- #36
Creator
- 566
- 6
Nice work...now, how fast can it go AGAINST the wind??
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Creator said:Nice work...now, how fast can it go AGAINST the wind??
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"You seem to misunderstand the method of operation. The prop is not acting like a wind turbine - it is never extracting energy from the air, so to speak. It is acting as a propeller, pulling the cart forwards against the air. The energy source is the wheels - they are rolling against the ground. "
I think you would have to agree that, if your cart were inside a tunnel (tube) with the same CSA as the cart, then it wouldn't go any faster than the airflow in the tunnel (how could it do better than a well fitting piston). Therefore there must be another source of momentum to transfer to the cart to explain how it goes faster than the air flow. The cylinder to which you refer must be much larger than the cylinder immediately around the cart or where is the momentum / velocity difference / power coming from? You can't transfer momentum if there is no (positive) velocity difference so the system has to produce one in some way."The airflow around it will be very much like the airflow around any propeller. As the cart moves, it will leave a cylinder of air behind it which is moving slower (relative to the ground) than the surrounding air."
sophiecentaur said:QUOTE "You seem to misunderstand the method of operation. The prop is not acting like a wind turbine - it is never extracting energy from the air, so to speak. It is acting as a propeller, pulling the cart forwards against the air. The energy source is the wheels - they are rolling against the ground. "
"Wheels" are not an energy source. Something must be pushing them along the ground, making them rotate, for power to be available. What is that 'something'? You need a Force X a Speed for power to be developed. Where does the Force come from? If the action of the prop were just like a conventional 'driven' propellor, you could do at least as well by driving the wheels - and that would be nonsensical, you must agree.
Wrong. In a tunnel, the cart would do significantly better than a well fitting piston, and (perhaps more surprisingly), the cart would do better in a tunnel with a relatively close fit between the prop blade and the wall of the tunnel than it would in free air. This is because ducted propellers are more efficient than free ones.sophiecentaur said:QUOTE "The airflow around it will be very much like the airflow around any propeller. As the cart moves, it will leave a cylinder of air behind it which is moving slower (relative to the ground) than the surrounding air."
I think you would have to agree that, if your cart were inside a tunnel (tube) with the same CSA as the cart, then it wouldn't go any faster than the airflow in the tunnel (how could it do better than a well fitting piston).
sophiecentaur said:Therefore there must be another source of momentum to transfer to the cart to explain how it goes faster than the air flow. The cylinder to which you refer must be much larger than the cylinder immediately around the cart or where is the momentum / velocity difference / power coming from? You can't transfer momentum if there is no (positive) velocity difference so the system has to produce one in some way.
The energy transfers are fairly straightforward, so long as you understand that the propeller is doing work on the air and the wheels are having work done on them by the ground (and therefore, they have different effective velocities). Once you see that, everything else basically falls into place.sophiecentaur said:Just because you have a system that works (and very impressive it is too!) it doesn't necessarily mean that your explanation is correct. I can find nothing in your explanation that goes further than a 'by its own bootstraps' argument and that won't do, will it? I am trying to look at the system in more depth and to explain what's happening in terms of possible energy transfers.
sophiecentaur said:I can't really accept that your use of the term "ground frame" is relevant. I feel that it could probably also work for an airship, using some sort of drogue, possibly.
sophiecentaur said:You could resolve the matter once and for all by measuring the tension on both legs of the drive belt at the same time. The side with more tension in it would be the side that is transferring the power - i.e either from wheels to prop or prop to wheels.
That would be interesting, would it not? You could even infer it from still pictures of the thing at work. Just look at the relative angles / slack in each side of the belt.
You could prove me wrong or right. I dare you.
Curl said:LOL I find it hilarious that there is even a debate about this issue.
Its so easy to understand with about 14-15 seconds of thinking (with the imagination part of your brain involved).
Trying to apply your book formulas to this will get you confused. Instead, just try to simulate a car like this in your head. Your brain's physics simulator will say it works. Mine did.
sophiecentaur said:You could resolve the matter once and for all by measuring the tension on both legs of the drive belt at the same time. The side with more tension in it would be the side that is transferring the power - i.e either from wheels to prop or prop to wheels.
That would be interesting, would it not? You could even infer it from still pictures of the thing at work. Just look at the relative angles / slack in each side of the belt.
