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  1. Naked Science Forum
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  4. Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
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Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?

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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« on: 14/12/2013 07:32:20 »
Removing this post as it is counterproductive.
« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:02:34 by McQueen »
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Offline evan_au

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy
« Reply #1 on: 14/12/2013 08:26:42 »
The video clip from "Bang goes the Theory" shows a vacuum cleaner consuming 1kW of electricity while doing no useful work.
It is beyond extrapolation to imagine a vacuum pump which can generate useful work while consuming no electricity.

It still looks like another Perpetual Motion Machine to me - see discussion at http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=49077.0.
I'm afraid that I would have to recommend that people see a working model before investing any money in it.
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Offline RD

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy
« Reply #2 on: 14/12/2013 08:28:02 »
Quote from: McQueen on 14/12/2013 07:32:20
.. I would like to hear your views on the presentation.

At first glance it looks like yet another perpetual motion scheme [:(]

There has to be a source of energy* somewhere to exploit for it to work, (energy cannot be created),
I cannot see where that source of energy is in your presentation. 

[ * the Newcomen atmospheric engine you mention has a fire as a source of energy , where is your source of energy ?]
« Last Edit: 14/12/2013 08:47:18 by RD »
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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #3 on: 14/12/2013 20:04:10 »
It is quite amazing that the weight of the hundreds of miles of air above us cannot be thought of as a source of energy, surely it is as tangible a force as solar or wind ?
« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:02:56 by McQueen »
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Offline dlorde

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #4 on: 15/12/2013 00:39:24 »
Quote from: McQueen on 14/12/2013 20:04:10
It is quite amazing that the weight of the hundreds of miles of air above us cannot be thought of as a source of energy, surely it is as tangible a force as solar or wind ?
It's not amazing at all. You can't use a magnet as a source of energy either.

If you can't see that this is an energy-from-nowhere scheme, look at it another way. If you use energy to do work, it's no longer available in its original form. Suppose these machines worked, and you covered the surface of the Earth with them to use the energy of all that weight of air, converting it to various forms of work and heat. What would you expect to happen - would you use up all that weight so the air became weightless? would you use up Earth's gravity so everything weighed less? would we all float off into space?  [:o]

If the weight of the atmosphere could be a source of energy, why not try it at the bottom of the ocean where there's even more pressure?  [::)]
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Offline RD

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #5 on: 15/12/2013 01:52:13 »
Quote from: McQueen on 14/12/2013 20:04:10
It is quite amazing that the weight of the hundreds of miles of air above us cannot be thought of as a source of energy, surely it is as tangible a force as solar or wind ?

The only angle I can think of how the [changing] weight of the atmosphere can be a source of energy is using changes in atmospheric pressure caused by weather, like this clock ... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cox%27s_timepiece

That device generates the same amount of power as an electric clock battery , so not sufficient to light a home.
« Last Edit: 15/12/2013 01:58:52 by RD »
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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #6 on: 15/12/2013 03:17:44 »
Quote
If the weight of the atmosphere could be a source of energy, why not try it at the bottom of the ocean where there's even more pressure?  [::)]
« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:03:17 by McQueen »
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Offline RD

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #7 on: 15/12/2013 06:31:51 »
Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 03:17:44
As for this gem it is totally out of this world:
Quote
The only angle I can think of how the [changing] weight of the atmosphere can be a source of energy is using changes in atmospheric pressure caused by weather, like this clock ... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cox%27s_timepiece
Here the changing weight of the atmosphere presumably refers to barometric pressure ! And this from a member who has made above 6500 posts !

Maybe you can enlighten me as to the difference between the pressure due to the weight of the atmosphere and "barometric pressure".
Maybe obfuscation with terminology serves your purposes but that is antithetical to the goals of this forum.

Clocks powered by changes in atmospheric pressure, aka barometric pressure, have been running for over a century, so unlike your proposed scheme, have been proven to work.

Your idea is an oscillating system which employs dynamos, electric motors and air-tight high-friction components ...

