Stirling Engines - the power of the future?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 11. 2016
  • Stirling engines are having a bit of a revival. What are they, and how do they work? Could they generate our electricity in the future? See the follow-up video: • Stirling engines - an ...
    Support me on Patreon: / lindybeige
    More ranty videos here: • Rants
    I like machines that show their workings. You can see all the parts of a stirling engine doing their jobs. Stirling engines are simple, but use a principle that may be unfamiliar to many viewers. One thing that you have to remember from your science classes is that gases expand and contract very rapidly indeed, making this sort of engine practical.
    Stirling engines are not very powerful nor do they have great power to weight ratios. I know of one annual boat race that takes place in England on a river using stirling engines, and it is somewhat sedate.
    Lindybeige: a channel of archaeology, ancient and medieval warfare, rants, swing dance, travelogues, evolution, and whatever else occurs to me to make.
    You can now buy the music I use over the end-plates of my videos, which was written as the theme music for The Adventures of Stoke Mandeville, Astronaut and Gentleman: lindybeige.bandcamp.com/releases
    ▼ Follow me...
    Twitter: / lindybeige I may have some drivel to contribute to the Twittersphere, plus you get notice of uploads.
    Facebook: / lindybeige (it's a 'page' and now seems to be working).
    Google+: "google.com/+lindybeige"
    website: www.LloydianAspects.co.uk
    / user "Lindybeige"

Komentáře • 6K

  • @robertguttman1487
    @robertguttman1487 Před 6 lety +4451

    Leave it to the British to invent an engine that could be powered by a cup of tea.

  • @munch15a
    @munch15a Před 4 lety +1272

    TO quote adam savage "this is not free energy but it is free to me energy"

    • @pablorepetto2759
      @pablorepetto2759 Před 4 lety +91

      Or as the British may put it: "this is not free real estate, but it is free to _me_ real estate"

    • @Rid3thetig3r
      @Rid3thetig3r Před 4 lety +17

      @David Jones It was all given back. And see how they flourish...

    • @vegetorat
      @vegetorat Před 4 lety +27

      @@Rid3thetig3r Turns out life is a lot easier when someone else is telling you what to do. It's a lot harder when you gotta figure it out yourself.

    • @raygodwin3496
      @raygodwin3496 Před 3 lety +3

      The very best kind in my humble opinion

    • @NwoDispatcher
      @NwoDispatcher Před 3 lety +2

      Like slaves and communists

  • @JarthenGreenmeadow
    @JarthenGreenmeadow Před 3 lety +366

    "Its a stirling engine, and whats more its a stirling engine and you might be wondering: What's a stirling engine? Well, this is"
    *Video ends*
    I will never tire of your humor.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Před 2 lety

      @charles wheelock It would also need to be Stirling Engine because it's a noun.

    • @GrumpaGladstone1809
      @GrumpaGladstone1809 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dcarbs2979 "a Stirling engine", capital S after Robert Stirling, small e because engine is just a normal noun.

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Před 2 lety +2

      @@GrumpaGladstone1809 I got it wrong i think.
      Stirling engine = Noun
      Stirling Engine = Proper noun
      Sterling engine / sterling engine = adjective. Make up your own pun accordingly :-)
      A Stirling Engine is a sterling engine.

    • @nicholasadams2374
      @nicholasadams2374 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dcarbs2979 Yes. It's a sterling engine, and a Stirling engine. You got it :)

    • @billynomates920
      @billynomates920 Před 2 lety

      @@nicholasadams2374 even if silver was the best material, i just haven't the sterling for a sterling sterling stirling engine but i reckon raheem has...

  • @nadaa2370
    @nadaa2370 Před 4 lety +418

    I love how I have become an ardent defender and advocate of the Stirling Engine ten minutes into this video.

    • @ahmadtarek7763
      @ahmadtarek7763 Před 4 lety +20

      Rightly so, they are almost better than other engines in every way , being silent, safe and lacking any waste product whatsoever, except for the power/weight ratio which unfortunately matters a lot.

    • @AcidxAnarchy
      @AcidxAnarchy Před 3 lety +4

      @@ahmadtarek7763 I'm sure the power and weight ratio can be improved upon greatly. You could probably improve it a lot just by adding a more intricate pulley system lol

    • @yetanother9127
      @yetanother9127 Před 3 lety +10

      @@AcidxAnarchy I don't think pulleys would help--they'd just change the torque ratio, not the amount of energy coming out, which is useful for some applications but doesn't really help in terms of power generation. The main avenue of improvement is getting the weight down, I think.

    • @Xrayflames
      @Xrayflames Před 3 lety +4

      @@yetanother9127 i believe that there was an effort to make an electric car where the stirling engine didnt directly cause a car to drive, rather it charged a battery which powered the car. Quoting a piece on it "The MOD II project in 1980 produced one of the most efficient automotive engines ever made. The engine reached a peak thermal efficiency of 38.5%, compared to a modern spark-ignition (gasoline) engine, which has a peak efficiency of 20-25%. The Mod II project replaced the normal spark-ignition engine in a 1985 4-door Chevrolet Celebrity notchback. In the 1986 MOD II Design Report (Appendix A) the results showed that highway gas mileage was increased from 40 to 58 mpg‑US (5.9 to 4.1 L/100 km; 48 to 70 mpg‑imp) and achieved an urban range of 26 to 33 mpg‑US (9.0-7.1 L/100 km; 31-40 mpg‑imp) with no change in vehicle gross weight. Startup time in the NASA vehicle was a maximum of 30 seconds, while Ford's research vehicle used an internal electric heater to quickly start the engine, giving a start time of only a few seconds. The high torque output of the Stirling engine at low speed eliminated the need for a torque converter in the transmission resulting in decreased weight and transmission drivetrain losses negating somewhat the weight disadvantage of the Stirling in auto use. This resulted in increased efficiencies being mentioned in the test results."

    • @kyleb3754
      @kyleb3754 Před 3 lety

      They are incredibly inefficient, using something like 40HP worth of fossil fuel to make 1 HP. Other than that, I would be a great advocate.

  • @harbl99
    @harbl99 Před 7 lety +2407

    6:45 -- "Churches traditionally don't move around that much."
    Sage wisdom right there. Not to be overlooked.

    • @Clint945
      @Clint945 Před 7 lety +62

      To be fair... he's not wrong! :p

    • @chriscos123
      @chriscos123 Před 7 lety +105

      Beige wisdom

    • @ptonpc
      @ptonpc Před 7 lety +31

      Although in the novels by Alistair Reynolds, the churches do move..

    • @sergepokorny3972
      @sergepokorny3972 Před 7 lety +65

      They do tent to create big movements though.

