Added: 4 years ago
From: ukiahhaiku
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  • way to go India !

  • Wouldn't it be awesome to have a self sustaining farm like this in the USA? I want one!

  • Now thats being resourceful!

    Want to sell organic food? check out my blog - trybeyondorganic {dott} com

  • nice presentation....

  • good old cow dung.

  • It would work with old dung, if the sufficient amount of water is added.

  • No it doesn't smell because the gases are contained in the underground system. The gas is only let out as methane gas to a burner, and when methane is burning it doesn't smell unpleasant.

  • Does this system attracts flies and mosquitos?

    I am guessing it would smell aweful. Let alone the cow dung smells, added with water and stirred!

    Is fresh dung used in this system or the methane can be extracted from old dung?

  • Love it!

    Don't they also use dead animals and vegetable waste in addition to cow dung?

  • this is hella good technology... god job guys!!!!

  • After getting the gas, can it be use for producing electricity? Thanks

  • Well, if this video had captions it would be way more useful.... could barely understand the guy.......

  • good man. fantastic

  • Could you please give me the mobile/telephone/email contact of Mr. Jose Elanjhimattam.

  • Could you please give me the mobile/telephone/email contact of Mr. Jose Elanjhimattam.

  • @ukiahhaiku what is the cost of this project 

  • @svtuition 60 bucks, I really like this idea. I give credit where do. Fantastic = )

  • great, but how to use colelcted gas in my cooking purposes. Can I keep it cylinder

  • @svtuition

    The gas collected in the dome of the tank. There was no storage. The pressure from the tank pushed the gas the 50m distance to the kitchen. The flow of the gas was regulated by a tap on the kitchen wall.

  • @ukiahhaiku Thanks for the video, but his wife is cooking with charcoal and he is preaching biogas cooking lol quite ironic.

  • very good,sobhan allah how eazy it was !

  • This video really helps a lot

    thanks

  • YOUR A HAPPY MAN.....

    Pls watch my biogas digester use pig dung... small digester.....

    nice presentation....

  • 0:48

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  • How safe or dangerous is this? How much damage can a cigarette but do?

  • Thanks u for sharing that info with us and love how it is simple and useful everything is used back in a natural way.

  • this is good, pls can some1 tell me how to produce gas for my kitchen as gas supply is not available in my country

  • search for biogas, here at youtube.

  • i have built one at my farm let see how it works

  • sir 12000 indian ruppee in usd is 300usd and u said 60 usd for 12000

    ur wrong in maths though good in science lol

  • how bout this: they take all the vegetation and grain the bull eats in a year and dry and prepare it for fuel bricks. And get some boots to walk around in the dung.

  • Brilliant!!! I think we should be using similar concept and process in America.

  • Nice one mate. Why can`t Yorkshire Water do sommet like that ?

  • this is a little bit confusing and i still must do this for my homework -.-''die

  • This is great, but I do have a question:

    Can human waste be used as well?

  • Human waste can be used. The slurry from human waste can contain salmonella, so it needs a quarantine period of about one year after adding to the soil before the crops are harvested.

  • I confess, I didn't factor in Salmonella, though there's something I've also thought about, what if cow, or human dung(well, the gases generated) were used as an alternative fuel for cars?

  • Many people use the human dung too.

  • Fascinating o.o

  • lol

  • Very interesting! Thank you for the post!

  • Great idea. I was bit confused about the slurry. How did they remove the slurry after firmentation of 45 days. Is the old slurry being pushed out with the new one? Thanks for the information.

  • Thanks for the feedback.

    The slurry of dung and water ferments in the tank, and the pressure of the biogas produced pushes the slurry out the other end (in this case along the trench and into a collecting area)

  • Interesting. Is it sloped downwards towards the exit or is the floor of the dome tank area and exit channel completely horizontal?

  • I am not 100% sure, I think it is horizontal and the pressure from the gas pushes it out. I will see if I can find out and get back to you.

  • @ukiahhaiku

    The gas pressure generated in the fermentation tank will push on both input and exit channel. I think it will be important that the pressure needed to push out the exit channel is much lower than that of the input channel, so a sloping floor could assure that. Looking forward to your further info.

  • Im pretty sure there is a lever that you open every 45 days to let the slurry out, since it has completed its fermentation. almost. the shoot comes out from the bottom of the Egg then into the pit.

  • wow this is wonderful. I want to build one for myself now!! We have 2 cows. we need to get this going everywhere. Can't you use that type of gas to run cars too? If you convert the car?

  • I wish we could do this in Hawaii (U.S.A.)

  • Other parts of the country should learn something about this because really beneficial.

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