Thanks Gil. That's one possible mix; the mix used at Coolspring Power Museum contains propane and I can get the exact formula if anyone is interested (just send me a PM). The problem is you can't pressurize this mixture over 100 psi or the propane will condense and the mix becomes adversely affected. If I'm not mistaken these gasses are kept in separate tanks and mixed in the correct proportions as they enter the engines' fuel stream at Coolspring. Propane that you buy at your local store is stored as a liquid at 100-200 psi. So the amount of this gas mix stored in one of these tanks at less than 100 psi won't last long even for a tiny engine like mine.
That's right, Brent. Wayne keeps them in separate tanks and with his precision mixing regulators he delivers into on pipe or tube at 80% Hydrogen with 20% propane. In addition, with his set-up, these percentages are infinitely adjustable so he can fine tune a mix to a particular engine when needed.
With the hydrogen, methane, and carbon monoxide I believe you can compress it nicely into a single bottle and that bottle purchased empty can cost many hundreds.
Wayne has also worked out a way to start a larger flame ignition engine and warm it up with the hydrogen straight or as an 80/20 mix. Once it is warm, he has been able to leave pure hydrogen on the pilot flame/flames for the ignition and switch the operating fuel to propane. This saves considerably as a large engine can burn a lot of expensive hydrogen. This works on 4 cycle slide valve engines but not well on non-compression engines.
If you have Wayne's Flame Ignition Book on Internal Combustion Engines, in the beginning, page xiv and xv have tables of illuminating gas composition by region and heating values of engine fuels in BTU per cubic foot and BTU per pound.
Now I'll edit my other post on street gas!