Fool wrote: ↑Sat Jun 29, 2024 6:12 am
Tom Booth wrote:Just as you have been doing to me and others on this forum since your arrival.
It is not I that discourages you. The Carnot theorem is reflecting nature.
You would have to prove that assertion. The Carnot limit equation and how it's being applied in academia, is a completely arbitrary theoretical imposition, 100% the product of the human imagination without reference to "nature" actual observation of reality or empirical experiment.
Nature will discourage anyone by failure. The Carnot rule protects a very long drawn out process of building leading up to what has already learned to be a failure.
I've asked for ANY evidence of any such "failure". But there have been no such experiments. Under such circumstances there can be no repetition of failure for something that has never been tried.
Just for example, on the old thermodynamics thread I was told several times if the sink of a Stirling engine was insulated the engine would stall.
Nobody had done the experiment, that was a logical assumption based on the Carnot limitations theory. A false assumption.
There are posts on old threads stating a Stirling engine could never run without a flywheel, at all. Again, based on the Carnot limit assumption. Again this turned out to be false.
Instead it can be used to help. Oh my! My engine is only getting an efficiency of 1.5%! Wow! That's good! What do you mean? Well Carnot says the maximum you will get is 2%. You are getting an incredible 75% of the Carnot limit. That is way better than most engines. Keep up the good work.
That is not encouragement. It's stopping progress in its tracks, saying little if any additional progress or improvement is possible so don't waste any more time trying, and conveys the same message to everyone else, in perpetuity.
A very damaging consequence immediately as well as for future generations.