Corn drying (Continued from Page C2O) adapted a pickup truck to experimentally, wood-gas and operated it DeKalb’s interest in STARTAKTT.TTV CUTABILITY DEPENDABILITY AFFORDABILITY That’s Pioneer’s mid-range maxi-value lineup! P4l For heavy pulpwood and light timber cutting 4 cu in /65 cc power to handle 16 -28 guide bars with ease Chambrake option available $394 * 95 utility chainsaw with - effective 4-pomt vibration isolation system Hand guard and chaln brake Only $279.95 P 26 Field-proven performance in a simple, dependable package 3 1 cu in /51 cc with yjfcl electronic ignition to handle 16 sprocket nose guide bar 5244.95 The Farmsaw For woodcutting chores on the farm -4cu in /65 cc electromc/igmtion, 6-pomt vibration isolation system and a lot 10% OFF ALL ACC. WITH PURCHASE OF NEW SAW A & N ENGINES Rd 2, Narvon, PA 2 mi. North of White Horse on Cambridge Rd. Prop. Amos K. Beiler Phone; 717-768-3227 PIONEER OIL P R,C S? : 50* - 65* - 85 95 c. ?? ? How Much Will You Pay? utilizing corn cobs as fuel has resulted m a production size cob gasifier at Water man, and others are planned for construction soon at other seed plants the com pany operates. Early test runs indicate that the system works well, and that cobs make excellent fuel. Cobs contain about 7200 BTU’s per pound compared io 8800 from oak. While considerable research has been done to refine wood gasification techniques, DeKalb’s gasifier is one of the first successful designs using cobs. Chuck Lindhart, seed operations manager for DeKalb, explains the cobs are not burned for heat directly because such a system would require very large equipment. Also, a heat exchanger would be needed, because heat coming off burning cobs is not clean enough for direct use. Using a heat exchanger would reduce usable heat by about 30 percent, and the total loss of energy through direct combustion would be 50 percent. According to Lindhart, the cost of drying seed com with cob-gas is considerably less than when burning propane, even at today’s prices. Comparing the two fuels, propane’s cost (at 50 cents a gallon), using a drying system already installed and paid for, is 56.6 cents per bushel of seed com dried. Drying with the cob gasification system, in SERVING THE FARMERS FOR 107 YEARS Each depositor incur**u MOjOOO HAMBURG SAVINGS FDIC aiHl ■ toiict mMPANY »u*i •tfosn iniuianci c**'o*at«n | I UUITII fill I Hamburg, PA Phone: 215-562-3811 A FULL SERVICE BANK GEOTHERMAL • Utilize The Ground Water Heat on Your Property ... Weils, Ponds, Pools, etc. 40% TAX CREDIT eluding capital outlay ex penses, will be only 28.6 cents per bushel. The technology of com cob gasification is simple. The cobs are “burned” (pyrolosis) in a limited oxygen environment which produces a gas. A small amount of ash remains. The gas is burned, and the resulting heat is mixed with outside air. The warm air, 110°F., is forced by a fan through the seed com ears to be dried. The seed drying process dries the cobs as well as the gram, and then the cobs are ready for use as fuel. The process is somewhat similar to making charcoal, says Lindhart. In com parison to natural and LP gases, the gas from corncob gasification is low grade, containing only a fraction of the BTU’s per cubic foot. The gasification chamber m the Waterman system is a hopper-bottom box about four feet square and made of heavy sheet steel, and lined with refactory. The problem of tar buildup, normal m cob gasification, has been overcome. As shown in the drawing, the burning gas enters a combustion chamber. There, it swirls m a cyclone fashion, providing a long dwell time so that most particulate is burned. According to Lmdhart, a land of “perpetual motion” exists when drying seed com with cob gasification. “There are about enough ENERGY ★ Heat ★ Cool ★ Provide Domestic Hot Water For Less Than V* The Cost of Oil ★ Air or Hot Water Systems AVERAGE OPERATING COSTS...LESS THAN *4OO PER YEAR! & ASSOCIATES, INC. Lancaster FarmmgV&Wday 1 , &ptemlier 13,* * cobs in the crop to dry the crop,” he explains. “When we get rolling we will pur chase very little propane or natural gas.” The company is con cerned, he explains, about supply interruption of petroleum-based fuels, especially during the drying season. “Seed com won’t wait until they turn your fuel supply back on,” he says. Another reason for using cobs is to help conserve exhaustible supplies of fossil fuels. A third reason for the conservative measure is to save money. The long-range economics of cob State urges farmers to set fuel supplies HARRISBURG - Penn sylvania Agriculture Secretary Penrose Hallowell today urged the state’s farmers to establish regular sources of supply for gasoline and diesel fuel purchases. He said that this was important to protect fuel supplies in the event that the Department of Energy would change the base year for making farm fuel allocations. “When the gasoline crisis struck m 1979, many farmers faced irregular supplies and shortages from their regular dealers. To supplement farm fuel needs, farmers often turned to purchasing needed fuel at the curb,” Hallowed said. “Farmers who have continued to purchased fuel supplies at the curb may find themselves on the short end of allocations if a new base year is selected.” Hallowed said, “I would urge any farmers who stid are purchasing gasoline or diesel fuels for farm use at the curb to return to their major suppliers without delay to protect themselves against changes in the base For Information, Contact: C.M. DAVID 400 N. Race St. Richland, PA 17087 717-866-7588 (Call 717-272-8580 Collect) -OR HAROLD C. FOSTER 80x96A Star Route Huntingdon, PA 16652 814-643-0248 (Call Collect) gasification are very favorable, he says. “It will take several com cob gasifiers to provide all the heat needed at this plant if we convert completely,” explains Lindhart. He adds that cob gasification may be adap table to on-farm use in drying feed com and possily other crops. The challenge is to develop a system for saving the cobs as they leave the combine. “I know of no farmers domg cob gasification,” says Lindhart. “But it certainly has long-range potential.” year or the farm allocation procedure. “Pennsylvania's family farms rely heavily on gasoline and diesel fuels,” Hallowell said. “Right now farmers are receiving allocations at 100 percent of use for the 1977 crop year but we cannot expect this system to continue in definitely . Any interruption in the farm fuel supply at any stage of production could prove to be economically disastrous.” Hallowell said that petroleum-based fuel con sumption on Pennsylvania farms totaled more than 120 million gallons in 1977. At least 60 percent of gasoline used on farms that year wait into dairy enterprises and production of com and forage crops which support the dairy industry. ) have a nice weekend... * li ItT 'M I,II Mm lttl 'W KH Uff ftk ** Uff tw BH I Cslovernorv) energy r*«ourc* cantws 458-8011 , p o box 24, uwchland, pa 19480