Power from junk is fun stuff! Sometimes they don't make much electricity. Once I am set up on the homestead, I plan to build a vertical axis machine from scratch of my own design.
I havd complained to the bot owner. I don't mind a conversation on Bible concepts, but having a questionable video, with limited Bible content; spammed at me evfew days, in unacceptable!
I dropped Netflix because they started making offensive programming, but I did watch this video. He dug out small electric motors that contained permanent Magnets, and added impeller blades. They didn't make a lot of power, but where they had none, it was a game changer! This would be a place to put up several, to make multiple small charging points.
Gallon cans, split down the middle and soldered on the open end, would make a good single cup for the vertical axis machine. Mounting them in odd numbers seems to help low speed start up. Cooling fan motors or heater fan motors would be a good one to build upon! But as you say, keep it small to avoid problems....
Politics are poisoning this Planet, we need to be rid of all of it! It is a cancer on the Human race....
Might be time to find a wooden (or steel) boat, and find a better place. It is not as good here as it was, too much liberal garbage here too. But it might help you for a while.
This virus is over rated, and not as dangerous as they claim. They will use it to crash the markets; so they can steal money from investors, and then blame the virus!
William Kamkwamba
William Kamkwamba (born August 5, 1987) is a Malawian inventor and author. He gained fame in his country in 2002 when he built a wind turbine to power multiple electrical appliances in his family's house in Wimbe, 32 km (20 mi) east of Kasungu, using blue gum trees, bicycle parts, and materials collected in a local scrapyard. Since then, he has built a solar-powered water pump that supplies the first drinking water in his village and two other wind turbines, the tallest standing at 12 meters (39 ft), and is planning two more, including one in Lilongwe, the political capital of Malawi.
Power from junk is fun stuff! Sometimes they don't make much electricity. Once I am set up on the homestead, I plan to build a vertical axis machine from scratch of my own design.
I havd complained to the bot owner. I don't mind a conversation on Bible concepts, but having a questionable video, with limited Bible content; spammed at me evfew days, in unacceptable!
>:(
Yes, I have watched it too. He did well turning junk into power, where there is normally no power.
I will need a significant structure to get above the trees, absorb the wind pressure and resist the magnus effect, for my design.
:)>
I dropped Netflix because they started making offensive programming, but I did watch this video. He dug out small electric motors that contained permanent Magnets, and added impeller blades. They didn't make a lot of power, but where they had none, it was a game changer! This would be a place to put up several, to make multiple small charging points.
Gallon cans, split down the middle and soldered on the open end, would make a good single cup for the vertical axis machine. Mounting them in odd numbers seems to help low speed start up. Cooling fan motors or heater fan motors would be a good one to build upon! But as you say, keep it small to avoid problems....
Politics are poisoning this Planet, we need to be rid of all of it! It is a cancer on the Human race....
Might be time to find a wooden (or steel) boat, and find a better place. It is not as good here as it was, too much liberal garbage here too. But it might help you for a while.
This virus is over rated, and not as dangerous as they claim. They will use it to crash the markets; so they can steal money from investors, and then blame the virus!
>:(
William Kamkwamba
William Kamkwamba (born August 5, 1987) is a Malawian inventor and author. He gained fame in his country in 2002 when he built a wind turbine to power multiple electrical appliances in his family's house in Wimbe, 32 km (20 mi) east of Kasungu, using blue gum trees, bicycle parts, and materials collected in a local scrapyard. Since then, he has built a solar-powered water pump that supplies the first drinking water in his village and two other wind turbines, the tallest standing at 12 meters (39 ft), and is planning two more, including one in Lilongwe, the political capital of Malawi.