinds of toxins. SeaWeeds plenty of alcohol. I realize your semester may be over but we live school everyday.
Aircaraccess. com air car books free. Nikolei Tesla was 1/2 way done building air car when Mysteriously his lab was destroyed. .. rockefellar, oil, greed, disposable society won that battle, RAW war's on
charukrsnadasa 4 months ago
@charukrsnadasa air was not teslas medium.
circusboy90210 3 months ago
@circusboy90210 believe what you want .. illuminaughty is pretty good at hiding truth. Ever seen inside of HAARP or Area 51 or Vimana ? Tesla had over 700 inventions never built anything until he could see it work in his minds eye.... the 3rd of the 5 main pieces to that pneumatic air engine was made then his warehouse was torched. it's been over 13 years since reading the last pnematic manual published in 1936 that had some information on it... Bill Truitts skylark ? C 4 self.
charukrsnadasa 3 months ago
@charukrsnadasa show some proof . then I will believe. tesla worked for a man who was an air expert but was not one himself. (george westinghouse.) much love.
circusboy90210 3 months ago
@charukrsnadasa send me a pdf of this information please if it actually exists.
circusboy90210 3 months ago
"it is also used to make algae pills, dumplings, food for shrimp, and much more..."
Really? Those were the only examples you could come up with?
amswak2000 2 years ago 2
It would be cool if you give it away for free and just take a donation instead.
I would only buy it on paper.
heavyweather 2 years ago 33
I want that book!!! why don't you market it in Page One so that i can buy it in Hong Kong. I don't want to use credit card online. so dangerous. but i love that book, nobody else made something as good as this!!!!
aeroscope 3 years ago
What is the % oil content per gallon of algae?
SBha30 3 years ago
about 70% for the best type.
theonesean 2 years ago
But wait, isn't there more?
EntropyHaptens 3 years ago 2
yup
auraltube 2 years ago
Well, our peckerwood from east texas that is in the Whitehouse won't do it because it is not as sexy as drilling somewhere and polluting the planet like crazy. OMG! What will the oil companies do with all of the oil drilling equipment, etc. if all of a sudden we went to algae diesel? Oil companies might loose billions,
the b_ _ _ _ _ _ _ s. If you can not fill in the blanks maybe a call to Vana White is needed. LOL
1foxtrot70 3 years ago
I bought this book. Its a quick start to produce oil. But for the price... Well anyway. There needs to be more info on harvesting algae as that's the only reason that keeps algae from being a practical energy source. At least cover the use of ferric nitrate and cellulose to make it easy to harvest.
cheaphardwarez 3 years ago 3
soylant green
plumber3dad 3 years ago
it's people
1Jedthered 3 years ago 4
greed
poopygirlmartin 3 years ago
guess it is not in their political interests:)
sewings 3 years ago 4
@sewings It has to do with people's values. ie: is my own title in office or the money I receive in corporate donations worth risking to help humanity?? Damn right it is.
donsjuand 1 year ago