JoeSchmuckatelli Posted February 11 Share Posted February 11 30 minutes ago, farmerben said: Diesel fuel has 44 times more energy/kg compared to lithium ion batteries. That is 4400% better. *correction its not that much better because the conversion of thermal power to shaft power is around 40%, whereas electric battery combos are closer to 90% Oh yeah - trust me I was also thinking about ways to capture the heat and convert to electricity... But it's the same problem = adding weight + inefficiency. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted February 11 Share Posted February 11 8 hours ago, farmerben said: Taking the motion of a shaft into electricity and then back into a shaft involves losses. What percentage is lost I'm not sure but 10% is quite significant. It makes the most sense if you stagger the inputs and outputs in time. A hybrid that stops and starts frequently and has good batteries is ideal. If you need to motor continuously for many hours than basic diesel powered shaft is going to be more efficient than hybrid. Now diesel electric locomotives have no batteries but guess the zero rpm torque and many driving wheels makes this preferable. Else hybrids are nice you getting the best of both worlds. Fun fact the US made steam turbine electrical battleships, the problem was that they had issues with geared turbines so using generators and motors worked. It had the benefit of not needing an long drive shaft and that you could route power easy. Say you lost the left propeller and the right engine, just have the left engine drive the right propeller. Downside was losses and the fun of high power electricity and sea water if you took damage. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted February 11 Share Posted February 11 14 hours ago, razark said: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_oldest_extant_buildings Looking at some very sad looking pyramids Stuff who get buried survive much better unless its massive and / or build of huge stones. One thing who would survive for up to billions of years would be mines, yes they will be filled with mud who become stone but that its an old mine would be pretty obvious. More fun thick steel structures like the stuff holding up the roof and railroad track would fossilize easy compared to bones as it take much longer to break down. And it should be iron here, instead we find this weird stuff. Also stuff like ceramics don't break down more than stone if buried. Silurian hypnosis debunked. Yes they could be stone age, people find stone tools all the time, mostly arrowheads as they was semi disposable. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
farmerben Posted February 11 Share Posted February 11 Edenborough, Scotland is built mostly of granite blocks over a foot thick. I'll bet on it as the city that changes the least in the next 1000 years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darthgently Posted Tuesday at 06:25 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 06:25 PM On 2/11/2025 at 9:56 AM, JoeSchmuckatelli said: Oh yeah - trust me I was also thinking about ways to capture the heat and convert to electricity... But it's the same problem = adding weight + inefficiency. We already do make use of the excess heat in smallish ways. Cabin heating and defrost in an ICE vehicle is taken for granted. I would not own a Tesla, for example, in a blizzard prone area in winter without a small diesel cabin heater and a few gallons of diesel for battery emergencies. Here is a cheap Asian knockoff of what I’m thinking of but the $elect $pecial brand name$ are: Webasco and Eberspracher https://www.amazon.com/ChuBu-12V-24V-Upraded-Consumption-Heating/dp/B0C696B6V2/ref=mp_s_a_1_5?sr=8-5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted Tuesday at 07:54 PM Share Posted Tuesday at 07:54 PM On 2/11/2025 at 3:56 PM, JoeSchmuckatelli said: Oh yeah - trust me I was also thinking about ways to capture the heat and convert to electricity... But it's the same problem = adding weight + inefficiency. We have two ways of doing this first is a steam turbine, second is thermocouples, later is less effective than steam engines but has no moving parts. Make an thermocouple with an efficiency as an steam engine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
farmerben Posted Wednesday at 01:23 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 01:23 PM (edited) What is your favorite type of nuclear reactor. I think the US should be building breeder reactors like EBR II and LFTR. For export purposes to perhaps unstable parts of the world I recommend CANDU because there is no fuel enrichment or reprocessing. There has been sensational news that CANDUs leak tritium into the atmosphere. But that is so miniscule I don't care. Currently the AP1000 Westinghouse reactor might be the most economical. It is a pressurized light water reactor. Edited Wednesday at 03:11 PM by farmerben Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted Wednesday at 06:21 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 06:21 PM 4 hours ago, farmerben said: What is your favorite type of nuclear reactor BREST-OD-300 (fast neutron, lead-cooled)of Project Breakthrough for the sheer madness of coming bundled with its own on-site fuel fabrication facility. Yep, it's a breeder. Late-model VVERs have sold like ice cream in July, comparatively speaking. 4 hours ago, farmerben said: For export purposes to perhaps unstable parts of the world I recommend CANDU because there is no fuel enrichment or reprocessing. Truly unstable parts of the world tend to be too unstable for a large, long-term project in the first place. That's why the various mobile options might be a simpler way, and putting them on a barge expedites a lot of politics. Yeah, I'm talking about Akademik Lomonosov. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted Thursday at 07:35 AM Share Posted Thursday at 07:35 AM Russian Academy of Sciences petitions for a new HAARP-style system to replace Sura https://iz.ru/1841985/2025-02-20/v-rossii-postroat-superantennu-dla-izucenia-kosmiceskoi-pogody 60 antennae in 700 m x 700 m grid, 2,5-6 MHz, effective power 900 MWt How does it compare to HAARP - because I'm seeing givawatt claims for an array that is a fourth of the size - and how excited should the tin foil salesmen be? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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