Bulletin 43 Comparative Fuel Values of Gasoline and Denatured Alcohol in Internal Combustion Engines

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. M. Strong Lauson Stone
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
243
File Size:
9952 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1912

Abstract

Under the terms of the act establishing the Bureau of Mines, this bureau was authorized to carryon the work of testing and analyzing fuels which had been conducted by the technologic branch of the United States Geological Survey. That work included in its scope an investigation of the availability and uses ofliquid as well as solid fuels, for the original outline of the fuel-testing investigations contemplated, as soon as the funds would be available, a study of the liquid-fuel resources of the country and the making of related researches to determine how these resources could be utilized with greatest efficiency. Owing to the fact that many difficulties were being encountered in the adaptation of the heavier fuel oils for convenient use in internalcombustion engines, it was deemed best to begin the investigation of liquid fuels with tests of gasoline, a fuel in more or less general use. When this investigation began, the extensive introduction, especially by foreign powers, of liquid fuels for small naval craft had awakened much interest. However, the quality of gasoline was reported to vary materially in different countries and the quantity available was said to be rapidly decreasing, with the probability of a prohibitive increase in price. At the same time the claim was made that denatured alcohol, of fairly uniform quality, could be procured in all parts of the world, that unlimited quantities could be readily produced at a low cost, and that this fuel could be used much more efficiently than gasoline in internal-combustion engines. Such statements naturally led to a widespread belief that the time was near at hand when denatured alcohol would entirely displace gasoline as engine fuel. Therefore, the first investigations of the liquid mineral fuels logically embraced a careful series of comparative tests of gasoline and denatured alcohol in engines. A series of over 2,000 such tests was conducted at the Government fuel-testing plants at St. Louis, Mo., and Norfolk, Va., details of which are given in the following pages. The report is published by the Bureau of Mines because of the transfer of the fuel-testing investigations to this bureau.
Citation

APA: R. M. Strong Lauson Stone  (1912)  Bulletin 43 Comparative Fuel Values of Gasoline and Denatured Alcohol in Internal Combustion Engines

MLA: R. M. Strong Lauson Stone Bulletin 43 Comparative Fuel Values of Gasoline and Denatured Alcohol in Internal Combustion Engines. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1912.

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