    • @str_j1649
      @str_j1649 Před 7 lety +21

      I've seen some and they weren't moving at all.

  • @FoxRiverBridge
    @FoxRiverBridge Před 4 lety +525

    "Churches don't traditionally move around all that much"
    Brilliant

    • @gabeclancy9937
      @gabeclancy9937 Před 3 lety +62

      Evidently Lindy has not heard of Warhammer 40k.

    • @swampdonkey1567
      @swampdonkey1567 Před 3 lety +2

      I know Churchill’s family church is a museum in Missouri it is great.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před 3 lety

      Sounds like a circuit preacher, in the early days they were basically a priest with a bible, some wine, and bread on horseback who traveled town to town in rural communities too dispersed to support a full time priest (it occurred in catholic and protestant communities but I think it was more common in rural America and canada with their dispersed farms in the midwest)

    • @duskyflathead4483
      @duskyflathead4483 Před 3 lety +13

      Laughs in imperator class

    • @slinky6481
      @slinky6481 Před 3 lety +3

      Unless they're on a fault line

  • @sameggenton1077
    @sameggenton1077 Před 3 lety +492

    “Churches traditionally don’t move around all that much”
    Clearly he’s never heard of warhammer

    • @benaskalinskas4154
      @benaskalinskas4154 Před 3 lety +36

      that's why he said "traditionally"

    • @martinlagman
      @martinlagman Před 3 lety +23

      If Billy doesn't go to church, then the church will come to Billy!

    • @cupofearlgreytea7651
      @cupofearlgreytea7651 Před 3 lety +22

      @@martinlagman HERESY DETECTED

    • @1tuuber
      @1tuuber Před 3 lety +1

      I was interested in the engine until he started talking. It's 95% his ego and 5% about the Sterling....

    • @Aaron-is8yt
      @Aaron-is8yt Před 3 lety +14

      @@1tuuber The funny thing is, your comment shows way more ego than he allegedly showed.

  • @brandontrueblood9798
    @brandontrueblood9798 Před 3 lety +153

    You left out the "regenerator" which was what set the Stirling apart from the other closed cycle heat engines of the day. The regenerator is a thermal baffle and battery which thermally isolates the hot and cold sections of the engine. As the hot air passes through the regenerator a portion of the heat in the air is transferred to the material of the regenerator, as the temperature drops the pressure of the working fluid drops at a rate proportional to the change in temperature thus aiding flow from the hot section to the cold section by the induced negative pressure differential. Truly a Brilliant solution to closed cycle heat engine problem efficiency conundrum. Sorry, I had to bitch about it, my inner mechanical engineering nerd would not be quiet. Amazing engine developed by a Minister who was tired of watching members of his congregation get blown up. I love your videos, thanks for your excellent explanations and humorous descriptions.

  • @MonoMan1
    @MonoMan1 Před 5 lety +716

    "It's powered by ice, that's cool!"
    Doesn't even flinch.

    • @vinayseth1114
      @vinayseth1114 Před 4 lety +1

      Ya he's not Michael from VSauce.

    • @RDO-tw4qn
      @RDO-tw4qn Před 3 lety +1

      Lindies hard if humor.... That's what makes him so funny.

  • @alerty8791
    @alerty8791 Před 5 lety +522

    my guess that these engines would be really good in Iceland, using the geothermal heat and the icy climate would perfect

    • @0isay
      @0isay Před 3 lety +23

      That's how man-made climate change should be done! :)

    • @theenhancer
      @theenhancer Před 3 lety +83

      True but geothermal is once again more efficient to heat water for steam turbines.

    • @sevenproxies4255
      @sevenproxies4255 Před 3 lety +69

      @@theenhancer Why not put stirling engines on top of it?
      I mean, with steam turbines you still have waste heat.

    • @sbkenn1
      @sbkenn1 Před 3 lety +29

      Steam turbines are easier to build and maintain. Iceland doesn't need energy efficiency. They have far more heat than they can usefully harvest, but they are too far from other populations to export it.

    • @Tubespoet
      @Tubespoet Před 3 lety +8

      Iceland? Canada has lots of cold, does it have geothermal as well? Just thinking out loud.

  • @Gearz-365
    @Gearz-365 Před 4 lety +532

    We should have an era called "Stirlingpunk." Like steampunk, but with Stirling engine technology rather than steam

    • @consciousness147
      @consciousness147 Před 3 lety +9

      BRilliant!!!

    • @chaoticmasterpiece
      @chaoticmasterpiece Před 3 lety +46

      Too late. It's nuclear energy era soon, if not already. People are just scared of it for absolutely no reason.

    • @main135s
      @main135s Před 3 lety +23

      @Yes No Let's not forget stories like... I don't know... a tidal wave hitting Japan, causing a Nuclear Reactor to detonate as a level 7 accident. (Fukushima, 2011)
      Nuclear power isn't as dangerous as people say, but that doesn't mean it's not dangerous, and doesn't mean that it can't leave an area a health hazard for tens of years. Potentially upwards of 40, just to handle removing all the fuel from Fukushima.

    • @antiagonista
      @antiagonista Před 3 lety +19

      @@main135s it's still safer than hydro power

    • @chaoticmasterpiece
      @chaoticmasterpiece Před 3 lety +41

      @@main135s Now, if people had stopped using steam power because they blew up, where would we be? It applies to the same area, especially since nuclear energy is now safer than it used to be, and less wasteful.

  • @patrickeh696
    @patrickeh696 Před 5 lety +394

    A Stirling engine powers the quietest and most deadly attack submarine in the world...

    • @archivearchive9457
      @archivearchive9457 Před 5 lety +22

      Hi do you have any links and why a Stirling engine was used? I'm doing a project about Stirling engines and would love to know where they're being used and for what reasons they chose to use Stirling engines

    • @patrickeh696
      @patrickeh696 Před 5 lety +54

      @@archivearchive9457 Why? Low noise for one. The USN had it attack an alerted Carrier group TWICE and both times it penetrated ALL ASW assets and sunk our super carrier. Go to the sub manufacturers website

    • @justarandomtechpriest1578
      @justarandomtechpriest1578 Před 4 lety +12

      @@archivearchive9457 theres a type of sonar that detects noise from the sub engine

    • @timearly5226
      @timearly5226 Před 4 lety +21

      @@archivearchive9457
      The secret to the world’s most silent submarine
      saabgroup.com/media/stories/stories-listing/2015-02/the-secret-to-the-worlds-most-silent-submarine/

    • @pagarb
      @pagarb Před 4 lety +12

      @@timearly5226 yeah but I understand that every so often the crew has to do what Lindybeige did, which is to put their hands on the engine to restart it..