 [ Invalid Attachment ]


Dynamos and electric motors are only 70-90% efficient so each cycle you will loose around a quarter of the energy in your oscillating system, and that's before you attempt to extract energy from it to do useful work. And then you have to include the frictional losses in the air-tight seals. Your idea is a non-starter. 

BTW can you give me the email of the person who contributed $140 to your project, I have some   swamp land    prime real estate I could sell them [:)].

* McQueen's proposed apparatus.png (14.56 kB, 632x473 - viewed 1732 times.)
« Last Edit: 15/12/2013 07:10:43 by RD »
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Offline CliffordK

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #8 on: 15/12/2013 07:06:04 »
Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 03:17:44
For more than a hundred years the weight of the atmosphere was used as a source of energy in the Newcomen engine and that surely is the point here. 

The Newcomen Engine has energy input (fire & steam), and alternates between steam pressure and vacuum from condensation.

Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 03:17:44
The question here is will this design work as postulated and the answer is that it will.

Your system will not produce any results without any external energy source.  The energy to pull the vacuum will be exactly the same as that supplied by the atmospheric pressure (minus system losses).

As RD mentioned, you could use periodic variations in barometric pressure (a few mm Hg), to supply some energy.  Or, perhaps if it is and elevator, force the users to walk up the stairs, then descend using the elevator, thus with a net gain of energy. (not counting calories burnt climbing the stairs).

With no external energy source added to the system, the system as designed will consume energy due to friction, and would stop rather than generating energy.

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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #9 on: 15/12/2013 08:09:23 »

I am grateful that you have at least raised a practical objection:
Quote
The Newcomen Engine has energy input (fire & steam), and alternates between steam pressure and vacuum from condensation.

« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:03:54 by McQueen »
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Offline RD

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #10 on: 15/12/2013 08:43:28 »
Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 08:09:23
… and electricity to run the multistage turbine comes from an alternator … The energy to run the alternator comes from the kinetic energy of a descending counterweight. Thus if the counterweight weighs 150 Kg and is situated at a height of 10m its kinetic energy as it descends will be 14.7 KJ , more than enough energy to run the alternator and therefore the vacuum turbine.

An alternator which are typically only around 70% efficient , driving an electric motor in a vacuum pump which is about 90% efficient. That's around 25% loss of energy from each cycle of your oscillating system, which allegedly has a period of  "2.5 seconds".  The total energy in this oscillating system reducing by 25% of every 2.5 seconds. Any oscillations in your apparatus will die away within less than a minute, even before you extract any useful energy from the system. [ If the frictional losses of  air-tight seals is included then I doubt it will perform even one cycle ].

Once the gravitational potential energy of the 150Kg at 10m has been used, either in combating friction / electrical resistance / or useful work , your apparatus will grind to a halt as you have no other source of energy.

Cuckoo clocks are powered by a similar system : a pair of linked weights where one falls ...

 [ Invalid Attachment ]

but at some point someone has to lift the fallen weight back up, putting energy into the system, to keep the clock going.

* cuckoo-clock.jpg (11.62 kB, 400x400 - viewed 1773 times.)
« Last Edit: 15/12/2013 09:14:17 by RD »
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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #11 on: 15/12/2013 09:11:59 »
Right RD,
This seems to be a little better
Quote
Your idea is an oscillating system which employs dynamos, electric motors and air-tight high-friction components ...
« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:04:15 by McQueen »
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Offline RD

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #12 on: 15/12/2013 09:45:50 »
Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 09:11:59
… PTFE has a frictional co-efficient that at 0.6 is less than the friction produced by ice on ice.
… systems work at 70% - 80% efficiency …

Let’s say you could achieve the impossible : frictionless apparatus with magic electrical devices which are 100% percent efficient, then you could create a perpetual motion machine, (which in reality is impossible).

Once set in motion this hypothetical perpetual motion machine would run forever without applying any additional energy.
However this hypothetical machine would begin to run down as soon as you extract energy from it to do work.