You could prove me wrong or right. I dare you.
sophiecentaur said:You can't transfer momentum if there is no (positive) velocity difference so the system has to produce one in some way.
spork said:There's an element of truth to that though. The real problem is that many people mistake denialism for skepticism.
Both wind turbines and sailboats move faster than the true wind and when I learned to sail as a kid I was very surprised to learn that the top speed of a sailboat was not directly downwind but was at an angle roughly perpendicular to the wind. And I didn't at first understand how a sailboat could travel nearly upwind in seeming violation of the "direction" from which the energy was provided. But this concept has an added twist:cjl said:You seem to misunderstand the method of operation. The prop is not acting like a wind turbine - it is never extracting energy from the air, so to speak. It is acting as a propeller, pulling the cart forwards against the air. The energy source is the wheels - they are rolling against the ground.
sophiecentaur said:If the action of the prop were just like a conventional 'driven' propellor, you could do at least as well by driving the wheels - and that would be nonsensical, you must agree.
Just because you have a system that works (and very impressive it is too!) it doesn't necessarily mean that your explanation is correct.
I can find nothing in your explanation that goes further than a 'by its own bootstraps' argument and that won't do, will it?
I am trying to look at the system in more depth
sophiecentaur said:You could resolve the matter once and for all by measuring the tension on both legs of the drive belt at the same time. The side with more tension in it would be the side that is transferring the power - i.e either from wheels to prop or prop to wheels...
You could prove me wrong or right. I dare you.
russ_watters said:Impressive creation/effort, spork.
russ_watters said:most, iirc, have to be pushed to get them started.
sophiecentaur said:How many different turbines have you tried?
I still have an idea that an airship could work with, rather than a drogue, a second turbine with different pitch.
Again you should be able to get a force times speed imbalance between the two turbines but there would be 'slippage' on the 'retarding' turbine which is not a problem when wheels are used.
if the cart wouldn't start from rest, I can see that it should never work (apart from a small factor of static friction).
I have a feeling that the drive to an upwind vehicle would have to be reversed but, judging from my previous intuitions (!) I could be wrong. A 'force times speed' argument is more difficult for me to apply here.spork said:None. We've only operated this as a downwind vehicle to date. Thus we've only ever used the one propeller. We're considering building a turbine to demonstrate that it can go UP wind faster than the wind. The prop we have has been operated fixed pitch and was later converted to variable pitch.
I can see that but i suppose that would just limit the power available.But we still get "slippage" with our prop - right?
So a variable pitch prop would / could be a good thing. If it were feathered at rest then the wind would always push it forwards (?).Not necessarily true. We can set the prop to a pitch such that the cart won't self-start, but it works great once underway. Keep in mind that the entire prop is stalled while at rest (or worse yet, producing significant lift in the wrong direction at the roots). As we begin to move, the tips become unstalled first. As we move faster, the unstalled region grows toward the roots.
As spork said: They can start from rest relative to the ground:russ_watters said:But a DWFTTW device finds a way to operate with the wind being the stationary frame of reference and the ground being the moving frame. This is made clear by the fact that most, iirc, have to be pushed to get them started. They start from "stationary" in the frame of reference of the wind.
spork said:Nicely done video. I got a little kick out of the notion that you think it's unfakable. You try and make something foolproof, and I can bring you a better fool *every* time.
Physics, and why even some very highly educated people substitute their own faulty intuition and call it physics.
Depending on the range of pitch you can adjust on the prop, you may only need to increase the pitch to convert the prop into a turbine.spork said:To go against the wind efficiently we have to swap our prop out for a turbine. I expect we might build one over the winter and try it next season. From 20' away you won't notice any difference at all, except I expect it will go directly upwind faster than the wind.
spork said:As we begin to move, the tips become unstalled first. As we move faster, the unstalled region grows toward the roots.
rcgldr said:For an upwind vehicle, the pitch of the prop just needs to be increased so that the effective gear ratio is > 1, so that prop "wash" speed is greater than wheel speed. This will change the situation so the prop acts as an upwind turbine, driving the wheels,
Mercstein said:Just to be clear, this cart, in its record breaking configuration (effective ratio < 1) will not travel forward when presented only with a direct headwind from standstill.