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Howdy Folks!
We got some pretty smart folks here at the UT forums many of whom are scientifically inclined so maybe someone can give me an idea here or point me in the right direction. I've had an idea for building small water powered generators. With large hydro-power dams, we've created problems with rivers etc., but what I was thinking here was something along the lines of smaller generators, strung in series along small creak beds, streams and smaller rivers. Not to give too much of my idea away so that no one comes along and patents it and makes a fortune on it (please scuse the mild paranoia here), but basically the idea I'm thinking of would have minimal impact on wildlife and the surounding ecosystem and could at the very least be used as an alternative power source to compliment current sources of electricity. Now my question is, how would a person with such an idea go about pursuing or trying to implement this idea (with little or no cash of his or her own to work with)? If my house was very near to a stream, I could at the very least try this idea out with my own houses electrical and see how much power it would generate, but how would a person go about trying to "sell" this idea if you will...or at the very least see if it's something that would be worthwhile? I'm not an engineer or a scientist or anything, but I do have some knowledge and experience working with electricity and a pretty good understanding of generators and such and I think if it were done correctly, this could be a very viable alternative source of energy. I'm grateful for any and all input here...thanks! Bright Blessings & Gentle Breezes, Jim |
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I agree with Tom however; increasing the efficiency of houses (and commercial use) is the best way to knock off a large percentage of greenhouse gas production quickly. It would also save people money, rather than cost money.
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Climate Change Australia |
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Kashi, On the part about the ram pump-
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And Tinaa, re- Quote:
Also, when extracting energy from moving water, the reverse occurs, and energy is lost in the transfer from moving water to the prop. Variables affecting cavitation include: curvature of the prop, the number of blades, prop speed, water temperature and salinity, and percentage of dissolved gasses. Neat little reference to this in the book/film- "The Hunt for Red October".
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Pre-Quote: 'To survive one has to experiment. When the environment changes, the traditional way of doing things doesn't work.' Quote: "It's the outriders, the organisms that seem to be maladjusted before the change, which are the only ones that survive these changes...in that way a species continues." Carl Sagan |