Greetings and a few Q's
Posted: Thu Sep 13, 2012 7:58 pm
Greetings all -
Been lurking for a bit and gathering tons of info. Thought I'd finally sign up in hopes of kicking off my new project. I'd like to drive my wood stove blower off a stirling engine. This will be the actual blower moving air through a shroud and out into the room - not the typical stove top fan. Seems like a natural fit...hotter stove means faster fan, colder stove, lower fan...stove burns out, fan stops.
My main concern is a) getting enough power and b) noise. I think power should be OK. The blower right now is ~80 watts, so that is the rough stirling design power. The stove top typically runs 400-500F an sometimes up to 800-900F. I don't have a problem cutting a hole in the stove top and fitting the bottom section of the displacer cylinder so it can actually be 'licked' by flames inside the stove. I can also braze a set of fins to the cold side to really move the heat out. So 800F hot side, room temp cold side should be a fair dT.
The big concern is noise. Every post I see talks about how quite a stirling engine is. Every video I see...clack!...clack!...clack!...clack! One video the guy even remarks the stirling sounds like a 2-stroke gas engine! This will be pretty much unacceptable for an engine on the stove in the living room. I intend to run nice bearings, bushings, balanced flywheels, watch the displacer clearance, etc. Plus, I'm looking at some low speed / high torque designs which should run pretty slow and hopefully quiet. But then I'll be geared up to run a squirrel cage blower at a decent speed...maybe 250 at the stirling and 1000-1250 at the blower.
So the main question to those who dream stirling...can an 80-100 watt engine be built to run quiet given a 800F hot side and room temp cold side? Side question - if there is noise...where does it come from? Displacer hitting the cylinder? sloppy bearings on the pistons/con-rods?
Thanks for any additional insight!
Corey
Been lurking for a bit and gathering tons of info. Thought I'd finally sign up in hopes of kicking off my new project. I'd like to drive my wood stove blower off a stirling engine. This will be the actual blower moving air through a shroud and out into the room - not the typical stove top fan. Seems like a natural fit...hotter stove means faster fan, colder stove, lower fan...stove burns out, fan stops.
My main concern is a) getting enough power and b) noise. I think power should be OK. The blower right now is ~80 watts, so that is the rough stirling design power. The stove top typically runs 400-500F an sometimes up to 800-900F. I don't have a problem cutting a hole in the stove top and fitting the bottom section of the displacer cylinder so it can actually be 'licked' by flames inside the stove. I can also braze a set of fins to the cold side to really move the heat out. So 800F hot side, room temp cold side should be a fair dT.
The big concern is noise. Every post I see talks about how quite a stirling engine is. Every video I see...clack!...clack!...clack!...clack! One video the guy even remarks the stirling sounds like a 2-stroke gas engine! This will be pretty much unacceptable for an engine on the stove in the living room. I intend to run nice bearings, bushings, balanced flywheels, watch the displacer clearance, etc. Plus, I'm looking at some low speed / high torque designs which should run pretty slow and hopefully quiet. But then I'll be geared up to run a squirrel cage blower at a decent speed...maybe 250 at the stirling and 1000-1250 at the blower.
So the main question to those who dream stirling...can an 80-100 watt engine be built to run quiet given a 800F hot side and room temp cold side? Side question - if there is noise...where does it come from? Displacer hitting the cylinder? sloppy bearings on the pistons/con-rods?
Thanks for any additional insight!
Corey