  • @philipocarroll
    @philipocarroll Před 5 lety +290

    The Stirling Engine, the engine of the future since 1816

    • @sirsydneycamm1883
      @sirsydneycamm1883 Před 4 lety +12

      Give it a chance, it's only 23:24 now. Maybe it's the engine of tomorrow.

    • @BenMitro
      @BenMitro Před 4 lety +6

      Just like fusion power.

    • @kevinclass2010
      @kevinclass2010 Před 4 lety +1

      Mazda will probably buy the license and make a RX9 with it.

    • @DavidEllis94
      @DavidEllis94 Před 3 lety

      @@Penguiniel Fusion with direct energy conversion or gtfo.

    • @robertbennett9949
      @robertbennett9949 Před 3 lety

      Like nuclear fusion perhaps.....always 30 years away.

  • @wheturangi
    @wheturangi Před 7 lety +129

    I know of an old Stirling engine that is used for a water pump at a farm. Been there for at least a hundred years as there is a bronze plate with the year 1890 on it. It's big and clumsy, but just does its job and seems to need very little upkeep.

    • @sheepieworks4974
      @sheepieworks4974 Před 7 lety +38

      yeah it just goes round and round. nothing more and nthing less. no explosions. no nothing. just some warmth and some cold and there ya go

    • @dangerouswitch1066
      @dangerouswitch1066 Před 6 lety +5

      Fascinating, i would like to see a picture.

    • @graemeallan54
      @graemeallan54 Před 5 lety +5

      photo?these were used on american farms cos wood was every where

  • @Jaxon_America
    @Jaxon_America Před 4 lety +68

    "From flywheel to good!"
    Lindybeige-2k16

  • @d_knightly7225
    @d_knightly7225 Před 5 lety +42

    This could well be the most interesting video I've seen on CZcams.

  • @antonhaeffler784
    @antonhaeffler784 Před 5 lety +655

    I'm currently writing a paper on a Swedish energy company which uses stirling engines to take advantage of excess gasses from heavy mining operations.
    Normally these gases are too "rough" to be used so they are just burned straight into the air. Since the stirling engine only needs a temperature difference, it can operate using the heat created from the burning of these excess gasses. Therefor, a lot of energy that was previously wasted can now be turned into electricity.
    It's really interesting how something so simple can work. I think this technology has huge potential for the future.

    • @evoliveoil
      @evoliveoil Před 5 lety +11

      Can I read your paper?

    • @antonhaeffler784
      @antonhaeffler784 Před 5 lety +42

      @@evoliveoil It's sadly not published anywhere, and it's in swedish. But you can look up the company if you want, it's called Ripasso Energy. :-)

    • @evoliveoil
      @evoliveoil Před 5 lety +5

      @@antonhaeffler784 Thanks.

    • @SkullCandy5671
      @SkullCandy5671 Před 5 lety +16

      i wonder if it would be more efficient to use those gasses to spin a turbine

    • @CUBETechie
      @CUBETechie Před 5 lety +1

      @@hakimmohamad6216 in Iceland they use the Steam to power the turbine.

  • @ahmjamil0
    @ahmjamil0 Před 5 lety +340

    We used a Stirling engine powered fan when I was very young. It ran on kerosin/paraffin oil. There was a regenerator. My father had purchased it in the 1940's in Kolkata. We used it when there was a power outage, which was more often than not.

    • @ballHand
      @ballHand Před 5 lety +22

      very cool

    • @putheflamesoutyahoo1503
      @putheflamesoutyahoo1503 Před 4 lety +3

      still have it?

    • @vinayseth1114
      @vinayseth1114 Před 4 lety +2

      I actually came here after watching a post shared on Facebook showing the type of fan you just mentioned! Thanks for sharing :)

    • @ahmjamil0
      @ahmjamil0 Před 4 lety +6

      @@putheflamesoutyahoo1503 No, that was almost 70 years ago.

    • @bobcostas6272
      @bobcostas6272 Před 3 lety +1

      Neat

  • @Plus_Escapee
    @Plus_Escapee Před 4 lety +23

    Robert Sterling was one of the scientists that Tesla took great interest in. I don't belief this platform has been applied to it's maximum potential yet, so I'm sure it will play it's part in future energy production.

  • @GusCraft460
    @GusCraft460 Před 4 lety +20

    Actually, close to the equator you could basically modify it to word as a sort of solar-sterling engine. Paint the top black to absorb heat and keep the bottom in in the shade and you can still get a decent output, especially considering that you aren’t even using fuel.

    • @Caesar-do2pl
      @Caesar-do2pl Před rokem +1

      Could also make some sort of water cool at the bottom.

  • @Ganbalf
    @Ganbalf Před 7 lety +69

    Stirling engines are great. Sweden has a submarine powered with a stirling engine, The US has come to call it "Swedens little carrier killer" It is close to impossible to detect, The US navy literally could not find it, During exercises it "sunk" several of the US's atomic submarines and the largest aircraft carrier, The USS Reagan and was still not detected.
    The sub is called the HMS gotland

    • @Ganbalf
      @Ganbalf Před 7 lety +14

      Swedens politics might be littered with feminists, and our army may the small AF, and we may be pacifists, But we do know how to build military equipment

    • @arudegesture
      @arudegesture Před 7 lety +4

      Yeah, because we're selling it to anyone willing to pay. Shameful, really.

    • @antred11
      @antred11 Před 7 lety +7

      While quiet submarines are definitely a lethal threat, let's not forget that this happened during a time where the US Navy was exceptionally crappy at anti-submarine warfare due to negligence and excessive post Cold War budget cuts. They are trying to remedy those problems now.
      Also, a sub that was set up specifically to test the US Navy's ASW defenses is one thing. Actually finding the carrier group out in the ocean, positioning the sub to intercept it and then penetrate its defenses and attack the carrier is quite another.

    • @marklarizzle
      @marklarizzle Před 7 lety

      antred thats interesting.

    • @BigBoss-sm9xj
      @BigBoss-sm9xj Před 7 lety

      Lazor XD I love it

  • @founoe
    @founoe Před 7 lety +529

    I'm looking forward to Stirling-punk.

    • @xiaoxiao01
      @xiaoxiao01 Před 7 lety +4

      i thought the same thing xD

    • @fernandocabette6050
      @fernandocabette6050 Před 7 lety +11

      You might want to look into solar punk, it is already thing. Quite interesting actually.

    • @foodfoodfood8898
      @foodfoodfood8898 Před 7 lety +13

      The cities in the book series Mortal Engines are powered by Stirling Engines. Though the cities don't exactly remain still...
      Peter Jackson is producing a movie of it in December 2018.

