I personally believe in green and clean.Green to protect our Earth, use recycled material.Clean remove the rubbish, recycle and reuse.
Yeh.. recently come across a new material in wikipedia.org http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_reinforced_composite
The material is created via advanced composite technology combining Rice Hull / Rice Husk and Plastic bottles. into a timber like material...Rice husk... burnt away in millions of tons per year in South East Asia.Plastic Bottles... thrown in large quantity and used for recycling.
These two ingredients become the perfect ingredient for the new material known as fiber reinforced composite. Currently it is commercialized, I think that is the reason why it is in wikipedia.org... The only thing that catch my eye besides using Rice Hull and plastic is that . the Material can be recycled 20 times. That is interesting. Cos, the house material can be use again and again... for up to 20 times... This is unheard of...
Anyway. I contact the scientist and manage to get a container load of it for building a house. Yeh.. after using it. We realise that that the material is great for building houses.... and we build two low cost house with it.
Without using Timber... ZERO trees are cut.It is built like BUILDING with LEGO, as the materal is molded to have tongue and groove and all the color are mixed in the material before hand .... No painting needed.Yeh... Criteria for low cost housing ... The first criteria for me.

- ZERO timber usage,
- Long LASTING, and
- termite free,
- Toxic Free.
- Fast to Build 10 days or less per house and LOW COST.... preferably around 10,000 USD or less for 500 sq feet.
Among the many thoughts that came to my mind are:
- Do you have a commercial interest in this product or company? Sounds like it!
- No trees chopped down? Who cares! You either chop them down or they'll fall down by themselves as they get old. - Over-exploitation is the only problem.
- Rice hulls have been used for some time as a loose infill - successfully! So why grinding them up, grinding up the plastic, melting it all together, extruding it, etc. That all costs money and energy, besides causing contamination.
Bottomline: I'm not impressed!
Quoting from [germex]:Yes, the forum he is mentioning, leads to his own website. The idea of low cost ok. I still doubt the the withstanding capacity of the structure against nature's fury like winds, storms, rains and earth quake; the last but important against burglars. At best this could be seen as a development of alternative low cost construction to be studied further.
Quoting from [cyber chap]:
Yes, the forum he is mentioning, leads to his own website. The idea of low cost ok. I still doubt the the withstanding capacity of the structure against nature's fury like winds, storms, rains and earth quake; the last but important against burglars. At best this could be seen as a development of alternative low cost construction to be studied further.
You are right! The "structural strength" of the material depends on the plastic. If it is recycled, it also would have to have some "softener" added. That means, it will outgas over time. Furthermore, especially in hot climates the house will start getting out of shape, sagging, etc. pretty soon, so it will be a major disaster.
I like rice husks as an insulation, but in the form of a loose infill. For that it would have to be sandwiched between two hard layers, like for example ferrocement. That would of course mean that you can't drive a nail into the wall, but otherwise it would provide terrific shelter. And as rice husks are hard to burn, they won't be a fire hazard under these confined conditions.
Another solution would be preparing a thick slurry from used paper or cardboard and shaping it like a brick, with the help of a press similar to the ones used for adobe bricks. You could provide protrusions and dimples in the shape, to make it easy to assermble a whole wall without using any mortar. You would only use mortar as a stucco, to cover the wall. That wall would be pretty similar to a normal brick or block wall.
And there are of course many more options to build a sturdy, insulating wall for next to nothing. But this strange combination of organic and inorganic material...
Quoting from [germex]:Among the many thoughts that came to my mind are:
- Do you have a commercial interest in this product or company? Sounds like it!
- No trees chopped down? Who cares! You either chop them down or they'll fall down by themselves as they get old. - Over-exploitation is the only problem.
- Rice hulls have been used for some time as a loose infill - successfully! So why grinding them up, grinding up the plastic, melting it all together, extruding it, etc. That all costs money and energy, besides causing contamination.
Bottomline: I'm not impressed!
To begin with, I mentioned FERROCEMENT, but you constantly make reference to timber! Does this imply that you would look bad if you made this comparison?
