Good grief, what do you plan to do with distillation fractions like #4 diesel, or white gas? Every crude has typical profile of finished product ratios that can be produced. In the 1980s there were tankers that made a good profit hauling diesel from NJ to Europe and carried Gasoline back. This was due to the difference in percentages of fuel consumed in each location.Weird Harold wrote:Randomiser wrote:Weird Harold seems to be ignoring the fact that there were reasons the Wright Brothers used an ICE instead of a steam engine for their plane.
No, I'm assuming that there will never be a Safehold equivalent of the Wright flyer.
Merlin does indeed want to encourage indigenous innovation, but the inner circle is already leaping over a lot of elementary research to production ready products.
Heavier-than-air flight is one technology that is problematic without resorting to ICEs. But gas turbines or even pulse-ramjet engines will run on any flammable liquid -- alcohol, perfume, coal-oil, etc. They don't need to run on fossil oil.
If Safehold can limit oil refining to simple distillation of Kerosene and Gasoline and ICEs to places an other option is truly unavailable (not just more inconvenient, truly unavailable) then they won't be stalled in an oil-based economy built in ICEs like the US currently is.Randomiser wrote:ICE powered vehicles are not just used for cars despite Harold's focus on them, they also form the end of every efficient distribution chain for goods, sometimes both ends.
That distribution chain was around and working fine when Steam ruled the rails and seas and "horsepower" meant four-hooved ungulates. It does NOT require ICEs.
Your fascination with steam is causing you to forget some key things. Steam is scalable, but at smaller sizes internal combustion engines are noticeably more efficient. At a minimum you must factor in the fuel used to warm up the boiler. There were three main reasons the US railroads converted to diesel power in the 1950s, warm up times of the Steam locos, small but growing differences in maintenance requirements, and the ability to abandon maintaining watertowers.
Wood is not that good of a fuel compared to fossil fuels, thanks to its lower energy density, poorer storage characteristics, and the extremely limited ability to increase production.
The end of draft animals for hauling freight was after the ability to make pneumatic tires in the sizes required for large trucks and more to the point, farm tractors. Horses require feeding even when not working, and farmers would hire out their teams when not pulling farm equipment.