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Date:         Wed, 22 Oct 2003 16:09:42 -0400
Reply-To:     Daniel Stevens <dosteven@SYR.EDU>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Daniel Stevens <dosteven@SYR.EDU>
Subject:      interesting generator motor
Comments: cc: robertnstevens@hotmail.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

i know barely vanagon content.. but wow what a concept.

The Stirling motor http://www.suremarine.com/whispergen.htm

Conventional generators are driven by noisy internal combustion diesel or petrol engines. The main feature of the Stirling motor is its silent operation, as it is not an internal combustion (explosion) engine: its principle is based on permanent external combustion. A boiler-type burner heats the outside of the cylinder heads of the engine to about 700°C. Pressurized nitrogen contained in the water-cooled engine block is pumped into the hot cylinders and pushes down the pistons while expanding as it heats up. This same gas then returns into the block where it cools down and contracts, and so on in a continuous cycle.

Invented in 1816 by the Reverend Robert Stirling, the engine has been subject to lots of research but till recently no one has succeeded in developing a practical application that is suitable for daily use.

Although the Stirling technology was invented in 1816, the WhisperGen is the first commercially available product incorporating a Stirling motor.


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