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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Tech and Science -> 
Motorcycle runs on swamp gas
    2021-08-04  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

Gijs Schalkx, a Dutch engineering student, modified his motorcycle to run on methane harvested from roadside bogs and ponds.

Aptly named Sloot Motor (“sloot” means “ditch” in Dutch), Schalkx’s ingenious vehicle features a modified Honda GX160 motorcycle engine, with a hole into the airbox, through which it receives the methane. The inventor hooks a balloon filled with methane to the hole, which acts as the fuel tank. The engine still starts with gasoline, but once it starts, it uses the methane to keep going. But what truly makes Schalkx’s project special is the fact that he manually harvests the methane himself from roadside swamps and ponds, a labor that takes approximately eight hours. The methane only lasts 20 kilometers at a top speed of 43 kilometers per hour.

Schalkx claims that he got the idea while reading about a fisherman who allegedly used methane collected while out fishing to fry some eggs. He adapted the concept to suit his needs, which also involved creating a tool for harvesting the methane and he calls it plompstation.

“A plompstation consists of a collecting apparatus which is anchored to the water, only reachable by those who bring their waders,” the inventor wrote on his website. “Next to that there is a pressure pump locked on site for transferring the fuel to your fuel container.”

While the Sloot Motor is undeniably ingenious, it wasn’t built as a serious alternative to electric or internal combustion engines. Its relatively low speed and disappointing fuel efficiency make it a poor alternative, not to mention the work required to actually harvest the fuel. Instead, Schalkx hopes that it will make people reconsider their relationship with technologies.

“Driving an electric car does not mean that you are exempt from the oil circuit on which our society runs. Throwing more money at a problem won’t solve it, we are the problem and we have to change,” he said.

While swamp-harvested methane may be a hard-to-come-by fuel in many parts of the world, Schalkx points out that “it is easy to find a little pond or ditch that will serve as source for fuel anywhere in the Netherlands.” As for the eight hours required to harvest enough bog methane for a 20km ride on the Sloot Motor, he claims the hard work just ensures “that it will be the best 20 kilometers of your life, priceless.”

(SD-Agencies)

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