
Originally Posted by
Windwalker
It's been a few years since my father was going to drive through the bridge tunnel with a Dodge van and a 20 LB propane bottle on the back. He was told he was not allowed to go through it and had to go around. Last time I went through, I was passed by a utillity truck that was clearly labelled "PROPANE POWERED". So, to the best of my knowledge, up to now, a 20 LB bottle was not allowed.
As to the secret of improving efficiency...
Having worked with electronics and electrical engineering, you are familiar with VECTOR DIAGRAMS. You are also aware that in an inductive circuit, the current lags the voltage by 90 degrees, and in a capacitive circuit, the current leads the voltage by 90 degrees. So, put both onto the same diagram and one cancels the other. What you are left with is the resistance. In a series tuned circuit, the reactance is zero at resonance.
Electrolizers represent a DC resistance, and can not be compensated for by either, but... They CAN be powered by an M-G set. Companies do use them to keep lightening out of the computer controls. With them, it does not matter what the load is, the generator powers it regardless. That load is reflected back to the source as a mechanical load on the motor. The motor represents an inductive load on the line with very little resistance. That CAN be compensated for.
I also started out my work life as an electronic technician.(I held a valid FIRST-CLASS FCC LICENSE for about 10 years.) Then later, worked as an electrical engineer for 13 years before butting heads with stress. At Thanksgiving, one year, a doctor gave me a choice of reducing my stress or being buried by Christmas. That was when I got into driving a truck. Obviously, since I'm still here, I don't have as much stress with this. But, during those 13 years, I also served as a project engineer, and finally as a project manager.
So, now, all you have to do is figure out what kind of circuit would be adjustable to the variations of the load, automatically. Solid state diodes, for example, during a reverse portion of a cycle, build up a barrier region. The larger the diameter of the diode, the greater the capacitance it presents. "Hocky-Puck" diodes have a pretty respectable diameter. The greater the reverse voltage, the wider the barrier region, and the lower the capacitance it presents. Completely variable, isn't it? You have heard of a "vari-cap" before. Used in electronics all the time, but I have never seen them in an electical diagram.
Actually... No. That is not my complete answer. Those hockey-puck diodes are quite expensive. The answer is much simpler than that. And, considering the number of those diodes it would take to do the job, what I'm doing takes up far less room, and is also far more cost effective.
That's all you get without some kind of legal agreement.