[Stoves] Anticipating future markets for stoves and fuels

Crispin Pemberton-Pigott crispinpigott at gmail.com
Sat Jun 25 07:35:52 CDT 2011


Dear Jeff

The use of condensate would be simply to drop it into the ground. There is a problem in winter because the ground freezes down 25 feet. 

Saving fuel is more important than worrying about water disposal so there will be a preference for the former. 

Regards
Crispin in Waterloo
------Original Message------
From: Jeff Davis
Sender: stoves-bounces at lists.bioenergylists.org
To: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves
ReplyTo: Discussion of biomass cooking stoves
Subject: Re: [Stoves] Anticipating future markets for stoves and fuels
Sent: Jun 25, 2011 01:54

Dear Crispin,

The thought "out of sight out of mind" has, well, crossed my mind when
people say that a condensing heater should not be use. Of course a large
amount a pollution can be dumped in a small area with a condensing
system but a non-condensing system still emits the same amount of
pollution. I'm assuming the same system is behind the condenser.

If the burner is running clean is there a use for the condensate?

Jeff




On Fri, 2011-06-24 at 11:28 -0400, Crispin Pemberton-Pigott wrote:
> If the temperature drops below 100 C there is a black, sticky mess
> running down the chimney to deal with if combustion is poor.


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