> Thanks for the pointer. Wood-gas was not a term I would have known to sea= rch. This > looks like an interesting article. > I remember a WW II soldier returning home with a story about a taxii ride= somewhere > that had a wood-gas system. > He said the driver would have to stop to tinker once in a while but it wo= rked well. If you have ever seen the UK originated TV series "Dads Army" about the Hom= e Guard, one of the episodes they are driving around in a bus with a big wo= od gas 'balloon' on top as the fuel supply. AIUI this was a common way of s= toring the wood gas on the vehicle if you didn't have a convertor mounted o= n the back bumper (which is probably what the taxi driver had, and had to p= ut more wood in every so often). --=20 Scanned by iCritical. --=20 http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist .