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BLP Thermal transfer and DEKA Stirling Engine
Posted on Saturday, May 15, 2004 @ 11:14:45 UTC by vlad

Devices In the hydrino yahoo group VC writes: I have had the good fortune to have some interaction with Dean Kamen's organization DEKA Research. Dean is a genius inventor who came up with ideas like the STENT, SEGWAY and IBOT devices to name a few.


Recently, DEKA developed a concept for a highly efficient Sterling engine (updated to conform to 21st century engineering and materials standards). I note that Randy Mills has mentioned the use of the BLP with a Sterling engine serveral times. I think there is probably opportunities for DEKA and BLP to do something together.

DEKA's sterling engine http://www.dekaresearch.com/coreTech.html currently has a limited life span due to the fact that the heating element wears out. My thoughts would be that a BLP thermal generator could be substitued (almost immediately) to fit in one of the DEKA's sterling engines .. I think there are a couple of different models.

My thought is that coupling BLP with a sterling engine would make a pretty good (reliable and smooth) electrical generator. It would make for very low cost electrolysis mechanism.

Its worth giving Randy a heads up on this.

THanks
VC

 
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"BLP Thermal transfer and DEKA Stirling Engine" | Login/Create an Account | 1 comment | Search Discussion
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Re: BLP Thermal transfer and DEKA Stirling Engine (Score: 1)
by vlad on Sunday, May 16, 2004 @ 21:00:42 UTC
(User Info | Send a Message) http://www.zpenergy.com
A thought I have also had, since Kamen has devoted a lot of effort to design a way around many of the inherent problems of Stirling engines, and he is wealthy, and inventive and all that, a seemingly good match. As I recall, I have suggested such cooperation in an email to Mills in the past. Somehow I got an impression from someone that Mills had dismissed Kamen as 'just a mechanical engineer'. I do not have this from any authoritative source. Choices of relationships involve lots of factors about which I have no clue.

Kamen was featured on one of the TV tabloids a while back with a package that contained a water purifier driven by excess heat from a Stirling engine which also drove a small electric generator. The idea was that this package would be a boon to the developing world, for it would give drinking water (women of some villages walk miles for a jugful of potable water) and electricity for light, radio, or a small TV to remote villages. I haven't heard any more of this, but it could be transformational in some areas --- but deforestation by incremental needs for firewood has already wrought great ecological damage in some countries, the Kamen package would run on wood fires, perhaps incidental to cooking.

We need BLP!

Mike Carrell



 

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