Following on from this thread ...
http://www.biopowered.co.uk/forum/index.php/topic,865.msg7685.html#msg7685There's something really screwy going on.
The bio had sat in the processor and cooled to 26°C over night. I took a sample and it looked reasonable, a few soapy lumps but OK. I decided to play it safe and just add winteriser, pump out and settle. This seemed to have worked for all the samples I'd taken.
So I did just that. Quite nice looking bio pumped into the settling tank, then suddenly I got thick, grayish/brown soap. Pumping out from the bottom of the tank means that all this gunge was floating on the bio. Even I know hat's just not what's supposed to happen.
I stopped the pump quickly, drained the remnants into a barrel and spent the rest of the day trying to work out what was going on. I could well be wrong, but I'm pretty dammed sure the oil was dry. If that was the case there's no water present to make soap. Added to that the soap appeared at the demeth stage not the reaction stage.
To my knowledge in four years of reading bio forums, although is often talked about, no one has ever claimed to have one or described what a reverse reaction looks like. With no chemistry knowledge you would assume if would revert to oil, but what if that wasn't the case and it reverts/converts to some other gloop?
Could what I'm seeing be the elusive reverse reaction. It upholds my claim the oil was dry. It appeared at the right time in the process. It appeared after a long demeth period. It could explain the strange floating behaviour of the "soap" and the rubbery glycerol which set in the pipe work within an hour.
I did cock up on the sums, but only a little and what I gained by my error I lost by reducing the base , so not massively overdosed with catalyst.
Ducks and waits for incoming!