John Collins wrote:Why a "small" one Steve. I picture a large chunky structure, perhaps partly sunk into the ground. Nothing fancy, just big, crude and brutish and able to pump enough electricity into a home to satisfy all requirements. I don't subscribe to the general feeling that the wheel will be too weak for real benefit. It all depends on its height, the size of the weights, how many of them there are, how many mechanisms, whether there are serial wheels mounted on one axle, or just one very wide wheel with very wide weights, how slow and powerful it is or how fast you make it. If Bessler said he could make them fast or slow then so can we. Too many variables to write it off yet.
JC
Hey John....still waiting for the book! ;-)....no hurry. lol
I was addressing a statement by Silverfox...
Just another, if slightly more important, household appliance that they'd own just like a fridge or a water heater and that no home should ever be without.
I just thought if would be a good bit bigger than that to provide for one of todays households. I am coming at this from the demand perspective of even a single household. There is a tremendous demand anymore and it seems to constantly increase with technological advancements that also...consume power. Where Bessler mentions that he could put many of these on a same axle would seem to be the way to go in a massive distribution type of situation, say providing for 6-8 homes. This could be centrally located, underground even, with individual generators for each home.
Definitely in agreement that we can't make any true distinctions on the practicability of this yet, but just from the understanding we already have as to what is needed to maintain a load, I would think that even a wheel the size of the Kassel would not be able to maintain a household by itself if the demand is not reduced. at least in my neck of the woods.
I don't think speed adjustment is going affect the
load on the device....a generator is still a generator.
Steve
Finding the right solution...is usually a function of asking the right questions. -A. Einstein