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Hybrid boat technology

A couple years ago, I looked into Sterling engines which are EXTERNAL combustion engines, meaning they use the heat from some source to heat a working fluid. Sterlings are the most thermodynamically efficient of all heat engines but have never been popular due to poor power to weight ratio. There are modern Sterlings that are incredibly efficient and burn diesel, natural gas, or just about anything, even waste motor oil. Sterlings require a good heat exchanger to cool the working fluid and boats have this in excess..seawater. Sterlings are constant RPM engines meaning they are best for generating electricity while an electric motor produces propulsion. The commercially produced Sterling I saw used Helium as the working fluid and the system was sealed. In spite of the best sealing, helium has the habit of leaking out of anything (which is why it is used in vacuum leak detectors). This means a Sterling might need to be pumped out and refilled with Helium every so often. It would be interesting to see a sailboat use a large battery bank as ballast and have a Sterling to generate electricity. ANother good thing about Sterlings is that they are QUIET.
dbohara
Feb 3
2006
>thing about Sterlings is that they are QUIET.

stirling - not sterling

Shortwave
Feb 4
But they're not efficient, the mechanical conversion is no better or worse that an internal combustion engine (most of the energy goes out the exhaust pipe, in the stirling the engine itself doesn't have exhaust but whatever does the heating & cooling has a similar heat cycle.

The same old problems arise in that lots of seemingly free or cheap(er) power alternatives just can't produce large amounts of power. It seems the modern internal combustion engine is as good as we can currently do.

Thus far anyway things like the Prius, Ficht, E-Tec & others have only reinforced just what a big ask it's going to be to get environmentally acceptable new power systems into general use.

As a side observation, here because we're much more motherland (UK) based than you, what you call rod ratio, we've always known as stirling angles. You can see the relevance of rod length in a stirling engine.

K

K.
You mean STIRLING?

Here's one run off a solar collector: (scroll to bottom) http://www.stirlingsouth.com/Roy/others/alphonse.htm

http://stirlingenergy.com/

Bill
Feb 4
   

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