Don't be sorry! Your enthusiasm is why I'm here! :D
I like your interpretation of my idea. I'll need to do some drawing and show what I mean to be explaining.
Don't be sorry! Your enthusiasm is why I'm here! :D
I've been trying to draw my own design, which is complicated by my wear induced arthritis.
Nice concept. I get the general idea. My only real concern is that a conventional Alpha V type Stirling engine has limited surface area for heat exchange, which usually necessitates a rather extreme temperature difference. That is, a lot of high heat concentrated in the relatively small area at the piston head. The tight seals required on the pistons also introduce more friction than other options.JessIAm wrote: ↑Tue Aug 03, 2021 9:02 pmI've been trying to draw my own design, which is complicated by my wear induced arthritis.
Here's how I would change your drawing:
Have the hot/cold cylinders in an Alpha Stirling Engine with a single crank case.
Have pipes:Water flows in the pipes to collect the heat from the compost pile, and heat the hot cylinder. This is the heating loop.
- Coiled within the Compost Pile
- Pipes connecting the compost pile coil and the hot cylinder coil
- Coiled around the hot cylinder
Make a similar system for the cooling system:Like the heating loop, water flows in the cooling system pipes to cool the cold cylinder.
- Coiled within a stream or some other cooling source
- Pipes connecting the cooling source coil and the cold cylinder coil
- Coiled around the cold cylinder
I don't think I've ever seen a V style alpha Stirling running with anything less than a flame of one sort or another. Usually something like a propane torch, so I'm guessing that it might be difficult to have one run on something like heat from a compost, though I've never tried it and wouldn't necessarily rule anything out.
Of course.The basic idea of heating and cooling the cylinders with separate loops of coolant is still sound.
Part of my goal with this suggestion is to use a much more efficient method to heat/cool the appropriate cylinders. Using a blow torch relies on air to transfer the heat, which is not a good temperature transfer medium. Coolants would be much more efficient, and therefor require less fuel.Tom Booth wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 2:29 pmI don't think I've ever seen a V style alpha Stirling running with anything less than a flame of one sort or another. Usually something like a propane torch, so I'm guessing that it might be difficult to have one run on something like heat from a compost, though I've never tried it and wouldn't necessarily rule anything out.
An LTD type Stirling on the other hand is designed specifically for low temperature difference operation, so it would almost be guaranteed to at least run, probably.
Of course.The basic idea of heating and cooling the cylinders with separate loops of coolant is still sound.
Any type Stirling engine has a hot side or end or cylinder and a cold side/end/cylinder of some sort. Using a different type of Stirling engine does not alter the basic concept.
I totally missed this from before. This is such a cool idea. Seems a little inefficient, since the camshaft is longer since the cylinders are separated. Still, pretty cool!Tom Booth wrote: ↑Sat Apr 17, 2021 1:48 am For a long time I've been hoping to find the time to try building one of this type Stirling engine, that might be adapted to your project.
Basically, it runs on hot and cold water.
Maybe it could be scaled up by using 30 and 55 gallon drums or something instead of just tin cans.
Screenshot_20210417-042838.jpg
I don't anticipate that it would produce much power, but should be inexpensive and uncomplicated.
I'm wondering, theoretically, a Stirling engine can run on cold. (Not theoretical really, it can, sort of)MikeB wrote: ↑Mon Aug 16, 2021 3:13 am 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 much heat your compost provides, I can't do a full calculation, but for every litre of 40 degree water you can pump through, you have a max of 26Wh available, assuming 100% efficiency...
MikeB, you got it in 1! 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. Note: A large black stone absorbing sunlight could also work for the heat source.Tom Booth wrote: ↑Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:50 pmOf course, that engine is REALLY running on ambient heat, or the ∆T between the cool wet paper and the warmer ambient.MikeB wrote: ↑Mon Aug 16, 2021 3:13 am 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 much heat your compost provides, I can't do a full calculation, but for every litre of 40 degree water you can pump through, you have a max of 26Wh available, assuming 100% efficiency...
Anyway, the point is, I'm not sure how it would be calculated exactly, but the cold water provided by the stream could, in theory, keep a Stirling engine running without the additional heat from a compost.
A flowing stream could absorb a virtually unlimited amount of "excess heat", which is something that needs to be taken into consideration when figuring energy output.
Likely the NEGATIVE heat, or cold provided by the limitless cold of the stream would provide more potential power output than the finite heat from the compost.
Also, a low ∆T does not necessarily mean extremely low power.
The Sun Pulse, just an oversize LTD engine puts out 500 watt to - 1.5 kw
There is a patent and various other links here:
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 two different things from a heat-source/cold-sink, and absolute temperature is only one of them! The other is volume - the stream has plenty, but if the compost heap was actually producing a lot of _Energy_ then it would still be heating up.