Not a lot of details, but here's a nice shot of a homemade still. The homemade still seems to be constructed using a stove and a paint can condenser. See previous "still making". Link.
Homemade still...
Not a lot of details, but here's a nice shot of a homemade still. The homemade still seems to be constructed using a stove and a paint can condenser. See previous "still making". Link.
Recent Entries
- Tiny solar-powered brass engine in a wineglass
- Maker Shed kiosks at Fry's
- New hackerspace in Chicagoland: Workshop 88
- Mint tin electronics dev kit packs the essentials
- Olympus BioScapes competition winners
- Mac mailbox
- LHC tweets its first circulating beam of 2009
- Building a shop presence notification system
- Vacuum tube prototyping board
- Free LED Cookbook from TI
Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
Leave a comment
Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!
Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.
$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)




































I know that deisel engines can run off vegtable oil as per Make Volume 2; therefore it only makes sense that vegtable oil can be used in place of fuel oil to operate a furnace, stove, or a still.
I think that the vegtable oil can be converted to alcohol/ethanol.
Am I correct in this belief? If I am, does anyone know how to make a safe working still? I think modern GM cars are designed to run on pure ethanol.
Reply to this comment