Page 1 of 1

I need engineer help

Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 6:54 pm
by gtmtulsa
I have developed a way to make air combust...yes the very air we take
into our lungs....WITHOUT A FUEL OR ADDITIVE OF ANY KIND... I can
make it combust and hold a temp above 400 degrees on less than 1 lb
per hour. It requires 400 watts/4 amps.
My question is this...wouldnt that be free energy for a 1-2 hp
Stirling ? This process MUST be used with an external comustion
engine only. I mean to say, If 1 hp is just over 700 watts, but I
only need 400 "once the system is primed" PLEASE DO NOT RESPOND WITH
STUPIDITY ABOUT COMBUSTABLE AIR. I HAVE IT AND CAN/WILL PROVE IT WHEN
THE TIME IS RIGHT. AT THE MOMENT IM TRYING TO PUT A TEAM TOGETHER TO
HELP ME. Please understand, I only have a Jr high education, but have
been inventing/tinkering all my life. I have something here and I
know it. I NEED HELP PLEASE.....

Posted: Tue Jul 05, 2005 3:00 pm
by stan.hornbaker

Response to I need engineer help

Posted: Wed Aug 10, 2005 5:19 am
by s3079893
Dude you need to give way more information to get a serious response. I've done a couple year of thermos dynamice at uni would be happy to crunch some figures for you but you will have to tell me exactly what your thing does (not it's secret or how it works, i'll assume you are able o combust air).

what i need you to be specific on is:
-how much air you heat up (volume or mass) do you contain this air?
-power required and for how long to reach the temp?

Please send me as much info as you can IN DETAIL, if you would like a bit more privacy send me an email at s3079893@student.rmit.edu.au

and i can't stress enough be specific on your UNITS ie (temp when you say degrees are we talking Calcius, kevin ....)

Response to I need engineer help

Posted: Tue Oct 25, 2005 2:56 am
by cyril.bouchayer
Hi,

First of all : do you have a patent ???? If not, you should not tell anything to anyone !!!!!!

If yes I would ba happy to help you.

Cyril Bouchayer (France)
cyril.bouchayer@caramail.com

Response to I need engineer help

Posted: Sun Mar 05, 2006 8:09 am
by danielj
First off, if you need 400 watts to work this process, than it isn't free energy. You're paying for it with that power input.

Second, with the temp differentials you're talking about, You'd need close to 2000W input to get 750W out (1 hp) Thats assuming 400F to room temp (75F) with an ideal cycle.

I'm not meaning to discourage you, only trying to suggest that nothing is free, and the world is not as forgiving as we'd all like it to be. Good luck and happy tinkering.

~DiffyQ