    • @Strideo1
      @Strideo1 Před 7 lety +2

      I think it already fits in with steam punk, really. No reason to create a new genre for it.

    • @fernandocabette6050
      @fernandocabette6050 Před 7 lety +22

      I guess it could be kind of a anti steam-punk if you will. While steam-punk is usually dark and dystopian, compounded by the dirty looking soot etc, a stirling punk could be the exact opposite as with delivering clean and fresh energy.

  • @BL4D3RUNN3R0M3N
    @BL4D3RUNN3R0M3N Před 5 lety +14

    Really cool to see a video of someone so knowledgeable & passionate about such an obscure technology. I think we all have that one weird passion we can relate with. Thanks for sharing!

  • @Barttek
    @Barttek Před 4 lety +21

    This is amazing! As I was learning physics in school, I always wondered if there is an engine, that could turn heat into power instead of just disposing of it.

    • @trouts4
      @trouts4 Před 6 měsíci

      Well.... steam turbines :)

  • @TheGreatSteve
    @TheGreatSteve Před 7 lety +122

    You've mentioned two shit bands in this episode, One direction and Cold plate.

  • @TheTank1900
    @TheTank1900 Před 7 lety +61

    This could be really useful to me as an amateur science fiction writer. I was looking for a method to 1) get rid of excess heat without massive heat dispersers, and 2) provide some power to the internals of a ship without putting a massive nuclear reactor or something and taking some of that power from the engines and routing it into the ship. This could be really useful for both of those tasks. Thank you, Lindybeige, for proving that you never know when learning for the sake of learning might come in handy.

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige  Před 7 lety +24

      Be careful if you mean SPACE ship, because seawater around a submarine carries heat away whereas the vacuum of space does not.

    • @moosemaimer
      @moosemaimer Před 7 lety +4

      You need something to turn heat energy into radiation so it can be emitted into the vacuum. The space station has large radiators unfolded from its modules, that look like solar panels only white.

    • @NarpytheCrimeDog
      @NarpytheCrimeDog Před 7 lety +1

      The vacuum of space does allow heat to travel through it, though. Not as well as an atmosphere, but heat does travel through space.

    • @HammaneggsAirborne
      @HammaneggsAirborne Před 7 lety +1

      As Lindy said, space can't carry the heat away very well. The reasoning behind it is that because space is nearly empty, you can't really get the heat dispersed very well. In water you have lots of particles in which to send heat, and it can dissapate into the rest of the water. In space, well, you just have the occasional particle hit you.
      IMO, you would be better off with some sort of system that dispenses something with low mass and high heat capacity. Rockets work so well because they are shooting most of the heat that they generate away from themselves in the form of very fast particles.

    • @ZombieSurvivalist11
      @ZombieSurvivalist11 Před 7 lety +1

      Great video Lindy! I enjoy your video and almost always learn something.
      It might be a cool video idea if you compare and contrast different energy sources. Like the pros and cons of nuclear power vs wind turbines or hydroelectric damns vs geothermal wells and just do one big video on how they all could work and the most viable for the future.
      Might be a long video but I'm sure a lot of people would be able to learn a lot from it.
      Greetings from the U.S.!

  • @beshkodiak
    @beshkodiak Před 5 lety +2

    I do so enjoy your so British calm but enthused way of speaking. A couple of my professors spoke this way and it kept my interest up to pass with rather good grades.

  • @rudsong35
    @rudsong35 Před 4 lety +17

    "What is a Stirling Engine?"
    - Loydboy: Well... this is!
    Directed by George Lucas

  • @Someloke8895
    @Someloke8895 Před 7 lety +156

    There is actually an automatic teaspoon machine, a Stirring engine.

    • @absurdist5134
      @absurdist5134 Před 7 lety +15

      It'll revolutionize the world.
      Well, maybe not, but it'll definitely be a hit in Britain!

    • @jeffsmith8197
      @jeffsmith8197 Před 7 lety +9

      I had a clothes washer once that was 31 years old, required little energy and worked perfectly. Couldn't cook very well, though.

    • @crestfallensunbro6001
      @crestfallensunbro6001 Před 7 lety

      why were you cooking with a clothes washer?

    • @jeffsmith8197
      @jeffsmith8197 Před 7 lety +8

      matthew hurley Because I thought that she could do more then one thing. :-)

    • @charleswood4635
      @charleswood4635 Před 7 lety +1

      Jeff : Bet you ate a lot of soup.

  • @bitfreakazoid
    @bitfreakazoid Před 7 lety +33

    That transition to the trying something hot segment. Was not expecting that and I busted out laughing.

  • @AnAfricanApe
    @AnAfricanApe Před 2 lety +2

    I have a lab lesson today at Uni and we're using one of these for our experiment this week. I came here to get a head start and I'm glad I did! I feel like I'm going to go in much more prepared now. Thanks!

  • @Persephon94
    @Persephon94 Před 4 lety +6

    Just thought I come back to this video: This was the one that hooked me into subscribing to you, and later inspired one of my nation's submarine navies in their subartic seas.Keep up the good work Lloyd!

  • @Ricardo8388
    @Ricardo8388 Před 7 lety +55

    Cold is what you feel when the object STEALS your energy to HEAT itself

    • @Ricardo8388
      @Ricardo8388 Před 7 lety +6

      Like water steals your heat to evaporate which it finds more comfy

    • @weebmarck9833
      @weebmarck9833 Před 7 lety +13

      NOOOO NOT MY HEAT I WILL KILL IT

    • @1234macro
      @1234macro Před 7 lety

      Damn you and your elementary education!

    • @Ricardo8388
      @Ricardo8388 Před 7 lety +2

      Lord Geezmo Well I like to explain things in its elementary form..so all dummies understand :)

    • @pandemiceclipse6596
      @pandemiceclipse6596 Před 7 lety +1

      I can finally say I'm so hot that it makes things melt!

  • @pcarrierorange
    @pcarrierorange Před 7 lety +25

    But what if you strapped a sniper rifle to it?
    Can it end my opponents as rightly as a pommel?
    THESE QUESTIONS NEED ANSWERING!

    • @spud4242
      @spud4242 Před 7 lety +1

      now if we use the barrel of a spandau as the hot end......

  • @erg0centric
    @erg0centric Před 4 lety +13

    Please consider the irony of measuring Sterling Engine output in Watts, the inventor of the reciprocating steam engine.

    • @temkin9298
      @temkin9298 Před 3 lety

      It makes sense
      On a different note:
      Don't you feel like these engines could be viable when there is a great difference in temperature like magma in antarctica.
      Then again when you try to do that you will inevitably heat up the surrounding air.
      Maybe in a different planet. One in where it is -45°C. Can be also used to heat up the planet.

