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Commando911

01/22/13 5:25 PM

#211482 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Wow that's one of the most detailed posts I have ever seen from a first time poster. Welcome to Ihub.

P2O WORKS...very, very, very well!

Rawnoc

01/22/13 5:33 PM

#211484 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Sorry, but I refer reality. See, I was actually there and saw the tagged weights on the nearly stacked bins that fit perfectly into the trucks.

Here's some pics for you. 500 lbs isn't "being generous" -- they got up to and just over 800 lbs. Here's one that's 577 pounds at the bottom. Longs win:







buenokite

01/22/13 5:36 PM

#211485 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Excellent and informative post. I will be interested in the topics that you mention in your post that you will address in the future. At the very least this could drive a fact-based debate.

jcoukr

01/22/13 6:06 PM

#211488 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Rock tenn Might want to know about this before they start plastering the country with p2o machines. Oops too late Jacksonville site is under construction.

guzaling

01/22/13 6:23 PM

#211489 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

I totally disagree with your post Doc...P20 works...stay tuned!

stocker11

01/22/13 6:24 PM

#211490 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

I know your math is way off (I'll explain in a later post)

100% CORRECT DD

01/22/13 6:34 PM

#211491 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

It takes 10-12 people to drive one tow motor to unload one of those 60' trailers.... but wait, there is more.... They don't make 60' trailers and they don't make 10-12 person tow motors.
I will post more later when I am done laughing....

Do you realize how much manpower and overhead is required to manage, unload, sort and warehouse 50 truckloads? Tap,tap,tap… is anyone in there?]

BeerIsGood

01/22/13 6:51 PM

#211494 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Forget about all that consumer plastic. It amounts to peanuts compared to the industrial plastic going to landfills daily.
I packed my 40 quart cooler full of beer and a sandwich and sat at the local landfill for a couple days to observe how much industrial plastic was coming in. If I drank a can of beer for every ton that was dumped daily, I would have been out of beer by noon and needing a ride home.

I followed up on the sources. They do sell some of the pure non-contaminated highly sorted plastic you refer to but 90% I found was getting land filled.

Think industrial, the same type of plastic day in/day out.

Zardiw

01/22/13 9:26 PM

#211506 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Interesting math.....however....building a chicken farm as you put it will result in huge numbers of eggs in the future......and JBII started with a strategic plan in place.......which will pay handsome dividends down the road.........z

Zardiw

01/22/13 9:27 PM

#211507 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

What does JBII do with unwanted, unsorted and dirty plastic?


They make End-User Fuels like this. To the tune of 281 Barrels/Day per processor potential production. This works out to about $10M/Year/Processor revenues.

Bingo Baby. And the output of JBII's P2O processor(S) is absolutely beautiful:



JBII Fuel Products and Specifications:





Firing up the lawnmower with JBII gasoline! From Techisbest:

My unrehearsed video:



This lawnmower has not been run this season. The smoke you see when I first fire it up is from it sitting idle. Note that the longer it runs the cleaner it runs.

The jar used is the one on the left in this pic:

Fuel Ouput:



EMail to Techisbest:

Nice to hear your lawnmower ran well with the fuel tapped directly off our gasoline condenser.

Our gasoline is no different than highly refined gasoline from a refinery. Our gasoline is different than gas found at the pump because we do not inject the additives and low cost cutting agents (butane injection), aromatics, and other additives to artificially inflate the octane thereby reducing the amount of high-cost gasoline. Many additives are injected in pure gasoline to increase the margin on gasoline at the pump. Our fuel was tested in a new engine long ago and the spark plug, head, valve seats and valves were inspected. There was no carbon build up, pitting, burns, or oxidation on those parts. We were quite impressed by how cleanly it burned.

Regards,

John Bordynuik

And they sell it to these (more customers on the way):

1. Coco Paving:

Coco Asphalt Engineering, a division of Coco Paving, Inc., entered into a Supply and Service Agreement for the Company’s ultra-clean, ultra-low sulphur fuel.


2. Oxy Vinyl:

Oxy Vinyl Canada, a wholly owned subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY - News), has agreed to purchase JBI's low sulphur heating oil for $109.80 per barrel.

3. Indigo Energy:

long-term fuel supply agreement with Indigo Energy Partners, LLC (“Indigo Energy”).

“We are very impressed with JBI, Inc.’s proprietary technology and the quality of their fuel products,” stated Martin N. Underwood, Jr., COO of Indigo Energy



4. XTR Energy:

the signing of a multi-year transport fuel supply agreement with XTR Energy Company Limited (“XTR Energy”).



z

snow

01/23/13 2:36 AM

#211518 RE: Arthur Edward Whoof #211481

Dr GoldSmith

I find your post interesting. However, you seem to forget that JBII has an agreement with RKT which means a supply of waste plastic that may be enough to have a hundred processors running. This is industrial plastic that is presumably one or two sorts. Therefore your post may have some relevance when it comes to the current processors but not the future processors at the RKT sites.