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| #Post#: 6270-------------------------------------------------- | |
| EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: lynx wind Date: March 24, 2017, 7:32 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I designed and built this engine 11 years ago. It comes out now | |
| and then for testing. But lately I have been pushing for | |
| funding to get this developed. The video here is of the | |
| prototype - 1 chamber engine. The next engine is a 10 hp 2 | |
| chamber 190 cid engine. Version 2 is 10" diameter. | |
| The engine in the video is an 80 cid 1 chamber. We are testing | |
| the alternator to get the speed, hz and voltage coordinated. | |
| Steam engines run slow so we don't run it as a pressure engine. | |
| Steam engines are better as heat engines. In this video we are | |
| using air supply of 130 psi and the exhaust is open so it is a | |
| bit loud. | |
| Steam is different because there is initial kick from the | |
| pressure and then the pressure drops as the heat is given up. | |
| Out comes droplets of water. With air we have to push out the | |
| large volume of uncompressed air at 14 psi. | |
| The purpose of this engine is to produce electricity from | |
| typically un-useable fuels such as biomass, chicken crap, etc... | |
| Yes, there is a guy in Arkansas that wants to burn the manure | |
| to heat and light his barns. A steam engine is ideal as a | |
| co-generation system. It can use waste heat and also give up | |
| waste heat. | |
| The other purpose is to make an engine that burns as clean as | |
| the kitchen stove and is quiet. It can run on gasoline,, | |
| diesel, alcohol.... but burns the fuel completely and clean | |
| because the fuel has enough air and time to burn at a high | |
| enough temperature. | |
| If you know anyone with an extra $100k laying around let me | |
| know. | |
| https://youtu.be/BGtbyFwPjJw | |
| #Post#: 6271-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: CG Date: March 25, 2017, 4:53 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Very nice. | |
| The obvious answer to your question is: If you can't get an | |
| investor interested, you need to "crowd fund". Go fund me etc. | |
| Also is it patentable? That costs money and takes years, then | |
| you have to argue with the patent examiners which is very | |
| frustrating and time consuming. You'd be surprised what they | |
| come up with. | |
| Keep us updated we are in your cheering section. | |
| #Post#: 6296-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: Benjamin Date: February 8, 2018, 11:52 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| These are good information you should read. | |
| #Post#: 6297-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: LynxWind Date: February 13, 2018, 9:04 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I'm slowly moving closer to getting this generator built. It is | |
| very difficult for a lone individual to get something off the | |
| ground. I have applied for Grant money after visiting with | |
| Innovation consultants and Industrialists. One big challenge | |
| was narrowing the focus to a market that has a problem that this | |
| innovation is unique in solving. Sounds easy but it's not an | |
| easy question to answer. | |
| So the focus now is laser - the prototype will have a small | |
| footprint so it can be carried by one person. You put scrap | |
| wood or any biomass in the self feeding hopper, light a fire. | |
| The result is clean combustion, no smoke, no noise, electricity | |
| (12 and 120v), optional cooking, milling, heat and hot water. | |
| This would market to off grid people, campers, 3rd world Relief | |
| Organizations... | |
| Marketing will be done using the Zapato model - Someone buying | |
| this in the Western World will know that one will be donated to | |
| a Village not having power. Partners are Raincatchers.org and | |
| CroptoCup, and others when things are ready. | |
| The generator could also be made in a larger size in Phase 2. | |
| #Post#: 6298-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: suineG Date: February 15, 2018, 8:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| So crowd funding is out? | |
| #Post#: 6299-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: CG Date: February 15, 2018, 10:26 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| No noise or smoke? I 'll need to see that. Is there a video of | |
| this? How heavy is it? What are the normal electric watts you | |
| can expect from a few sticks of wood. | |
| I would think that a steam engine would be heavy because it | |
| needs to contain the steam pressure. It would have to be heavy | |
| to perform all those tasks. | |
| Need help? I know a few retired guys who would. | |
| I also am in a very close relationship with a international | |
| energy company that might be able to help in some way. | |
| #Post#: 6300-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: LynxWind Date: February 16, 2018, 5:11 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Crowdfunding isn't what it used to be. When you sign up you are | |
| spammed to death by companies that prey on innovators. Not that | |
| crowd funding can't work but it's better for small projects, | |
| tech, novelty. Not so much industrial innovations | |
| No smoke/no noise is relative. There are gases of combustion, | |