    • @ghostwheelppk
      @ghostwheelppk Před 2 lety

      We could create a new unit, pounds Stirling - feet per second.

  • @ravensmith8614
    @ravensmith8614 Před měsícem

    My partner and I enjoy your videos during our breakfast. Our kind of nerd beyond words and she is thankful for your content.

  • @bigfil1981
    @bigfil1981 Před 5 lety +87

    "churches don't tend to move around that much."

  • @MikeysPsyche
    @MikeysPsyche Před 7 lety +43

    GEEZ! The damn "BEIGE!" scared the absolute shit out of me!

  • @biblehistoryscience3530
    @biblehistoryscience3530 Před 4 lety +5

    Your reference to Brownian Motion (say a nice hot cup of tea) reminded me of the Infinite Improbability Drive from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Well done, old chap!

  • @Fredministrator
    @Fredministrator Před 4 lety +13

    now and then I come back here just to watch the first 20 seconds again

  • @curtisbrown547
    @curtisbrown547 Před 7 lety +84

    the qeustion is can it power a modified spandau that shoots katanas

  • @TheTrueReiniat
    @TheTrueReiniat Před 7 lety +146

    You could even attach them to standard combustion engines to get extra power from the wasted heat.

    • @niffenator2395
      @niffenator2395 Před 7 lety +7

      Or use a turbocharger to better effect

    • @foobar201
      @foobar201 Před 7 lety +22

      No. The stirling engine is less effective in carrying heat away from the primary engine than a proper cooler, thus the cool end of the primary engine is not as cool anymore and it loses efficiency. The loss in the primary engine is always greater than what the second engine would produce.

    • @evil001987
      @evil001987 Před 7 lety +7

      +niffenator An engine with turbochargers are still producing waster heat.
      +foobar201 The heat will still have to go somewhere. The cooler can carry the heat away from the engine and to a stirling engine. And it doesn't matter if it can produce energy for all of the lost energy in heat. If it is effective enough to make up for its weight it can add to a more fuel efficient car.

    • @niffenator2395
      @niffenator2395 Před 7 lety

      Patrik Lilja ALL heat engines must reject some heat in order to work. A turbocharger can be used to increase the thermal efficiency of the engine however by recovering waste energy from the exhaust.

    • @evil001987
      @evil001987 Před 7 lety +5

      Yes? So? That is waste energy from the exhaust. The stirling would not interfer with the turbocharger as it will be powered by the waste heat outside of the exhaust.

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 Před 4 lety +17

    I thought those sterling engines on aircraft were quite loud… oh wait, those were Merlin engines… 🙄

  • @frequentfiler
    @frequentfiler Před 3 lety +5

    "And it's another first for Britain!" sounded like the Pathe' newsreel announcer.

  • @stenrod2383
    @stenrod2383 Před 7 lety +332

    But the real question is, can it power a bren gun?

    • @peridoodle2644
      @peridoodle2644 Před 7 lety +63

      The real real question is, can we design a Bren gun that requires a Stirling engine to run?

    • @garethbull2226
      @garethbull2226 Před 7 lety +29

      Think bigger. Can it power a Tesla death ray?

    • @jackdaniels4975
      @jackdaniels4975 Před 7 lety +15

      Can we design a Bren gun that uses the power of a Stirling engine that shoots pummels?

    • @eclipseslayer98
      @eclipseslayer98 Před 7 lety +18

      Think even bigger, can it power a pommel catapult?

    • @jackdaniels4975
      @jackdaniels4975 Před 7 lety +9

      Eclipseslayer98
      A pommel minigun?

  • @liamcraven4936
    @liamcraven4936 Před 7 lety +12

    I thought the video had ended 24 seconds in. Great job, it made me laugh more than I should have.

  • @Gr8thxAlot
    @Gr8thxAlot Před 3 lety

    This is like an updated "Secret Life of Machines"! Love it, nice work.

  • @trevorthieme5157
    @trevorthieme5157 Před 4 lety +4

    10:50 That has to be one of the more pleasant intermissions to listen to! lol

  • @mcpartridgeboy
    @mcpartridgeboy Před 7 lety +24

    wow good video i had no idea a sterling engine could cure loanliness and depression for 20 mins , thankyou ! basic science is really interesting to me !

  • @Destiny1G
    @Destiny1G Před 7 lety +25

    was really thinking that the video was going to be 40 seconds long.

  • @jdraper12
    @jdraper12 Před 3 lety +5

    I'm about halfway through your video, but it may interest you to know that Sterling engines are perfectly viable and are used for spacecraft power generation. They have a fairly decent specific power

  • @robertdouville74
    @robertdouville74 Před 4 lety +3

    Bravo, I love it, I add today to my knowledge in mechanics, the counter part of what I was familiar with the electric thermocouples, who can use the differences in temperature to create energy also.

  • @LadyLunarSatine
    @LadyLunarSatine Před 7 lety +14

    This has me contemplating something for a fantasy setting where some enterprising spellcaster/engineer figures out a way to place gates to the Elemental Plane of Fire and the Elemental Plane of Water on opposite sides of a massive Stirling frame in order to power a death ray.

    • @JudgeDeadMJ
      @JudgeDeadMJ Před 7 lety +1

      That'd be great, actually.

    • @ancapftw9113
      @ancapftw9113 Před 7 lety

      Solemn Howler why not just trap air elemental in VAWTs?

    • @josephpotter5766
      @josephpotter5766 Před 7 lety +3

      assuming magic that violates physical principles and machines that rely on those physical principles means that it is almost always a trivial exercise to create perpetual motion or over unity engines in fantasy settings... as a writer and creator i find it much more interesting to try and explain why they have not been created already, as otherwise every fantasy setting undergoes a magitech based industrial revolution as soon as you start applying common sense engineering.

    • @blazednlovinit
      @blazednlovinit Před 7 lety +2

      Keep a lobotomised dragon on top of one?

    • @Jmat-tc8zs
      @Jmat-tc8zs Před 7 lety

      That sounds pretty awesome

  • @miken7918
    @miken7918 Před 7 lety +98

    and it was in a blackened saucepan, I would've liked the video, but did you see the state of his saucepans

    • @mitchrils
      @mitchrils Před 7 lety +6

      mike n He's made a video on it.

    • @miken7918
      @miken7918 Před 7 lety +24

      That was the joke

    • @guitarlover1204
      @guitarlover1204 Před 7 lety +3

      use that blackened saucepan of yours to do a facepalm mate....
      a facepan...

