MD

"Morris Dovey"

15/08/2007 2:52 PM

More Stirling Stuff

...or "Thinking weird thoughts in Iowa"

I got to wondering just how big a fluidyne I could build - after all,
I've seen some pretty sizable plastic pipe going down the road on
semis. Naturally, I ended up asking myself: "Well, if you could build
a big honkin' Stirling engine, WTF would it ever be good _for_ ?

That evening I spotted a blurb about using windmills to produce power
to run pumps to fill reservoirs for hydroelectric power generation
when the wind wasn't blowing - !?! - and I had an application for my
big engine.

I thought about it a bit more and decided that plastic pipe might not
cut it for _really_ big engines - perhaps the pump bodies could be
cast in place using reinforced concrete. I'm still mulling that one
over...

Anyway, I've just put up another Stirling engine web page that goes a
bit beyond the coffee cup scale. I think I'll take a swing at the
hydroelectric generation idea myself. Link in my sig. Part of the
prototyping done did actually involve woodworking.

I don't mind saying that I'm *way* over my head on this one (I've done
that often enough that it doesn't scare me any more) so please feel
welcome to throw corrections, better ideas, rotten veggies, <whatever>
at my mailbox.

Also let me know if you're aware of any good potential reservoir sites
in Italy, Greece, Spain, Morocco, Portugal, Mexico, Ecuador, Turkey,
California...

;-)

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Stirling/HydroPump.html


This topic has 14 replies

JJ

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 12:35 AM

Wed, Aug 15, 2007, 2:52pm (EDT-1) [email protected] (Morris=A0Dovey) doth
sayeth:
..or "Thinking weird thoughts in Iowa"

Well, if I was looking for a way to feed a resivor from a river,
I'd just go with hydraulic rams.

If it all doesn't work out, here's something simple you can try
instead.
http://www.ahasvc.org/DesignYourSystem.htm



JOAT
I do things I don't know how to do, so that I might learn how to do
them.
- Picasso

sS

[email protected] (Scott Lurndal)

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 5:05 PM

"Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> writes:
>Puckdropper wrote:
>
>| Morris, I've got some Sahara Swampland to sell you. ;-)
>
>Valuable real estate! I think you'd better hang onto it - you're in
>position to dominate the north African cranberry market. :-D
>
Morris,

Here's a local storage site:

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Luis_Reservoir>

scott

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

15/08/2007 3:51 PM

dpb wrote:
| Morris Dovey wrote:
|| ...or "Thinking weird thoughts in Iowa"
||
| ...
|
|| That evening I spotted a blurb about using windmills to produce
|| power to run pumps to fill reservoirs for hydroelectric power
|| generation when the wind wasn't blowing - !?! - and I had an
|| application for my big engine.
|
| "Pumped storage" facilities...not the _most_ widespread thing, but
| quite a number of them exist. W/ excess capacity at night, etc.,
| can help on peaking by using that capacity to refill the reservoir
| when not needed on the grid. Aids in mitigating needing more
| capacity for peak demand...
|
| Other than that, interesting thought, but no direct input (other
| than to note we have lots of wind generation here, but no hill nor
| (surface) water to pump... :)

My guess is that (at least initially) the greatest interest in a
lash-up like this might be on a mountainous coast in a location with a
lot of sunshine.

It's interesting to me because the initial investment could be
relatively small, the maintenance/upkeep requirements would be
essentially those of providing TLC to the generators, and the
(hydro)carbon cost would be zip.

In seacoast areas, the upper reservoir "head" might also serve reverse
osmosis desalination facilities to provide freshwater in locations
where it was scarce.

Grows more trees, lets more people work wood...

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Stirling/

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

15/08/2007 8:38 PM

Han wrote:

| I just heard that some big office buildings save money on energy by
| freezing water at night and using it by day to cool air for air
| conditioning needs. What would be the requirements of fluidyne
| engines to generate cooling?

Warning: I haven't tried cooling with fluidynes yet - and I'm not
aware of anyone else ever trying. I'm giving you my best shot at what
I think is a reasonable answer, but you should maintain some degree of
scepticism...