I also asked you about the embedded energy you would need to collect, store, grind, inject, etc. your stuff. Besides, what about emissions caused in the generation of this energy, plus the plastic itself?
And I could go on ranting for hours, but I guess you get the idea why I'm not impressed at all. Besides, I still believe that your blog is in reality a commercial website. Nice try though!
There is a fine line between being persistent and hard-headed...
First, now you make it pretty clear that were indeed trying to fool us and that your blog is commercial. Thanks for showing your true face!
Second, you claim that you endorse "green", but don't spend one single word about the contamination you create with your system - or how you would avoid that if there were a way.
If you really appreciate my input, show it!
Properties
- Tensile Strength ASTM D 638 15.9 MPa
- Flexural Strength ASTM D 790 280 MPa
- Flexural Modulus ASTM D 790 1582 MPa
- Failure Load ASTM D 1761 1.5 KN
- Heat Reversion BS EN 743 : 1995 0.45%
- Water Absorption ASTM D 570 0.34%
- Termite Resistant FRIM Test Method 3.6
Could you make a comparison of your FRC product properties (ABOVE) VS wood properties??
Please reply ASAP
AL; V GAXIOLA
- Quoting from [francis teo]:
I personally believe in green and clean.Green to protect our Earth, use recycled material.Clean remove the rubbish, recycle and reuse.
Yeh.. recently come across a new material in wikipedia.org http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_reinforced_composite
The material is created via advanced composite technology combining Rice Hull / Rice Husk and Plastic bottles. into a timber like material...Rice husk... burnt away in millions of tons per year in South East Asia.Plastic Bottles... thrown in large quantity and used for recycling.These two ingredients become the perfect ingredient for the new material known as fiber reinforced composite. Currently it is commercialized, I think that is the reason why it is in wikipedia.org... The only thing that catch my eye besides using Rice Hull and plastic is that . the Material can be recycled 20 times. That is interesting. Cos, the house material can be use again and again... for up to 20 times... This is unheard of...
Anyway. I contact the scientist and manage to get a container load of it for building a house. Yeh.. after using it. We realise that that the material is great for building houses.... and we build two low cost house with it.
Without using Timber... ZERO trees are cut.It is built like BUILDING with LEGO, as the materal is molded to have tongue and groove and all the color are mixed in the material before hand .... No painting needed.Yeh... Criteria for low cost housing ... The first criteria for me.
- ZERO timber usage,
- Long LASTING, and
- termite free,
- Toxic Free.
- Fast to Build 10 days or less per house and LOW COST.... preferably around 10,000 USD or less for 500 sq feet.
VERY INTERESTING MATERIAL. ARE YOU THINKING ON MOUNTING A LINE FOR PRODUCING TYPES OF HOMES?Regards, Abelardo
Quoting from [francis teo]:
I personally believe in green and clean.Green to protect our Earth, use recycled material.Clean remove the rubbish, recycle and reuse.
Yeh.. recently come across a new material in wikipedia.org http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiber_reinforced_composite
The material is created via advanced composite technology combining Rice Hull / Rice Husk and Plastic bottles. into a timber like material...Rice husk... burnt away in millions of tons per year in South East Asia.Plastic Bottles... thrown in large quantity and used for recycling.These two ingredients become the perfect ingredient for the new material known as fiber reinforced composite. Currently it is commercialized, I think that is the reason why it is in wikipedia.org... The only thing that catch my eye besides using Rice Hull and plastic is that . the Material can be recycled 20 times. That is interesting. Cos, the house material can be use again and again... for up to 20 times... This is unheard of...
Anyway. I contact the scientist and manage to get a container load of it for building a house. Yeh.. after using it. We realise that that the material is great for building houses.... and we build two low cost house with it.
Without using Timber... ZERO trees are cut.It is built like BUILDING with LEGO, as the materal is molded to have tongue and groove and all the color are mixed in the material before hand .... No painting needed.Yeh... Criteria for low cost housing ... The first criteria for me.
- ZERO timber usage,
- Long LASTING, and
- termite free,
- Toxic Free.
- Fast to Build 10 days or less per house and LOW COST.... preferably around 10,000 USD or less for 500 sq feet.