Home > LPG > Some boring environmental facts about LPG |
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Joe90 Member Since: 29 Apr 2010 Location: Hampshire Posts: 6409 |
Similar calculation for humans is (I believe) @ 1.200000kg Co2e per kWh
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20th Jun 2016 4:29pm |
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PaulTyrer Member Since: 22 Jul 2013 Location: Devizes, Wiltshire Posts: 1253 |
So if humans are roughly 5 times higher CO2 than petrol engines, surely the answer is to keep nice big meaty V8 petrol engines and get rid of humans? |
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20th Jun 2016 4:36pm |
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Joe90 Member Since: 29 Apr 2010 Location: Hampshire Posts: 6409 |
Yes, but you would have to stop eating and breathing too! .
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20th Jun 2016 10:58pm |
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RR2008HSE Member Since: 06 Jan 2013 Location: British Columbia Posts: 2932 |
The reason you use more LPG is due to the energy density, so it makes sense that less energy/litre would give less CO2/litre. Very interesting. Thx |
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21st Jun 2016 12:32am |
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Dolphinboy Member Since: 07 Dec 2009 Location: Bristol Posts: 3156 |
That IS interesting to me zebedee!
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21st Jun 2016 10:31am |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8219 |
The calorific value of LPG is lower than petrol, however the octane is much higher, I've recently been playing with the ignition map in mine and got it running noticeably faster on LPG than petrol...
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21st Jun 2016 6:58pm |
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steptoe Member Since: 23 Jul 2012 Location: london Posts: 382 |
LPG vehicles used to be London congestion charge exempt. That changed in 2012 when Boris made changes to the rules. |
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23rd Jun 2016 11:21am |
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johnboyairey Member Since: 11 Jan 2013 Location: surrey Posts: 2032 |
All good news, against the uninformed, 'bloke down the pub' type experts.
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23rd Jun 2016 11:46am |
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mzplcg Member Since: 26 May 2010 Location: Warwickshire. England. The Commonwealth. Posts: 4029 |
I've had LPG cars and quite liked them. There are many environmental benefits to it but the main drawback for me was lack of factory installed systems. The bolt on aftermarket, dual fuel systems (certainly older ones) had plenty of issues and there simply aren't enough filling points around. Having to plan everything around knowing where to get fuel became tiresome TBH.
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23rd Jun 2016 1:55pm |
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RR2008HSE Member Since: 06 Jan 2013 Location: British Columbia Posts: 2932 |
Quick Chemistry lesson: in during combustion, you get a whole bunch of compounds from the reaction of oxygen and nitrogen. (Some will even continue to which compounds later.) We usually just call then "nitrogen oxides" or NOx. The "x" being the variable. I'd be pleased that they're close to zero (the lower the better) and not worry about the exact details. |
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26th Jun 2016 1:51am |
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