Thanks to all for the very quick replies. I was going to quote individually, but to save space; I’ll sum it up here. Actually, I see I didn’t save any space with this long winded reply. But this is a onetime reply to get my idea on the table. Future posts will be more streamlined.
Thanks, Bruce. I’m in learning mode here . . . and I am slow and busy, so it will take me weeks of forum education before I start building. I changed the title of this thread from “Building” to “thinking”. Don’t want to disillusion anyone to actually believing I am sniffing the PVC glue just yet. Can you edit the title?
JF and Tony, thanks also for the quick reply and your wisdom. Glad to see a gas motor is not outright rejected. With that in mind it will keep up my enthusiasm during the learning curve.
I think we are all focused on power density. Very loosely translated . . . “it’s the greatest amount of power packed into the smallest volume, with low noise, lowest heat, least pollution, best controllability, with good durability, for the lowest cost”. OK, admittedly a very loose definition, but you get the idea
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I’m in a residential neighborhood and I am in continual stealth mode regarding noise pollution even though the neighbors seem to care less about their barking dogs. I like the whine of the roots blower but doubt neighbors do. I plan to package it in a box lined with Dyna Mat (or whatever it’s called). It’s that silver, sound-deadening stuff you see being installed in Hot Rods and custom cars. Decibel reduction will be a goal. In a former life (25 years ago) I worked with roots blowers (we called them roughing pumps) in a high vacuum environment. They were driven electrically in town and by gas engines in the desert. We used them to pull down extremely large volumes to a few millitorr quickly. I have forgotten a lot of that experience but they were extraordinarily reliable and require zero maintenance except for an oil change.
I don’t mind paying for a good tool that helps me accomplish my goal. But at the same time I like to use up stuff that’s been lying around for years and already paid for. Some of the FB electrical horsepower numbers I see are problematic. The KW, amps, and electric motor costs don’t compare to the “free” gasoline (or E-15) stuff I have laying around. 10-50 gasoline HP is irrelevant for me compared with a 10-15HP electrical motor. With gas, my power density is great; electricity scales up too fast.
I too have limited indoor floor space. My plan is to have both motor and roots pump outside the shop, well muffled and sound insolated. With a DIY dyno in my future I also have a sound deadening idea with a concrete-block-tunnel muffler.
This just in: Thanks Rick for chiming in. I was just about to send this reply. As you know I am a newbie but my assumption is the PTS bench is rather immune to the vagaries of the power supply. How else to guarantee repeatability? If that is true what difference does it make if it is coupled to 8 vacuum motors or a quiet, clean, injected, E-85, Falcon or Vega motor? (Rhetorical question). Thanks for your advice. Ok, forget the Vega motor.

Yes, I will buy Bruce’s plans shortly.