To do the job with fluidynes alone, you'd need a pair of fluidynes and
a source of heat to drive the first in "normal" mode, which would
produce the mechanical energy to drive the second in "reverse" mode.
It'd only be cost efficient if you had an economical source of heat.

As with other Stirling cycle engines, in normal mode fluidynes work
off a temperature differential between their "hot" head and their
"cold" head to produce mechanical energy...

...but/and one of the interesting characteristics of Stirling cycle
engines is that if mechanical energy (instead of heat energy at the
hot head) is applied, they'll respond by developing a hot side and a
cold side.

[ I've actually driven a small mechanical Stirling engine with a drill
and seen frost form on the cold side. I have no idea why it didn't
occur to me back then to couple two of 'em together. I may be a bit
slow on the uptake... ]

So I guess that the answer to your question is that if you have a
source of alternating pressure, you can apply that to a single
fluidyne to develop a hot side and a cold side. If you circulate water
around the cold side and through a heat exchanger (picture an auto
radiator) and blow air through that heat exchanger, then you have a
fluidyne air conditioner.

If you lack a source of alternating pressure but do have an economical
source of heat, then you can apply that heat to the hot side of
another fluidyne and let it be the source of alternating pressure -
the setup I described in my first paragraph.

There's a drawing of the two-fluidyne solution on the web page at the
link below. I'm not a bit hesitant to confess that it looks almost too
strange to be credible - and yet, I think it will work.

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Stirling/Cool.html

Pp

Puckdropper

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 7:58 AM

"Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote in news:46c35a5a$0$3581$815e3792
@news.qwest.net:

*snip*

> Also let me know if you're aware of any good potential reservoir sites
> in Italy, Greece, Spain, Morocco, Portugal, Mexico, Ecuador, Turkey,
> California...
>
> ;-)
>
> --

Morris, I've got some Sahara Swampland to sell you. ;-)

Puckdropper
--
Wise is the man who attempts to answer his question before asking it.

To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 6:55 AM

Puckdropper wrote:

| Morris, I've got some Sahara Swampland to sell you. ;-)

Valuable real estate! I think you'd better hang onto it - you're in
position to dominate the north African cranberry market. :-D

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 8:15 AM

J T wrote:
| Wed, Aug 15, 2007, 2:52pm (EDT-1) [email protected] (Morris Dovey)
| doth sayeth:
| ..or "Thinking weird thoughts in Iowa"
|
| Well, if I was looking for a way to feed a resivor from a
| river, I'd just go with hydraulic rams.
|
| If it all doesn't work out, here's something simple you can try
| instead.

If you have the head to work with, the hydraulic ram might work for
you.

Largely it's a matter of scale and moving water (a _lot_ of water - an
average of 11 cubic km per day) uphill. It almost certainly won't be a
single pair of reservoirs, and it'll take a lot of pumps.

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 1:07 PM

Scott Lurndal wrote:

| Here's a local storage site:
|
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Luis_Reservoir

Interesting - especially so since I've been in that neighborhood
without even knowing it was there.

It looks as though they already have everything they're likely to want
already in place - and also as if that water is fully committed for
agricultural use.

I've saved the wikipedia reference so I can revisit. Thanks!

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Stirling/

MD

"Morris Dovey"

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 4:47 PM

dpb wrote:

| Smith Mountain/Leesville Lake combined pumped storage facility
| (Appalachian Electric Power)
|
|
http://www.smithmtn.com/Project%20Description/Smith%20Mountain/smithmo
untdam.htm
|
| At Smith Mountain, they drop into Leesville Reservoir for the
| reclamation and pump back in offpeak hours. Unfortunately, the
| Leesville lake is much smaller than Smith Mtn so they're limited in
| how much can generate before it is at limit stage...
|
| Another I'm at least somewhat familiar with is TVA's Raccoon Valley.

This comes a bit closer to the type of project I'm looking at, except
that I'm aiming to pump the lower reservoir "dry" (with non-electric
pumps).

They seem to like to put these things in (IMO) beautiful country.