At best you can only get the same amount of energy out of such a system that was in it initially , ( in reality less ). Machines cannot make energy : energy cannot be created, only converted from one form into another. Other than the gravitational potential energy of your 150Kg weight your machine does not have a source of energy, once that energy is used game-over.

Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 09:11:59
… systems work at 70% - 80% efficiency …

Ignoring friction your machine looses approximately 25% of the total energy every cycle via electrical losses,  so even ignoring frictional losses within a minute it will run down to a stop.
« Last Edit: 15/12/2013 09:55:41 by RD »
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Offline CliffordK

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #13 on: 15/12/2013 10:03:08 »
If you have a perfect counterbalance, then you have minimal energy raising and lowering the main component & counterbalance, and likewise, no energy recovered. 

You can simplify your system to a horizontal double ended piston with a pump between them.

 [ Invalid Attachment ]

Even with the best seal and least resistance, you still loose energy when using the pump to push the piston back and forth.

If you wish to extract energy from any system, then you need to define some kind of an energy gradient.  A static field doesn't give you an energy gradient.

Place a barbell on a table.  The table exerts an upward force on the barbell.  The barbell exerts an equal downward force on the table.  As long as the barbell is sitting on the the table, no work is being performed, and no energy is being transformed.   Knock the barbell off the table, and it will fall to the floor, as a one time burst of energy.  Then if you wish it to be back up onto the table, you have to put a reciprocal amount of energy back in, with no net gain.

* PistonPump.gif (4.29 kB, 405x221 - viewed 1917 times.)
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Offline dlorde

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #14 on: 15/12/2013 11:37:18 »
Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 03:17:44
For more than a hundred years the weight of the atmosphere was used as a source of energy in the Newcomen engine and that surely is the point here.
Ah, no. The Newcomen engine was a condensing steam engine, and was powered by a fire (coal or wood) that heated water to produce steam.

Quote
Magnetism is a force but has no energy of its own, exactly the same thing applies to atmospheric pressure, unless it has a vacuum to work against it does not constitute a form of energy, so what are you quibbling about.
Not so much quibbling as trying to find a way to explain to you why this idea fails. You seem to overlook how this vacuum will be maintained if you can take energy out of the system without putting energy into it. As Dr Johnson said, "Sir, I have found you an argument; but I am not obliged to find you an understanding."

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Offline dlorde

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #15 on: 15/12/2013 11:42:26 »
Quote from: McQueen on 15/12/2013 08:09:23
The Newcomen engine , as you had pointed out worked, why under the same conditions won’t my system work ?
The difference is that the Newcomen engine had energy input from a heat source. Your system has no energy input. Energy output equals energy input minus inevitable losses. 
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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #16 on: 15/12/2013 23:48:44 »
Quote
Let’s say you could achieve the impossible : frictionless apparatus with magic electrical devices which are 100% percent efficient, then you could create a perpetual motion machine, (which in reality is impossible).
« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:04:38 by McQueen »
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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #17 on: 15/12/2013 23:51:35 »
The main problem with your similie of a pump is that the same source of energy is being used, naturally there is no energy gradient and that is the reason perpetual motion machines don't work. In the case of 'Home Grid' two forces are utilised.
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Offline McQueen (OP)

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #18 on: 16/12/2013 00:07:27 »
Apparently the editors object to this post on the grounds that it is self promotion and ‘unproved’ science and will soon delete it.  Well and good!
« Last Edit: 27/12/2013 12:04:55 by McQueen »
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Offline alancalverd

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Re: Breakthrough in sustainable renewable energy?
« Reply #19 on: 16/12/2013 00:20:35 »
Instead of sinking huge quantities of capital into a fullsize device, why not build a scale model to convince your potential backers that you can set aside the laws of physics? 

Then nobody will delete your post, or even take issue with it.

Engineering is about realising our dreams, so instead of "imagining a 150 kg counterweight..." why not just build a little Meccano model with a 1.5 kg weight? 
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