- Oct 21, 2011
- 28
Did wood pellets take over for corn? Are pellets a fungible substitute for corn in a corn stove? I don't know much about corn stoves. Just remember hearing about corn fuel from a few years ago.
I like burning corn much better than pellets. My st croix burns corn w/ very little flyash, just have to drop the clinker every 1 1/2 days and that can be done on the fly. I dont like the stir pot corn burners they do burn very dirty. My ash w/ corn is light brown in the lower part of stove to snow white in the top of the stove. But I am burning pellets due to cost ;(DexterDay said:To buy a ton of Corn around me (screened, cleaned, and bagged in 50 lb sacks) is over $300 a ton.
That's what happened. Multi Fuel stoves are still around and one day, down the road, it may be viable to burn corn again.
But pellets are much cheaper and much "cleaner" to burn.
tjnamtiw said:What happened to corn? Ask the EPA that one! Fed subsidies on corn for ethanol plus now they have pushed from 10% to 15% ethanol so the price of EVERYTHING that uses corn will go even higher. Never mind that it's a losing situation to make ethanol from corn, hence the incentives (read that as OUR money).
The 15% fuel will only be able to be used in the last two model years. I have no idea how they plan on having a third pump ---- 10% regular, 15% regular, premium. Maybe they'll resurrect the old Sunoco dial-a-blend pumps.![]()
vinny11950 said:tjnamtiw said:What happened to corn? Ask the EPA that one! Fed subsidies on corn for ethanol plus now they have pushed from 10% to 15% ethanol so the price of EVERYTHING that uses corn will go even higher. Never mind that it's a losing situation to make ethanol from corn, hence the incentives (read that as OUR money).
The 15% fuel will only be able to be used in the last two model years. I have no idea how they plan on having a third pump ---- 10% regular, 15% regular, premium. Maybe they'll resurrect the old Sunoco dial-a-blend pumps.![]()
To be fair, it wasn't only the EPA mandate, but the Ethanol subsidies that drove up corn prices. Those subsidies were allowed to expire at the end of 2011. I am hoping it will bring down corn prices, and maybe corn pellet prices will become competitive again.
SmokeyTheBear said:vinny11950 said:tjnamtiw said:What happened to corn? Ask the EPA that one! Fed subsidies on corn for ethanol plus now they have pushed from 10% to 15% ethanol so the price of EVERYTHING that uses corn will go even higher. Never mind that it's a losing situation to make ethanol from corn, hence the incentives (read that as OUR money).
The 15% fuel will only be able to be used in the last two model years. I have no idea how they plan on having a third pump ---- 10% regular, 15% regular, premium. Maybe they'll resurrect the old Sunoco dial-a-blend pumps.![]()
To be fair, it wasn't only the EPA mandate, but the Ethanol subsidies that drove up corn prices. Those subsidies were allowed to expire at the end of 2011. I am hoping it will bring down corn prices, and maybe corn pellet prices will become competitive again.
Those subsidies were because of the EPA mandate and the then lack of ethanol production capacity to meet the mandate.
rona said:What do we sell China?? US made cars? nope very little.
rona said:I have been burning ethanol since 85 in cars pickups chainsaws ,lawn mowers, boat motors, and older gas tractors.
Since then I have replaced a few rubber gas lines with newer style and that's about all I can blame on that gas. Of course it won't last as long in small engines but add either sty bill or sea foam and that eliminates starting problem.
We have been able to buy a blend of anything from 85% to 10% for at least a year and I have been burning 15% with no noticeable effects.
.
smoke show said:rona said:What do we sell China?? US made cars? nope very little.
http://content.usatoday.com/communi...-more-vehicles-in-china-than-the-us-in-2010/1
KodiakII said:What were you paying for pellets a couple of years ago when there was a "shortage"? I was burning corn @ four dollars a bag, TSC (This stuff's Chinese Store) is now selling it for nine dollars a bag...you do the math.
PerfectaDude said:Simple answer, corn is a feed stock, pellets are not. This is why, until they perfect the making of ethanol using methods other than corn fermentation, you won't see E85 readily available anywhere. Using a feed stock as a fuel is never a good idea, using waste products is. A few years back there was a company making pellets from corn stalks and other field waste left over after the harvest, don't know what ever happened to them. A corn stove might be good if you live in say Iowa and happen to own a couple hundred acres of corn field, for the rest of us it just never made sense. I used to burn cherry pits when you could get them at TSC, they went and reduced the bag size to 30# and raised the price so it makes little sense now. They burned nice but I found I had to mix them with pellets to keep them from blowing out of the burn pot.
rona said:PerfectaDude said:Simple answer, corn is a feed stock, pellets are not. This is why, until they perfect the making of ethanol using methods other than corn fermentation, you won't see E85 readily available anywhere. Using a feed stock as a fuel is never a good idea, using waste products is. A few years back there was a company making pellets from corn stalks and other field waste left over after the harvest, don't know what ever happened to them. A corn stove might be good if you live in say Iowa and happen to own a couple hundred acres of corn field, for the rest of us it just never made sense. I used to burn cherry pits when you could get them at TSC, they went and reduced the bag size to 30# and raised the price so it makes little sense now. They burned nice but I found I had to mix them with pellets to keep them from blowing out of the burn pot.
Where do you live? E-85 has been available for probably 5 years or more. Haven't you heard of flex fuel vehicles?
As far as feed corn being wasted the left over is a highly sought cattle feed.
Using corn stubble and other waste for making ethanol is being tested but so far not economically feasible. Maybe by artificially raising other energy prices it may become feasible but a lot of money has been spent so far with no positive results.
Burning crop waste as pellets was being done with corn stalks, soybean stubble, sunflower hulls. Google Eagle Biomass Fuels. But they may be out of business because they were pretty high priced and had lots of ash.
As I remember they were charging over 5.00 a 40lb bag and I could get wood pellets for 4.00 a bag so that didn't work.
:lol: :lol:PerfectaDude said:Sorry to hear about the loss of your Johnson...
smoke show said::lol: :lol:PerfectaDude said:Sorry to hear about the loss of your Johnson...
Had it replaced with one half the size. ;-P
j-takeman said:smoke show said::lol: :lol:PerfectaDude said:Sorry to hear about the loss of your Johnson...
Had it replaced with one half the size. ;-P
Twice the girth! ;-)
smoke show said:j-takeman said:smoke show said::lol: :lol:PerfectaDude said:Sorry to hear about the loss of your Johnson...
Had it replaced with one half the size. ;-P
Twice the girth! ;-)
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