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Author Topic: Submergible Piston Track Engine  (Read 4138 times)

Offline Tommey Reed

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Submergible Piston Track Engine
« on: January 24, 2010, 04:54:16 PM »
This is a engine the convert displacement of water and convert it into work...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVPFYSDATlw

Tom..

Offline DreamThinkBuild

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Re: Submergible Piston Track Engine
« Reply #1 on: January 24, 2010, 10:12:01 PM »
Hi Tommey,

Your displacement engine is really neat. I suggest using cones or a torpedo shaped (small cigar tubes or glass lab vials) , so that it has a smaller surface area to push through the water to reduce the resistance. Cones within cones just slightly displaced along your linear version should give a lot of power.

Offline Cherryman

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Re: Submergible Piston Track Engine
« Reply #2 on: January 24, 2010, 10:30:53 PM »
Great work Tommy!

I was trying to use bouyancy myself too, think you might get a closed loop on this force.

http://www.overunity.com/index.php?topic=8684.msg224629#new

Keep up te good work



Offline Tommey Reed

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Re: Submergible Piston Track Engine
« Reply #3 on: January 24, 2010, 11:36:33 PM »
Yes I do believe this could do a closed loop, the data shows using displacement as a force could reach overunity.

This is one formula I did:

1 cu/ft = 62.38 lb lift
at 12 ft of water with a chain drive of 20 cubes, 10 on one side is filled with water and the other side is the displacement of air.
The 10 filled with water will sink to the bottom, and the 10 displacement will have a upward force of 10x62.38=623.8 lb of constant torque.
Each time the cube lets out the air trapped, the bottom cube fills with 1728cu/in of 5psi of air.
each 2.31 foot of water will need 1 psi, so 12/2.31=5.2 psi...
If you add a crank to the top of the shaft to compress enough air to fill each cube , this could be done because of 10cube vs 1 cube of force..
What do you all think?

Offline Cherryman

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Re: Submergible Piston Track Engine
« Reply #4 on: January 24, 2010, 11:45:34 PM »
Yes I do believe this could do a closed loop, the data shows using displacement as a force could reach overunity.

This is one formula I did:

1 cu/ft = 62.38 lb lift
at 12 ft of water with a chain drive of 20 cubes, 10 on one side is filled with water and the other side is the displacement of air.
The 10 filled with water will sink to the bottom, and the 10 displacement will have a upward force of 10x62.38=623.8 lb of constant torque.
Each time the cube lets out the air trapped, the bottom cube fills with 1728cu/in of 5psi of air.
each 2.31 foot of water will need 1 psi, so 12/2.31=5.2 psi...
If you add a crank to the top of the shaft to compress enough air to fill each cube , this could be done because of 10cube vs 1 cube of force..
What do you all think?

I think it looks promissing!   I like the belt drive and the variation of being put in rivers!  It saves fisch and envirement impact@ 

Keep it up

 You try it with air inlet, i 'm gonna try it with a closed sytem.  I think turning a blanced wheel takes less force then the bouyancy of an object inside it.