Engines embodying the Cyclone technologies will have broad markets for motive power and power generation. Early effort is being given to developing the U.S. military market, in parallel with civilian applications. APS has the exclusive license for all military applications in the U.S. – a very important long-term market, and for which development contracts are pending. It also has a non-exclusive license in the U.S., Canada, and the Caribbean for large generator sets powered by Cyclone engines using biomass as a fuel. APS also has the license for the U.S. Postal service, which is expected to replace its fleet of 140,000 small mail trucks starting within a few years. APS has an option on a license extension for generator sets and auxiliary power units under 20 kilowatts in the U.S. – a huge and very near term market. Various applications can run from as low as 1 kilowatt, up to 1 megawatt. The above listed advantages can have a dramatic beneficial result in military as well as civilian applications. At fixed base applications, garbage or any locally available biomass fuel source can be burned cleanly, drastically reducing the cost of power generation, while getting rid of bothersome waste. Biomass fueled power generation is expected to be rapidly growing, and eventually huge in size, with the Federal Government pushing hard for growth in this area. Unlike the expensive and capital intensive requirements to produce high grade liquid fuels that will run in internal combustion engines and diesels, the APS power generators can burn any fuel that is combustible. That includes wood, cornstalks, grass, farm waste, animal waste, garbage, etc. The cost of these fuels should be a small fraction of that necessary for the highly refined derivatives from them, or from conventional fuels.