Weird Harold wrote:I don't misunderstand, I oversimplify.
If crude oil -- or Fire Vine oil or Oil Tree oil -- will burn, it will fire a boiler. Unless you get very lucky, the same is not true for ICEs.
Refining is highly preferable because there are useful fractions to extract for other purposes, no matter where you burn the remainder. Refining is necessary for efficient ICE operation.
But that is oversimplifying to the point where it is outright wrong. Early realworld car history involved running ICE engines on unrefined "mountain oil", usually purchased in small bottles from an apothecary, where it was a long since common item for a multitude of uses.
As long as the oil was of high enough quality, it worked perfectly fine in an ICE.
However, ICE engines couldn´t become common until refining became effective, because there just wasn´t enough production(or cheap enough) of oil of that high quality.
However, there´s absolutely nothing saying that any of Safehold´s sources of oil isn´t such high quality(or the opposite of course).
Also, if you build some ICE right, diesels, glowbulb engines and others for example, they really CAN run on a surprisingly many types of oils.
Most modern diesels for example, despite specifically NOT being designed for it, can usually run on cooking oil. Including USED cooking oil taken directly from a frier.
A lot of vegetable oils will also work perfectly fine.
Point being that a modern diesel, while advanced, is actually less suitable for this than a primitive one made for a multitude of fuels.
So no, refining is most definitely not necessary. It is preferable for reliable mass use but certainly not a requirement.
And if the local sources of oil are of high enough quality, then it´s a completely moot point, because then refining is specifically NOT needed at all.
For the sake of making this point, you need to realise that the kind of unrefined oil you could get from an apothecary in the 19th and early 20th century (before the best sources ran dry), were of such quality, that you could pick a random airplane of today and run the engine on it quite fine. You might cause longterm maintenance issues, but that´s just because it´s a high performance engine.
Weird Harold wrote:So what you're saying is that "Bunker C" is crude oil with all of the easily flammable and volatile fractions removed -- that it is less flammable than pure crude?
That is preferable yes!
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LarryWill729 wrote:Note to all, please be careful when discussing EFFICIENY of various power systems. Efficiency can be, and is, based on different methods of comparison. During my training in Thermodynamics in Navy Nuclear Power School, the efficiency of gasoline ICS was given as 18%, and Steam power plants was a maximum of 30%. Granted I went through that school almost 30 years ago, and things have changed, but those numbers are what I remember and were given as best values in theory, not practice.
Aye, the numbers are not completely directly comparative, and there are additional efficiency costs for all systems, though steam generally ends up with the worse share of those. Steam is very good for a few things, like HUGE scale power generation, but overall, ICE is vastly more efficient for common use.
Also, those numbers of yours, they have definitely been overrun quite some time ago.
There are also some recent advances that might make ICE drastically more efficient.
For example, a team of designers managed to come up with a design for a constant combustion ICE a few years ago, if it works out well outside of a lab as well, it will be rather revolutionary as it pretty much doubles how much of the fuel is used efficiently during the combustion.
In lab conditions they claimed around 60% efficiency.
The "cylinder" looks almost like a turbine engine.
And *lol* at the nerd discussion. At least i can say that i understand it (if roughly at some points) even if i´m soooo not going to get involved with it.