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I understand perfectly well how it works, and I also understand that you have magically made the pontoon more than four time larger to let you reverse into your original, incorrect, power calculation.The pontoon is now 3.5 times larger than the World's biggest supertanker (er, or whatever Matt wants us to call it.)This isn't the Tommmy Cooper Show ewe know []"The 'reality' is that Mootle put the wrong figures into the calculation - a point that I've made several times. If anything, I find it amusing that people who obviously have an understanding of the principles cannot concede a point when the error has been clearly identified."
What I agree is that you never even bothered to look at what BC and I posted (despite repeated requests), because, if you had, you would have had ample opportunity to object to the numbers we were using.If you were proposing a displacement of 1.7Gt, why didn't you simply point that out five or more days ago? Did I hide that information in my calculation? Was the pontoon displacement never discussed? In fact, up until now, you have not provided ANY value for the displacement of the pontoon, despite the fact that it is critical in determining the amount of work done. I don't suppose that's because you only just worked it out based on the information we gave you?EDIT: Correction - that should be 1.7Mt (not 1.7Gt)
Mootle, old bean, if you look back down the thread you will see I said this;"If the pontoon displaces 400,000t or 400,000,000kg (which it must in order to submerge a 67,000 cubic meter storage vessel with a 6:1 mechanical ratio) the force in the cable is 9.81 times 400,000,000 = 3,924,000,000N."I also asked you several times to point out any errors in my calculation.Now you are saying you knew all along that I should have been using a displacement of more than four times that amount and a ratio of 25:1?I really hope you didn't know that all along, because if you did, and you didn't bring it up, you were simply being a troll. I will give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that you had no idea what the displacement was until you recently figured it out.
Mootle,What's the reason for not building a scale model?
Just recap on the economics - 1. your tank that sinks must be able to withstand 5 atmospheres pressure and hold 67000m3 of water - being very generous this tank itself will have to be constructed of about 10k mt of steel and will total about 80k m32. to drag this to the bottom with a ratio of 25 to 1 your pontoon which is moving by 2m will have to displace around 2M m33. you will need miles of steel wire - the breaking strength of a 300m 42mm steel wire rope is about 900k N but the safe working load is around 200k N1. your tank will cost 5 million bucks in steel alone2. easiest way to get 2M m3 of floating pontoon is to buy 7 vlccs (large tankers not supertankers) - scrap price of about 20 million bucks each3. i seem to remember that each SWR costs us about 5,000 bucks and weighs over a tonne- you will be needing lots. and these are designed for use above sea not underwater. Set up costs are well over 150 million bucks lets say £100M - there is just a lot of steel involvedWholesale electricity prices last month in the uk were £47 per MWh Your set up generates 16 MWh per day (on your calcs 2MW for 4 hours twice daily) thats an income of £750 per dayTo break even at today's prices and not including interest, labour, maintenance, insurance, and downtime you would need to generate 365 days a year for 365 years
This is going nowhere.Mootle,Please tell us the numbers you are working from, in particular,The volume of the floating pontoon,Its rise and fall distance.The volume of the moving tankThe number of pulleys or the vertical range of the moving tank.The number of tides each day.
That is (more than) enough information to work out how much energy is stored each day.For the sake of this bit of work we can assume that water is incompressible and has a density of 1 tonne per m^3. We can also assume, to make the maths easy, that the efficiency of the turbine and generator are 100%.
Then we can have a sensible look at(1) are you actually ignoring the rules of physics and(2) are you ignoring the rules of economics.Incidentally, I think for the record, that your equation is correct, provided that you are calculating the right quantity. My best guess is that somewhere or other we are at crossed purposes.If you can give us the information above then we can all get a better look at the problem.
This is going nowhere.Mootle,Please tell us the numbers you are working from, in particular,The volume of the floating pontoon,Its rise and fall distance.The volume of the moving tankThe number of pulleys or the vertical range of the moving tank.The number of tides each day.That is (more than) enough information to work out how much energy is stored each day.For the sake of this bit of work we can assume that water is incompressible and has a density of 1 tonne per m^3. We can also assume, to make the maths easy, that the efficiency of the turbine and generator are 100%.Then we can have a sensible look at(1) are you actually ignoring the rules of physics and(2) are you ignoring the rules of economics.Incidentally, I think for the record, that your equation is correct, provided that you are calculating the right quantity. My best guess is that somewhere or other we are at crossed purposes.If you can give us the information above then we can all get a better look at the problem.Imatfaal, Your dissection of his equation is right when you say."your equation dissects flow into two components cross sectional area and sqrt(2.Δh.g)"the root 2gh factor is the speed at which water would fall if it dropped down a pipe with no viscous losses.Multiply that by an area and you have cubic metres per second.Multiply by density and you get mass per second. Multiply by acceleration and you get force per second (an odd unit, but it's legitimate)Multiply by distance and you get force times distance divided by time; which is work done/ time which is power.The formula is OK. I think the values put in as the volume etc need clarification.
A half million tonne pontoon can only generate 250kW (average)
Quote from: Johann Mahne on 24/10/2011 04:33:33Mootle,What's the reason for not building a scale model?I have worked up the sketch designs, component selections and costs for a small system (3kW,) which came out at ca. £50k in materials and special pool rental plus my time to build and transport. Having already invested in software and time I think my wife would think me quite selfish to spend this kind of money on my idea rather than the kids college fund. Since the fundamentals of the system are well established I was hoping to get investment for the pilot. But maybe I should research a design for a micro-scaled model to say power an LED lamp (3W) just to demonstrate the principles. The problem is I would probably have to develop my own turbine and generator set as I couldn't find anything that small on the market.