Have you factored in the role of the specific heat of vaporisation of water into your efficiency claims every time you produce steam?
@Mr67chev
6 жыл бұрын
how many doobies did it take to come up with this one? it sounded like a great idea when he gets high.
@mangyscavenger
13 жыл бұрын
I've already run this idea by a few forums Stirling motor enthusiasts go to, so hopefully, others are already experimenting with this.
@mangyscavenger
13 жыл бұрын
This would be very easy to test on a single cylinder Sterling heat motor. Just tap a mist valve into heat chamber. Heat the chamber, inject a very small amount of water, & see if the motor increases speed, which it will. A Fresnel lens can be used to heat chamber. Would run on water & sunlight.
@mangyscavenger
13 жыл бұрын
Right on the money. You're heating ONLY the amount of water needed in the moment to run the turbine. That's a lot less than heating an entire boiler. Control pressure by timing the rate of injection. Monitor pressure to determine rate of injection.
@wizardman42
13 жыл бұрын
when you condense water at 1200 PSI the recycle temps goes way the heck up , preheat the "condensed water " on the exterior of the engine. Any liquid that goes form high pressure to low pressure will turn to vapor regardless of tempature
@DDStarkey
15 жыл бұрын
It all sound good, but a few errors are listed below. 1. The first law of thermodynamics: Energy can neither be created nor destroyed. It can only change forms. There is no free lunch, for every unit of power out of a system, there must be an equivalent unit put into it. 2. While you say that the only difference between water and steam is 2-degrees (wrong), a huge amount of energy is required to convert water to steam (heat of vaporization). 3. Steam is always recycled.
@moisesmartinez5703
3 жыл бұрын
you have to watch the entire video. have you ever seen how a fuel injector works?
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