    • @reececrump8483
      @reececrump8483 Před 7 lety +13

      awful. horrible sauce pan maintenance. his family should be ashamed

    • @mortimersnead5821
      @mortimersnead5821 Před 7 lety +5

      Since this is an engineering video, the black residue means that his range is burning it's fuel inefficiently. A well designed gas stoved, working properly should give off nothing but clean blue flame.
      Because of this, Lloyd's utility bill is a little higher than needs be, but the marginal cost is probably too small to justify a new range.

  • @stevesloan7132
    @stevesloan7132 Před 4 lety +3

    Wow, he actually used the phrase,"Brownian motion!" Magnificent! Bravo! What's next? Boyle's Law? Keep up the good work pal!

  • @TVlord5
    @TVlord5 Před 3 lety +9

    Is there any issue in the long term for durability with the components rapidly changing from hot to cold and back again?

  • @agylub
    @agylub Před 5 lety +61

    Lindybeige. The missing Python

  • @jMcWill781
    @jMcWill781 Před 7 lety +31

    This one earned my thumbs up in the first 35 seconds

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Před 7 lety

      Its so graceful , ye could watch it all day .

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Před 7 lety

      yeah , stick it on a cool can of beer and let the fans cool your face !
      But meditate to nothing
      If your concentrating on something your not meditating , your concentrating

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Před 7 lety

      FlyingAxblade emmm.....yeah , I suppose it would ......But on a scorching day , and you want a cool beer / put it on your can and it could fan your face (for a while )(i think)(maybe)....................
      I want Lloyd to muse about the roman dodecahedron

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Před 7 lety

      FlyingAxblade I was just searching it , and a chap actually knitted a perfect set of gloves using each hole for the different fingers and the "nodes" were essential to knitting it .
      And it makes sense considering most were found in cold Gaul rather than warmer countries .
      Theres a vid on him doing it .
      I was a bit skeptical at start but when I saw the finished result it was convincing .

    • @olliephelan
      @olliephelan Před 7 lety

      FlyingAxblade ill go there then.
      But my channels content is varied .
      Not sure what youd be looking for .
      My brother works building cryostats for universities and institutions around the place , and works one week a month in the IQOQI....but I never knew how to upload the vides he sent me .

  • @philipdemaeyer1665
    @philipdemaeyer1665 Před 3 lety

    Brilliant! Good explanation, thank you Sir Lindybeige.

  • @tonymoon4525
    @tonymoon4525 Před 4 lety

    Just love your enthusiasm. The Best Of British. Thank you.

  • @AwakenedSaxon
    @AwakenedSaxon Před 7 lety +21

    One good setup would be focusing sunlight onto the top plate while the bottom plate is submerged in some sort of running stream/river.

    • @nikolaspersson1052
      @nikolaspersson1052 Před 7 lety +16

      If you have a stream you might as well use a water wheel or hydroelectric generator directly. If you have non-running water though it might be a good heatsink.

    • @Nevir202
      @Nevir202 Před 7 lety +5

      I had a similar thought, but for residential use. Focus the sun onto the top and have the bottom plate be the lid of a water tank hooked up to the mains. The water will be somewhat warmed in the process, so if you are in a cold place you can get slightly warmer inlet water to your whole home. But if you're in a hot place where you don't want your "cold" water being any hotter than it already is, just use it to pre-warm the water that is going into your water heater. Either way, whenever you use water coming out of the tank it will slightly boost the efficiency of the unit by replacing some of the warmed water with cooler water.

    • @TheMadJestyr
      @TheMadJestyr Před 7 lety +1

      Or alternately you could use the earth as a heat sink.

  • @WILD4X4D
    @WILD4X4D Před 7 lety +761

    Cody sent me here

  • @williambianchi2006
    @williambianchi2006 Před 4 lety

    You, Sir, are an excellent teacher. Many thanks.

  • @circuitdotlt
    @circuitdotlt Před 4 lety +14

    Thank you for interesting video. Micro cogeneration is still in it's infancy, but these things are slowly coming to residential market.
    In my case I am heating my house with natural gas (from pipes, not bottles), which is 3 times cheaper here, compared to electricity. So I started looking in to electricity generation from heat. Found your video.
    All is nice, youtube is full of these demonstration units, however I am still to find a working unit at 10kW or so.

    • @hermitoldguy6312
      @hermitoldguy6312 Před 3 lety

      You can convert a car engine to burn gas.

    • @circuitdotlt
      @circuitdotlt Před 3 lety

      @@hermitoldguy6312 Do some calculations :) New engine will fail in one-two years and will need oil changes every week.

    • @hermitoldguy6312
      @hermitoldguy6312 Před 3 lety

      @@circuitdotlt Nicolaus Otto was making gas engines in the 1860's (hence the Otto cycle).

    • @circuitdotlt
      @circuitdotlt Před 3 lety

      @@hermitoldguy6312 I run my car on gas, too. But it's not the same as 24/7 operation.

  • @WumbologistPhD
    @WumbologistPhD Před 7 lety +151

    I like to think of the suggested Stirling submarine. In a tense moment the captain orders the whole crew to do jumping jacks in order to heat up the inside of the sub even more to get just a bit more speed and escape!

    • @dingchavez09
      @dingchavez09 Před 6 lety +23

      The Swedes use a sterling powered submarine! The Gotland Class.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gotland-class_submarine

    • @djdm2603
      @djdm2603 Před 6 lety +10

      wasn't there a Finnish sub that used one and beat the US navy in a War Game because it remained undetected because of no radiation signature or signal noise? think i saw a video on it by real engineering...

    • @djdm2603
      @djdm2603 Před 5 lety

      rigegs ty

    • @robertgoff6479
      @robertgoff6479 Před 5 lety +8

      The Gotland is awesome. It uses two Stirlings that appeared to fit in a 2-meter cube each. They're powered by diesel fuel and compressed oxygen, cooled by seawater, and the diesel exhaust is compressed on board and retained until it can be safely discharged. It was completely invisible to US anti-submarine assets, both active and passive.

    • @axel0_02
      @axel0_02 Před 5 lety +2

      @@robertgoff6479 I find that very unlikely to be invisible to active sonar... I suggest that the crew found a good place to hide in. I don't know what happened in reality I just think that my version is a bit more possible based on what I know (which is something, on how an active sonar work... but close to nothing on the war game that we are talking about)

  • @axiezimmah
    @axiezimmah Před 7 lety +5

    Wow, I never knew lindy could make a video of only 30 seconds.

  • @slackerpope
    @slackerpope Před 4 lety

    Excellent video and very interesting. I've always wanted to see a video like this. Thank you! Cheers!!!

  • @Alive6371
    @Alive6371 Před rokem

    I love the way you explained it. Keep up the good work ! ❤️

  • @greyareaRK1
    @greyareaRK1 Před 7 lety +26

    You'd think we have stirling engines everywhere here in Canada. So long as the energy produced is greater than the energy lost via heat to the engine. We'll have to install these on our igloos, post haste.

