Wood Gasifier: Builder--39-s Bible- Transform Tree Branches Into

When the next ice storm takes down power lines for a week, your generator runs on the branches that fell with the lines. When diesel hits $7 a gallon, your tractor doesn’t care. When the supply chain stutters, you look at the woodlot and see a full tank.

Don’t modify the carburetor. Instead, build a “mixer” that fits between the air filter and the carb throat. It’s just a pipe with a venturi (a narrowing) and a needle valve to bleed in extra air. When the next ice storm takes down power

It started with a clogged carburetor and a pile of slash. Don’t modify the carburetor

“I felt like a caveman,” he says. “Digging a hole to bury gold.” It started with a clogged carburetor and a pile of slash

Your job as a builder is to maintain that zone. Too wide, and you lose heat. Too narrow, and you choke airflow. The “Bible” method: Start with a 4-inch throat for a 10 kW generator. Taper it by welding a stainless steel cone. It’s crude, but it works. Raw wood gas carries tar and ash. Tar will gum valves and rings in under ten hours. Ash will score cylinder walls.

A gasoline engine expects vaporized liquid fuel. Wood gas is dry and has a different air-to-fuel ratio (about 1.2:1 by volume, compared to gasoline’s 14.7:1).