Search found 521 matches

by matt brown
Sun May 19, 2024 12:35 am
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's "Ambient Heat Engine" Experiment
Replies: 178
Views: 193356

Re: Tesla's "Ambient Heat Engine" Experiment

According to an article by Nikola Tesla some of the HEAT passing through a heat engine is CONVERTED into some other form of energy (mechanical motion, momentum etc.) and so never reaches the "sink". He envisioned that given a heat engine running on Ambient heat with great enough efficienc...
by matt brown
Sat May 18, 2024 5:58 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

caught it prior edit...Your a bigger blowhard than "fool". AC units are fairly cheap these days, except for electricity. When I lived in Phoenix (early 1960s), the population was small and most people had swamp coolers and they worked great. However, as the population exploded, all the law...
by matt brown
Sat May 18, 2024 4:55 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

According to Tesla's theory... If we first ran the Peltier module to cool the bottom plate. (Keeping it insulated of course, to preserve the cold). The engine could then run on the surrounding ambient heat, and with perfect insulation and a 100% efficient engine, it could run indefinitely. He recog...
by matt brown
Sat May 18, 2024 3:42 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

Let me ask you fool. Do you doubt that evaporative cooling (using water) can reduce the temperature of the air? i.e. "swamp cooler". Why, OMG, how is that possible! Water boils at 212°F !!!!! You couldn't possibly use evaporating water to cool below 100°C !!!! Evaporative cooling with wat...
by matt brown
Sat May 18, 2024 3:24 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?
Replies: 25
Views: 6885

Re: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?

Could i ask for source of this information ? I've been studying this stuff for 50 years... Alpha have 1.41 more cc at 90 phase angle. Beeing all other equal. Gammas do.suffer from lowest working fluid beeing heated and putted to work. Or all extra dead space is cushion to absorb pur precise pressur...
by matt brown
Sat May 18, 2024 3:10 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?
Replies: 25
Views: 6885

Re: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?

One major difference...hot gamma has more output for same regen than cold gamma and hot beta has more output for same regen than cold beta. Even with excellent regen, this is usually a big difference in overall efficiency. An alpha has the lowest regen and the best torque (everything else equal). h...
by matt brown
Thu May 16, 2024 1:26 am
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?
Replies: 25
Views: 6885

Re: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?

One major difference...hot gamma has more output for same regen than cold gamma and hot beta has more output for same regen than cold beta. Even with excellent regen, this is usually a big difference in overall efficiency. An alpha has the lowest regen and the best torque (everything else equal).
by matt brown
Thu May 16, 2024 12:48 am
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: The TRUTH? η = 1 – (Qc / Qh) = 1 – (Tc / Th)
Replies: 545
Views: 28449

Re: The TRUTH? η = 1 – (Qc / Qh) = 1 – (Tc / Th)

Stroller - I think Vincent is suggesting a bang-on demo akin a sloooow isothermal expansion lifting a rock. In this manner, the only 'fuzzy belief' required is that an isothermal expansion has no change in internal energy, whereby all heat input 'must be' converted into work, no ands, ifs, or buts. ...
by matt brown
Wed May 15, 2024 12:11 am
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?
Replies: 25
Views: 6885

Re: Stirling essex - beta or gamma ?

I'm not sure what really defines either, but by my logic it's a Beta for the following reasons. 1- Both piston and displacer share the same exact bore and axis of travel. 2- Most importantly, the displacer and power piston occupy the same space at various points of the cycle, a feature reserved for...
by matt brown
Sun May 12, 2024 4:32 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

The average bulk temperature is what the engine reacts to. Any pressure sensors will react similarly to the engine, so it is a fair representation to use for analysis. The sensor will react as fast or faster than the engine. The theoretical pressure change due to volumetric change in an unheated en...
by matt brown
Sun May 12, 2024 3:56 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

Over the years, I've often heard of Tesla's ambient heat engine (cold hole) and blown it off as just another one of his wacky schemes (he had many). However, a recent post made me reconsider the possibility. Which post, Matt? Vincent - I just saw this, I borrowed your planet Bob analogy somewhat......
by matt brown
Sun May 12, 2024 3:49 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

Tom - probably best to start a new thread with 2024 in title. The thread drift in this forum makes finding previous comments a challenge. BTW my original intent on this thread was that Tesla's cold hole appears valid on paper, but achieving such has an obscure issue where the Carnot 'tax' is double ...
by matt brown
Mon May 06, 2024 1:17 am
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

The experiments you did that I remember were insulating the top cold plate while heating the bottom which is similar, albeit more extreme. I was just over on this thread reading 2020 posts where you had tested ice melt time with running LTD vs static LTD and were going to test 2 LTD simultaneously. ...
by matt brown
Sun May 05, 2024 11:53 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

I don't have the time to read everything here and elsewhere. I'm still a working stiff and my day job has been brutal the past year (company move).

So, where did you post this here?
by matt brown
Sun May 05, 2024 10:37 pm
Forum: Stirling and "Hot Air" Engine Forum
Topic: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted
Replies: 217
Views: 2847

Re: Tesla's Ambient Heat Engine revisted

Yeah, that's the graphic. Maybe I saw a forum link to it somewhere recently. Anyway, what was the story behind the graphic? (I notice tesla-test capture)

edit: in graphic, is one engine running while other is not?