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A new turbine has been announced which is claimed to have unprecedented
low cost and ruggedness: http://www.theengineer.co.uk/Article...n+turbines.htm http://www.swri.edu/4org/d18/mechflu...rb/radflow.htm How significant is this announcement? How low-cost is low-cost? How rugged is rugged? What is the tradeoff to this design? Lower energy efficiency? What new applications will it enable or make practical? Turbine lawn-mowers? Turbine-powered bicycles? New personal aircraft? Moller SkyCar? Helmet-mounted turbine helicopter blades? ![]() Comments plz? (Btw, just as an aside -- what is a 'nanotechnology gas turbine' anyway? Is that one of those experimental dime-sized turbines etched from a silicon wafer that can be used to power a laptop or PDA?) |
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#4
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wrote:
A new turbine has been announced which is claimed to have unprecedented low cost and ruggedness: http://www.theengineer.co.uk/Article...n+turbines.htm http://www.swri.edu/4org/d18/mechflu...rb/radflow.htm How significant is this announcement? How low-cost is low-cost? How rugged is rugged? What is the tradeoff to this design? Lower energy efficiency? I like the idea, although I wonder how the turbine works. Does it work, like spinning fireworks, by slinging the air in a radial way? In that case, it is probably less effective than a conventional turbine. Also, the combustion part seems a bit "wasted area" to me (I know you need combustion, but you would rather not have placed it on the disc). I think you run into trouble with this design if you make it too large, for both rotating-mass reasons and turbine earodynamical reasons. Still, combining all the rotating parts of a jet engine into one is something brilliant. What new applications will it enable or make practical? Turbine lawn-mowers? Turbine-powered bicycles? New personal aircraft? Moller SkyCar? Helmet-mounted turbine helicopter blades? ![]() One of the first applications that springs to mind is model aircraft. Simplicity is very important there and fuel efficiency comes second. You could build real turbine model helicopters for a reasonable price. Comments plz? (Btw, just as an aside -- what is a 'nanotechnology gas turbine' anyway? Is that one of those experimental dime-sized turbines etched from a silicon wafer that can be used to power a laptop or PDA?) I do not know what the engine will do at extremely low Reynolds numbers, although I think you can construct the disc in such a fashion that the flow has no choice but to "follow the lines". I don't have a the faintest idea how effective it would be at a sub-milimeter scale. You could build tiny maintenance robots with it (to revise or check a conventional turbine ![]() interested first to build deadly bugs. Best regards |
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Dikkie Dik wrote:
wrote: A new turbine has been announced which is claimed to have unprecedented low cost and ruggedness: http://www.theengineer.co.uk/Article...n+turbines.htm http://www.swri.edu/4org/d18/mechflu...rb/radflow.htm How significant is this announcement? How low-cost is low-cost? How rugged is rugged? What is the tradeoff to this design? Lower energy efficiency? I like the idea, although I wonder how the turbine works. Does it work, like spinning fireworks, by slinging the air in a radial way? In that case, it is probably less effective than a conventional turbine. Also, the combustion part seems a bit "wasted area" to me (I know you need combustion, but you would rather not have placed it on the disc). I think you run into trouble with this design if you make it too large, for both rotating-mass reasons and turbine earodynamical reasons. Still, combining all the rotating parts of a jet engine into one is something brilliant. It's a radial inflow turbine - basically a centrifugal compressor running backwards. von Ohain's original jet engine prototype used a similar arrangement. But it worked so well that it was dropped like a radioactive potato. (See, in this case, the Germans _sere_ first!) What new applications will it enable or make practical? Turbine lawn-mowers? Turbine-powered bicycles? New personal aircraft? Moller SkyCar? Helmet-mounted turbine helicopter blades? ![]() One of the first applications that springs to mind is model aircraft. Simplicity is very important there and fuel efficiency comes second. You could build real turbine model helicopters for a reasonable price. Other than the Gee-Whiz factor, what would be the advantage? Model engines are so small that there won't be much, if any, weight savings, (Most of the weight will be the engine carcase and you're going to need a heftier gearbox), it'll be expensive, and who knows how long it will last? Comments plz? (Btw, just as an aside -- what is a 'nanotechnology gas turbine' anyway? Is that one of those experimental dime-sized turbines etched from a silicon wafer that can be used to power a laptop or PDA?) Basically. Feed it a few drops of alcohol, and off you go. Well - once you can get a reasonable amount of power from it. We're not there yet. -- Pete Stickney Java Man knew nothing about coffee. |
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