    • @greyareaRK1
      @greyareaRK1 Před 7 lety +10

      I could put one on my winter coat.

    • @Papierflugzeug95
      @Papierflugzeug95 Před 7 lety +11

      It's not possible to produce more energy than you lose, however you can use the energy that goes to waste otherwise (heat, for example, in a factory).

    • @jeffthecoder
      @jeffthecoder Před 7 lety +3

      In the future after ww3 you'll be burning your landfills to make electricity using stirling engines

    • @greyareaRK1
      @greyareaRK1 Před 7 lety +5

      Don't be ridiculous. Burning landfills just attracts the radioactive megachihuahuas.

    • @charleswood4635
      @charleswood4635 Před 7 lety

      All the way from Mexico ?

  • @tomasspace4819
    @tomasspace4819 Před 7 lety +25

    Most british engine engine ever. YOu can power it by tea and it works better in worse weather. :D

  • @jamietough7024
    @jamietough7024 Před 3 lety

    Btw love yer videos mate..... Your content is very refreshing, factual and enjoyable.

  • @fauseth
    @fauseth Před 4 lety

    You are my most favorite presenter. I dig your style. Thank you for the videos.

  • @Snailman3516
    @Snailman3516 Před 7 lety +23

    actually, the Antarctic idea is pretty good, Lindy. The center of the earth has a lot of radiation heating and it is set to last for millions of years. Unless we do some very stupid things to the earth, the Antarctic will always be incredibly cold as heat radiates out of the Antarctic.

    • @Snailman3516
      @Snailman3516 Před 7 lety +1

      it won't heat up the Antarctic because the heat will just radiate into the sun. It's the trapping of that radiation that leads to all kinds of climate change. Simply moving raw kinetic energy into the Arctic won't change anything unless it is on a scale that would fry the earth.

    • @mattpelzek3809
      @mattpelzek3809 Před 7 lety +8

      There's a particularly good place for it: Mount Erebus is a volcano in antarctica. Extreme heat and extreme cold, all in one place.

    • @absurdist5134
      @absurdist5134 Před 7 lety

      Well, yes, but we don't actually use much energy in Antarctica. I think you'll find transporting the energy to anywhere useful to be somewhat of a hassle.

    • @Snailman3516
      @Snailman3516 Před 7 lety

      Absurdist then just move some industries to Antarctica.

    • @absurdist5134
      @absurdist5134 Před 7 lety +1

      Equal opportunity means a job for every penguin!

  • @gralha_
    @gralha_ Před 7 lety +16

    Love that transition

  • @pointer2null
    @pointer2null Před 4 lety

    First video of yours I've every come across and I love your style!

  • @blueberry1c2
    @blueberry1c2 Před rokem

    Lindy's introductory video on thermodynamics. Can't wait until the video on the refrigeration cycle!

  • @Stettafire
    @Stettafire Před 6 lety +58

    3:30 That same method is used to power my step dad's fan. It works, you see because it's on top of an enclosed fireplace, the bottom is hot, but the air above it is colder, so it powers the fan using the differential. It's useful because then the fan blows hotter air back into the room.

    • @guythepirate
      @guythepirate Před 5 lety +3

      That is a peltier cell however, a bit different.

    • @_tyrannus
      @_tyrannus Před 5 lety +1

      guythepirate Absolutely not. Here's an example of what he's talking about: www.stirlingengine.co.uk/d.asp?product=VULCANSTOVEFAN

    • @guythepirate
      @guythepirate Před 5 lety +2

      Aha thought it was one of these
      www.ecofan.co.uk/woodstove-ecofans.html
      Never seen a Stirling version! Thanks

    • @davidross5770
      @davidross5770 Před 5 lety

      SO = IN THE DEAD OF WINTER AND THE DEAD OF SUMMER - ONE OF THESE MACHINES PLANTED IN THE GROUND WITH THE HEAT OF THE EARTH IN THE SUMMER COOLING IT AND THE HEAT OF THE SUN WARMING IT WOULD MAKE IT RUN BEST AND DURING THE WINTER WITH THE HEAT OF THE EARTH WARMING IT AND THE COLD OF THE AIR COOLING THE TOP OF IT AGAIN IT WOULD WORK BEST USING THERMAL ENERGY OF THE EARTHS CHANGES COMPARED TO THE OUTSIDE TEMPERATURE.. HMMMM ... this engine would slow down in the spring and fall compared to the winter and summer

  • @RuneChaosMarine
    @RuneChaosMarine Před 7 lety +50

    a sterling silver sterling engine cast in the city of sterling?

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige  Před 7 lety +14

      You missed one out.

    • @RuneChaosMarine
      @RuneChaosMarine Před 7 lety +1

      Lindybeige
      when will you go to the BRS and see Keith!? and be on the channel Objectivity?

    • @Dreska_
      @Dreska_ Před 7 lety +9

      Sterling's sterling Sterling Engine cast from sterling in Sterling

    • @tonyoliver2167
      @tonyoliver2167 Před 7 lety

      That it is a stirling, Stirling engine?

    • @fishgun604
      @fishgun604 Před 7 lety

      A sterling example of_______

  • @Hypersim
    @Hypersim Před rokem

    Thanks to your excellent explanation, I FINALLY understood the theory of a Sterling motor, thank you very much for that!!

  • @matthew.daniel
    @matthew.daniel Před 14 dny

    I really enjoyed this, thanks for making it

  • @koneal2000
    @koneal2000 Před 7 lety +12

    That's one long closing card.

  • @NarpytheCrimeDog
    @NarpytheCrimeDog Před 7 lety +32

    So, we could run a massive-ass sterling engine on top of the plutonium and uranium baths to produce energy as well instead of just wasting water?
    Also, do these produce a lot of condensation?

    • @JL-dance
      @JL-dance Před 7 lety

      NarpytheCrimeDog he explains all of this in the video, the stirling uses cold and heat to create motion, so i really don't understand what that has to do with uranium and plutonium baths, a place where people put the used materials from a nuclear power plant so that the radiation doesnt cause everybody in the area to get radiation sickness and long term radiation caused damage (like cancerous cells)

    • @farmerboy916
      @farmerboy916 Před 7 lety +10

      Issue with that would be that the reactors are designed to use the water baths as safety mechanisms. But yes, and it'd look a hell of a lot nicer than a typical nuclear power plant too. A steampunk monstrosity rather than an ugly concrete one.