| mostly water and CO2. Because the temperatures are so high in | |
| the combustion chamber there isn't the normal creosote and | |
| un-burned fuels of a normal camp fire. Target weight is 60 Lbs, | |
| but it's early stage and that may change. | |
| This wont be a device that puts out 6 kw. It could if it were | |
| much bigger. Probably more like 250-500 watts into a storage | |
| battery. Power will be enough to grind grains, light LED bulbs, | |
| charge electric tools, provide communications, provide heat and | |
| hot water.... | |
| #Post#: 6304-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: CG Date: February 17, 2018, 7:41 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Lots of questions: | |
| What makes this better than a regular small steam | |
| engine/generator ? | |
| Or maybe there isn't any others? | |
| How would the engine be controlled since different fuels burn at | |
| different rates? | |
| Would you have to constantly stoke the fire? | |
| How high does the pressure get? | |
| Any investor would need these answered and more. | |
| #Post#: 6307-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: LynxWind Date: February 18, 2018, 2:01 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I've been working with and studying steam for many many years. | |
| That's actually how I got into wind turbines. I needed a | |
| non-cogging low rpm generator. Of course we don't find them off | |
| the shelf so I learned to build them. | |
| I have designed and built a lot of engines. Piston engines have | |
| an over square geometry which means the stroke can't be much | |
| longer than the bore diameter. They develop highest power over | |
| 25% of the stroke, and not much around TDC or BDC. So trying to | |
| get a lot of power from low pressure steam requires a very large | |
| bore. Then there is the problem of compression in a piston | |
| engine. A little is Okay because it softens the TDC and raises | |
| the temp a little. But does steal some power. Then there is | |
| the problem of expansion rate and if you expand too much you | |
| risk condensation and even vacuum (both steal power). Then | |
| there is the problem of size, lubrication and parts count | |
| associated with the steam engines you may have seen at county | |
| fairs. Then there is the problem of the boiler. Large pressure | |
| vessels are potentially dangerous explosion risks. Controlling | |
| a boiler to a high degree is difficult with an engine expected | |
| to perform over a large power curve. I could go on and describe | |
| the challenges of porting, valves and compound engines. In my | |
| opinion the best steam engines are turbines (over 50hp) or | |
| Uniflow (under 50hp) because they adhere closer to the laws of | |
| thermodynamic efficiency. | |
| After years of study, prototyping, testing I arrived at what I | |
| feel is the best design to deal with most of the challenges | |
| faced by mechanical engineers in the field of steam power. | |
| Keep in mind, steam is old and it is modern. Our Navy runs on | |
| steam and most of our power grid is powered by steam today. | |
| Steam is very powerful. | |
| #Post#: 6308-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: EnGEN steam electric generator | |
| By: LynxWind Date: February 18, 2018, 2:01 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The engine I designed can be thought of as an infinitely long | |
| steam catapult. The virtual piston runs in one direction, the | |
| exhaust is always open so there is no compression, inlet of | |
| pressure is automatic, the engine can freewheel, it can ingest | |
| water without hydro-locking, it can run at very high rpm or put | |
| out tremendous torque at a few rpm. It follows the laws of | |
| thermodynamics closely (hot side hot, cool side cool). The | |
| engine has very low friction, very short ports, one inlet valve, | |
| five moving parts. | |
| Speed is controlled by a couple things: throttle, sizing of the | |
| boiler tubing, size of the firebox, and most importantly the | |
| load. The load is a 12volt battery which is being charged by | |
| the air core alternator. As voltage hits 14-15 volts and | |
| amperage starts going up the power in/power out reach a balance. | |
| At 20 amps the engine is requiring @1/2 hp and about 60psi | |
| continuous from the monotube boiler. There just aren't more | |
| btu's to be had from the firebox. The engine can also be | |
| charging at 20psi as the fire calms, so is not rpm sensitive | |
| like a typical generator that has to run at a specific rpm. | |
| 120 vac can be drawn off an inverter which doesn't put any major | |
| demands on the engine. | |
| If pressure rises above what the engine can use or if the engine | |
| is shutdown on standby, pressure releases up the exhaust via the | |
| safety pressure release valve, or the fire can be automatically | |
| shut down via a thermostaically controlled damper. I have had | |
| over pressure happen a couple times (intentionally). I have | |
| also had a monotube boiler rupture and/or develop a leak many | |
| times (sometimes intentionally). Imagine a squirt bottle. | |
| Water squirts out, drips down the casing, pressure drops. It's | |
| not like a pressure vessel. I have also operated a monotube | |
| boiler with leaks. It doesn't build as much pressure but still | |
| works. | |
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