I thought you guys on here would appreciate this. Over the last month my Dad and I have been developing an absolute seamless propane conversion kit for small gasoline engines (1-100hp). This kit works off vapor propane and fumigates the intake using his patented vacuum controlled LPG regulator. The beauty of it is you can leave the gas tanks in place as well. (if you choose to do so) If you run out of propane just turn the gas valve on and away you go on gasoline again. No modifications to the motor other than tapping 2 ports in the intake. This is still in the final stages of development. None are for sale yet unfortunatley. Not that it doesnt work but we need adequite instructions printed for multiple engines.
My reason for the post is I would like input on what people in this field know about propane powered vehicles so far? From my understanding people sort of poo-poo on it because of the lack of power, terrible throttle response(think of bog when you throttle up a forklift) and enormous gas consumption. Also many small engine conversions I see are not variable. They simply are a regulator just dumping 1.2 cfm at all times. The motor idles on the same amount of fuel as it does wide open. (User feathers throttle/adjusts gas flow until rpm slowly comes up every time the motor changes load or rpm) Like I said some are a serious joke that it can even be sold let alone getting government contracts for it.
Somebody please give me some feedback. We have made a kit that revs up faster and smoother than the motor on gasoline like I said (completley seamless). Would this spark more interest in conversions combined with a decent price?
Here is a rough video of a Toro Zero turn with a 28hp Kawasaki motor running on pure propane.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8AI8...ature=youtu.be
My BIG question is has anybody seen a mower running on propane run that good? Price for a full kit will be between 500-600 out the door. Compared to some that are $3000 and 1. run like crap, and 2. are under powered.
We have purchased competitors kits just to see how they work compared to ours. So far all I will say is we are not impressed with anybodys yet. Not only from an engineering standpoint but from a overall performance as well. Very sad to see stimulus $$ poured into crude junk when 2 guys can make a far superior product in a month with no assistance.
All input is appreciated. If anyone is willing to let me use a different type of mower for advertisable results/writing install instructions I can pretty much guarantee you a free conversion kit installed after we collect data. I want to get as many motors successfully running as possible for more validity when we put this on the market and go for extensive testing.
My reason for the post is I would like input on what people in this field know about propane powered vehicles so far? From my understanding people sort of poo-poo on it because of the lack of power, terrible throttle response(think of bog when you throttle up a forklift) and enormous gas consumption. Also many small engine conversions I see are not variable. They simply are a regulator just dumping 1.2 cfm at all times. The motor idles on the same amount of fuel as it does wide open. (User feathers throttle/adjusts gas flow until rpm slowly comes up every time the motor changes load or rpm) Like I said some are a serious joke that it can even be sold let alone getting government contracts for it.
Somebody please give me some feedback. We have made a kit that revs up faster and smoother than the motor on gasoline like I said (completley seamless). Would this spark more interest in conversions combined with a decent price?
Here is a rough video of a Toro Zero turn with a 28hp Kawasaki motor running on pure propane.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8AI8...ature=youtu.be
My BIG question is has anybody seen a mower running on propane run that good? Price for a full kit will be between 500-600 out the door. Compared to some that are $3000 and 1. run like crap, and 2. are under powered.
We have purchased competitors kits just to see how they work compared to ours. So far all I will say is we are not impressed with anybodys yet. Not only from an engineering standpoint but from a overall performance as well. Very sad to see stimulus $$ poured into crude junk when 2 guys can make a far superior product in a month with no assistance.
All input is appreciated. If anyone is willing to let me use a different type of mower for advertisable results/writing install instructions I can pretty much guarantee you a free conversion kit installed after we collect data. I want to get as many motors successfully running as possible for more validity when we put this on the market and go for extensive testing.

They hook these things up with tons of propane. Badass looking. They run off liquid propane though. Like a forklift does. Liquid propane tanks. Not vapor tanks.
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