How was that 40% calculated / measured?
Most of us are used to _ slightly _ lower numbers than that...
Search found 107 matches
- Mon Sep 27, 2021 5:29 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: I want to build a high efficiency Stirling electric generator
- Replies: 23
- Views: 11740
- Mon Sep 27, 2021 5:27 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Why are strokes are so much shorter than Stirling's?
- Replies: 1
- Views: 1852
Re: Why are strokes are so much shorter than Stirling's?
Pretty much everything is inter-dependant: materials; temperature difference; power; speed
Those numbers don't look very different to what I would expect for modern power-producing machines - LTD models are at the opposite end of the spectrum due to that pesky "Low" in the name.
Those numbers don't look very different to what I would expect for modern power-producing machines - LTD models are at the opposite end of the spectrum due to that pesky "Low" in the name.
- Mon Sep 27, 2021 5:24 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
- Replies: 30
- Views: 18848
Re: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
"It is well know that it takes TIME to transfer heat by conduction" Yes, that is one of the real-world compromises that we face - the longer we have for heat/energy transfer (in either direction) the more will transfer, but even at zero RPM the air on the inside will never reach the temper...
- Mon Sep 20, 2021 4:26 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
- Replies: 30
- Views: 18848
Re: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
The energy introduced as heat is "let out" as mechanical "work". This is what I was trying to get at with the wind-turbine analogy - you missed out the word "some" above - _some_ of the energy in the air inside the engine gets transferred to work done by moving the pis...
- Fri Sep 17, 2021 7:23 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
- Replies: 30
- Views: 18848
Re: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
I was once told that "All models are wrong, but some are still useful." The Carnot idea of heat as a fluid is a useful concept most of the time, but I don't think I've ever seen anyone suggest that it can be 'intercepted'. Similarly many of these conversations try to cover too much ground,...
- Thu Sep 16, 2021 7:21 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
- Replies: 30
- Views: 18848
Re: Programmatic control of Stirling Engines
I think the point that M13Calvin was trying to make is that if you were _able_ to build an engine that was optimised for adiabatic operation, and was 'perfect' in all other regards, it wouldn't be 100% efficient. This is unfortunately true for any engine, of any type - there is a theoretical limit t...
- Wed Sep 15, 2021 5:12 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Liquid Heating/Cooling of Hot/Cold Alpha Stirling Engine Cylinders?
- Replies: 82
- Views: 48225
Re: Liquid Heating/Cooling of Hot/Cold Alpha Stirling Engine Cylinders?
That is going to be a difficult question to answer, and potentially counter-intuitive too! A load of tarmac will certainly heat up a lot in direct sun, but not sure how good the heat conductivity would be - if there is too much insulating effect (as with the compost heap) then you won't get much tra...
- Wed Sep 08, 2021 8:17 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Liquid Heating/Cooling of Hot/Cold Alpha Stirling Engine Cylinders?
- Replies: 82
- Views: 48225
Re: Liquid Heating/Cooling of Hot/Cold Alpha Stirling Engine Cylinders?
That's the strength I see of this - the ∆T comes from two theoretically inexhaustible sources - the mountain stream, and the well tended compost heap. Whoa! The stream is a great source of cooling, but the compost heap not so much, nowhere near to inexhaustible in fact! The point is that you need t...
- Mon Aug 16, 2021 3:13 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Liquid Heating/Cooling of Hot/Cold Alpha Stirling Engine Cylinders?
- Replies: 82
- Views: 48225
Re: Liquid Heating/Cooling of Hot/Cold Alpha Stirling Engine Cylinders?
40 degrees F is kind of mid-range territory for a tea-cup model - some LTD engines can go as low as 4 degrees or so. On the other hand, for a power-producing machine it is tiny - they tend to operate with more like 400 degrees difference, so don't expect to run your house off it! Without knowing how...
- Mon Aug 16, 2021 2:56 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Stirling engine and cooler?
- Replies: 76
- Views: 18655
Re: Stirling engine and cooler?
I quite agree that that video is surprising, but too much so. The exact nature of heat transfer processes & sequences within the engine are certainly complex, but every motor in existence works by converting one form of energy into another, so any suggestion that running a stirling on top of a c...
- Thu Jul 08, 2021 5:10 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Vertical stirling engine.
- Replies: 6
- Views: 3130
Re: Vertical stirling engine.
A stirling engine with a flywheel beneath the cylinders, for a low centre of gravity. Fire might be placed between the crankshaft and the cylinder. My gut feeling is that you want the cylinder to be horizontal, not vertical. I don't think many engines have a flywheel that is heavy enough for it to ...
- Thu Jul 08, 2021 5:05 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Stirling engine and cooler?
- Replies: 76
- Views: 18655
Re: Stirling engine and cooler?
the problem is Improper load balancing. Maybe I didn't explain that well - the basic operation of any Stirling involves repeatedly changing the temperature of the working fluid. That cannot happen if the temp of the working fluid reaches the temp of the hot end. Unless the energy removed through wo...
- Fri Jun 25, 2021 7:29 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Vertical stirling engine.
- Replies: 6
- Views: 3130
Re: Vertical stirling engine.
I'm not sure I understand what you are after - fundamentally all engines work in any orientation, its just details like gravity-fed systems that need to be adjusted, so with most simple stirlings, the only thing you need to do is arrange for heat to be applied appropriately.
- Mon Jun 21, 2021 9:05 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: Stirling engine and cooler?
- Replies: 76
- Views: 18655
Re: Stirling engine and cooler?
I think you are getting overly caught up with the theory of work. Yes, doing work converts heat-energy into kinetic-energy, however generally speaking such processes live in the 20% - 50% efficiency range, so the remaining heat-energy must be removed from the system, or it will become impossible for...
- Wed Apr 14, 2021 1:55 am
- Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
- Topic: new concept of Stirling engine
- Replies: 62
- Views: 20892
Re: new concept of Stirling engine
"I removed the regenerator and replaced it with a heat exchanger."
I missed that little gem the first time - what does it mean, since the whole point of a regenerator is that it is a specific type of heat exchanger already?
I missed that little gem the first time - what does it mean, since the whole point of a regenerator is that it is a specific type of heat exchanger already?