    • @JL-dance
      @JL-dance Před 7 lety +4

      farmerboy916 really? i find nuclear power plant cooling towers to have a certain industrial look to them, if you just imagine that all the water vapor is smoke from heavy machinery

    • @farmerboy916
      @farmerboy916 Před 7 lety +1

      yo boi jonx
      I mean yeah, but they have the downside of having had an aura of fear built up around them. Plus, people tend to like the industrial look in some circumstances but it increases the "not in my backyard" effect.

    • @TheDetonadoBR
      @TheDetonadoBR Před 7 lety

      If you had that you would still need some kind of fluid to make that trade of heat, water or air, you would still to have fluid. And imagine the air going out of that engine, it would be full of water radioactive vapor.

  • @WJack97224
    @WJack97224 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the demonstration and education. Good on ya mate.

  • @alexanderwallberg640
    @alexanderwallberg640 Před 5 lety

    Great demonstration and explaination!

  • @muhammadschuitema1443
    @muhammadschuitema1443 Před 5 lety +149

    It could work at the equator. Plop the bottom in a lake and paint the top black you,d get a heavy temp difference.

    • @northrupthebandgeek
      @northrupthebandgeek Před 5 lety +43

      That'd be a useful way to get these working reasonably-well in a hot desert, too. Dig the "cold end" deep underground (where it's cooler) and fill that underground reservoir with water, and maximize the amount of heat on the hot end.

    • @User_2
      @User_2 Před 5 lety +20

      northrupthebandgeek | not really sure about that.. isn’t sand relatively good at insulating? I’d imagine the area below the engine would just heat up and - almost - equalize the temperature after a short while.

    • @northrupthebandgeek
      @northrupthebandgeek Před 5 lety +14

      @@User_2 Right, but then at night it'll get cooler at the surface and equalize the other way.

    • @bilbobaggins7137
      @bilbobaggins7137 Před 4 lety +14

      Parabolic mirrors aimed at the plate for the heat, the bottom on a lake? WELL done.

    • @eewweeppkk
      @eewweeppkk Před 4 lety +5

      At that point you have to ask yourself if the temperature difference between the water and heat from the sun produces more energy for a similarly shaped solar panel. I couldn't tell you the answer, but pointing out that you're trying to use a source of energy that we have already been utilizing.

  • @VYxFrost
    @VYxFrost Před 7 lety +73

    then one day, Sterlingpunk!

    • @bengineer8
      @bengineer8 Před 6 lety

      xD

    • @dangerouswitch1066
      @dangerouswitch1066 Před 6 lety

      Lol

    • @mipmipmipmipmip
      @mipmipmipmipmip Před 5 lety

      Lobbying by Big Steam killed off Sterling before it could catch on.

    • @coyoteannabis1192
      @coyoteannabis1192 Před 4 lety

      I actually wrote a story a few years ago about a goblin city powered by a massive Stirling engine.
      Underground aqueducts passed water over the cold side. The warmed water then flowed through a huge, city with parabolic solar array which brought it up to supercritical temperatures to power the hot side. The flywheel, located beneath the city, was so large the engine could be completely shut down for a week and it would still be spinning enough to generate power.

  • @vikvikviyakviyak
    @vikvikviyakviyak Před 3 lety

    that was the best lindybeige video I've ever seen

  • @itisyarb
    @itisyarb Před 3 lety

    This is a really entertaining and informative video, fab work!

  • @jacobgourley5232
    @jacobgourley5232 Před 7 lety +342

    Anyone all of a sudden want one?

  • @MGoudsmits
    @MGoudsmits Před 5 lety +13

    we used sterling engines for cooling the thermal imaging sensor for our tank night vision cameras around 1987. when you drive the engine from outside it will cool down on one side

  • @ZoeSummers1701A
    @ZoeSummers1701A Před 3 lety +1

    You present science very, very well. Like the 1970’s BBC open university programmes of my youth. You have a new subscriber and I’ll share with my friends.

  • @AlkalineGamingHD
    @AlkalineGamingHD Před 5 lety

    saw this recommended for weeks and i avoided it because I thught it would be one of those crappy informal videos that just shows off something I already know exists. This was a million times more informative and interesting. Well done

  • @terryendicott2939
    @terryendicott2939 Před 7 lety +33

    You do not have to go to Antarctica but look at the geothermal pools in Iceland. Iceland it self can be a bit chilly too.

    • @Grumpy_old_Boot
      @Grumpy_old_Boot Před 7 lety +12

      True, but then, Iceland have some nice geothermal power plants as well. :)

    • @RichyArg
      @RichyArg Před 7 lety +9

      then the question would be, what is more efficient, using stirling engines or the turbine generators most geothermal plants use

    • @terryendicott2939
      @terryendicott2939 Před 7 lety +7

      You would have the same question with Antarctica, but Iceland would be closer and less expensive to run test.

    • @Holynub
      @Holynub Před 7 lety +3

      Why not both? Don't geothermal plants also have wasted heat? What if this was attached near the exhaust portion of the plant, and it could capture/use some of that waste to provide even more electricity at only the cost of construction and maintenance. Now, is this cost efficient/economical at a municipal level. But that's something they'd have to investigate if they were to implement these.

    • @nonfunctionalslackfill
      @nonfunctionalslackfill Před 7 lety

      Terry Endicott yes but the also have letters like þ and đ.

  • @therealoldnosey8689
    @therealoldnosey8689 Před 7 lety +9

    Holy shit you mean if we put ice on top of a cup of coffee with some metal shit between we get energy. Fucking science man.

  • @govindarajd3248
    @govindarajd3248 Před 5 lety +2

    Cody sent me here and now I'm subbed!

  • @dominikrutkowski1720
    @dominikrutkowski1720 Před 2 lety

    Awesome video as always. Thanks

  • @Verlisify
    @Verlisify Před 7 lety +65

    From Cody's Lab, this man is hilarious! Subbed

  • @Kurtlane
    @Kurtlane Před 7 lety +6

    Wow! This gives me lots of ideas.
    First, this might be useful in deserts after all. First of all, it often gets very cold in deserts at night. Water often freezes, which is how sherbet was originally made: fruit juice in the desert was exposed at night, and covered up in blankets to keep it cold in the day. So that made be used to make ice for the engine.
    Besides, even in deserts, caves are reasonably cool, if they are deep enough. So an engine would work if it is installed between the surface and a cave, or just a deep enough hole in the ground.
    The other idea is that one might reverse the function and use the thing (it would no longer be an engine) to quickly equalize the heat difference when this is required.
    Please feel free to spread these ideas.
    Thanks.

  • @RichardFoleher
    @RichardFoleher Před 4 lety

    What a great video, thanks. Now I want to build one!

  • @martentrudeau6948
    @martentrudeau6948 Před 3 lety

    Thanks Lindy, very nice explanation of a brilliant engine!