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

sS

[email protected] (Scott Lurndal)

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 9:25 PM

"Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> writes:
>Scott Lurndal wrote:
>
>| Here's a local storage site:
>|
>| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Luis_Reservoir
>
>Interesting - especially so since I've been in that neighborhood
>without even knowing it was there.
>
>It looks as though they already have everything they're likely to want
>already in place - and also as if that water is fully committed for
>agricultural use.

A lot of that water goes to LA for lawn irrigation :-). The California
aquaduct runs along I-5 there, and the Oneill forebay links up with it
to deliver water to the overpopulated southern desert. They pump into San Luis
in the winter and spring when the runoff from the Sierra Nevada is
running, and release water in the summer and fall to LA (and the
san joachin valley).

scott

Hn

Han

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 12:33 AM

I just heard that some big office buildings save money on energy by
freezing water at night and using it by day to cool air for air
conditioning needs. What would be the requirements of fluidyne engines to
generate cooling?

Han

dn

dpb

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

15/08/2007 3:22 PM

Morris Dovey wrote:
> ...or "Thinking weird thoughts in Iowa"
>
...

> That evening I spotted a blurb about using windmills to produce power
> to run pumps to fill reservoirs for hydroelectric power generation
> when the wind wasn't blowing - !?! - and I had an application for my
> big engine.

"Pumped storage" facilities...not the _most_ widespread thing, but quite
a number of them exist. W/ excess capacity at night, etc., can help on
peaking by using that capacity to refill the reservoir when not needed
on the grid. Aids in mitigating needing more capacity for peak demand...

Other than that, interesting thought, but no direct input (other than to
note we have lots of wind generation here, but no hill nor (surface)
water to pump... :)

--

dn

dpb

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 1:49 PM

Morris Dovey wrote:
> Scott Lurndal wrote:
>
> | Here's a local storage site:
> |
> | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Luis_Reservoir
>
> Interesting - especially so since I've been in that neighborhood
> without even knowing it was there.
>
> It looks as though they already have everything they're likely to want
> already in place - and also as if that water is fully committed for
> agricultural use.
>
> I've saved the wikipedia reference so I can revisit. Thanks!

Smith Mountain/Leesville Lake combined pumped storage facility
(Appalachian Electric Power)

http://www.smithmtn.com/Project%20Description/Smith%20Mountain/smithmountdam.htm

At Smith Mountain, they drop into Leesville Reservoir for the
reclamation and pump back in offpeak hours. Unfortunately, the
Leesville lake is much smaller than Smith Mtn so they're limited in how
much can generate before it is at limit stage...

Another I'm at least somewhat familiar with is TVA's Raccoon Valley.

--

dn

dpb

in reply to "Morris Dovey" on 15/08/2007 2:52 PM

16/08/2007 4:59 PM

Morris Dovey wrote:
> dpb wrote:
>
> | Smith Mountain/Leesville Lake combined pumped storage facility
> | (Appalachian Electric Power)
> |
> |
> http://www.smithmtn.com/Project%20Description/Smith%20Mountain/smithmo
> untdam.htm
> |
> | At Smith Mountain, they drop into Leesville Reservoir for the
> | reclamation and pump back in offpeak hours. Unfortunately, the
> | Leesville lake is much smaller than Smith Mtn so they're limited in
> | how much can generate before it is at limit stage...
> |
> | Another I'm at least somewhat familiar with is TVA's Raccoon Valley.
>
> This comes a bit closer to the type of project I'm looking at, except
> that I'm aiming to pump the lower reservoir "dry" (with non-electric
> pumps).
>
> They seem to like to put these things in (IMO) beautiful country.
>
Well, two things contribute to that...it takes the change in elevation
which implies (usually) mountains and secondly, water. The combination
of those makes for what most folks find "purty"... :)

Smith Mountain and Leesville are both constructed, of course. Smith
Mountain in particularly is a very much used and developed property.
When we were in TN it was almost new and fairly undeveloped. Lakefront
property just seemed exorbitant, but if had bought some would have made
a _very_ nice investment!

--


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