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Cant find old website

Posted: Thu Feb 01, 2018 8:09 am
by Wellington
I once remember seeing a website that sold a huge selection of stirling engines in the links section of this forum. I think it was a german website. Does anyone know the site i mean?
Thanks
Wellington

Re: Cant find old website

Posted: Fri Feb 02, 2018 1:48 am
by Ian S C
The German site that I know of would be that of Bohm Stirling Technic, they make a number of novelty Stirling Engines. I'v got the Type HB 7, a little horizontal GAMMA motor, not really a brilliant design as far as easy running, you have to take the piston out each time you run it , and clean the bore and the piston.
Ian S C
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Re: Cant find old website

Posted: Fri Feb 02, 2018 12:36 pm
by Wellington
Ian S C wrote:The German site that I know of would be that of Bohm Stirling Technic, they make a number of novelty Stirling Engines......
Thanks Ian. A real nice website. They must have spent years honing their craft.
Wellington.

Re: Cant find old website

Posted: Sat Feb 03, 2018 4:35 pm
by cbstirling2
Quite the contrary. Boehm engines are junk imho. Make it run before you make something pretty.

Re: Cant find old website

Posted: Sat Feb 03, 2018 4:42 pm
by cbstirling2
This engine Japan is pretty and a superb runner.
Generates meaningful power.
Less expensive than Boehm as well.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/Desktop-Stirli ... 2136054651
I think the engine had a limited production run as the manufacturing company seems out of business.

Re: Cant find old website

Posted: Sun Feb 04, 2018 3:46 am
by Ian S C
One immediate problem is the power cylinder and piston. The cylinder is brass I think, unless it's anodized aluminium, the piston is a stainless steel cup shape, the open end of the cup goes into the cylinder, that part being dead space, the con rod connects to the bottom of the cup/piston. I think I may bore out the cylinder and put in a cast iron liner, then make a proper piston from cast iron, with the flat end going into the cylinder as it should. I will then see about putting fins on the cylinder for cooling.
cbstirling, the Ross Yoke motor in your link looks good, I'm sure it would produce more than .6 of a Watt. Don't know where the microphone was in the video, the motor makes quite a bit of noise.
Ian S C