Entries in the ‘Stirling engine’ Category:
filed in Stirling engine on Mar.27, 2009
1820, when steam engines operated everywhere, Robert Stirling, a Scottish vicar, and his brother James built a new engine. They used an outside burn, additionally hot air was sufficient for the operation of the engine. This principle has theoretically already been developed by the English flight pioneer Sir George Cayley twenty years earlier.
Tags: hot air, hot air engine, Robert Stirling, Stirling engine
filed in Stirling engine on Mar.27, 2009
Tags: Stirling engine
filed in Green Gadgets, New Inventions, Stirling engine on Mar.18, 2009
If you ever had to do with a computer, or with buying a computer by parts, then you surely have heard of MSI. They are a big Taiwanese manufacturer of computer motherboards (those boards that you put your microprocessor and memory on). They’re not on the top of quality and performance, but they sell well, [...]
Tags: amd, computer, fan cooler, heat, microprocessor, motherboard, msi, Stirling engine, Video
filed in Experiments, How to..., Stirling engine on Mar.15, 2009
A Can Stirling Engine(This engine was proposed by Mr.Saburo Tsucchida.
He is teacher of Kasukabe technical high scool.)
Step 1 - Material Preparation and Structure
To make the Can Stirling engine you require these materials: wood board 10mm thick; balsa wood 10mm thick; wire 1.5mm diameter; fishing thread; a balloon; square lumber 5mm square; two thumbtacks; a paper [...]
Tags: can, home made, Stirling engine
filed in Experiments, Stirling engine, Video on Mar.14, 2009
LTD stirling engines are an interesting idea. They harvest the temperature difference of the environment versus a cold object, and using this they power some pumps.
Tags: cold, differential, hot, ice, Stirling engine, temperature
filed in Experiments, How to..., Stirling engine on Mar.14, 2009
There are many ways for building of a hull, such as using frame of square lumbers or using F.R.P. Here, we build the hull using piled up boards of balsa. This can be built easily, and can stop the water leakage easily.
Tags: boat, home made, Stirling engine
filed in Electric Vehicles, Hybrid vehicles, Stirling engine on Mar.10, 2009
It’s been almost a year since I wrote about Stirling engines, and how heat can be transferred to a system and converted to do mechanical work. A Stirling engine works this way: you have two chambers communicating with each other: one that is being heated, and one cooling the hot air. The temperature difference between [...]
Tags: biofuel, Biogas, deka revolt, diesel, electric car, electric vehicle, hybrid vehicle, kamen, sterling engine, Stirling engine, stirling engine car, stirlingengine