I'm not a battery, but I can retain a static electric charge quite easily.
Originally posted by: mozirry
Do hydrogen cells store electric energy? I thought that was just a kind of fuel like gasoline
Anything besides chemical/nuclear storage and capacitors, anyone? I reckon compressed air could store energy to drive a turbine to spin a generator. A flywheel or pendulum could store kinetic energy to convert back to electric, but friction and size make those pretty useless.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Some people have worked on using magnetically-suspended flywheels (in near-vacuum) to store potentially large amounts of energy in a small space. This (mostly) eliminates friction during storage, but getting the energy in and out with high efficiency can be an issue.
Originally posted by: dkozloski
I read a paper that stated that for input/output efficiency it's hard to beat a wound up rubber band. Busses have been operated in Germany for years that use a huge flywheel under the floor for energy storage. The bus stops at a recharge station and uses electrical energy to spin up the flywheel so you could make the claim you are storing electricity with at least the same veracity as the guy with batteries.
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: dkozloski
I read a paper that stated that for input/output efficiency it's hard to beat a wound up rubber band. Busses have been operated in Germany for years that use a huge flywheel under the floor for energy storage. The bus stops at a recharge station and uses electrical energy to spin up the flywheel so you could make the claim you are storing electricity with at least the same veracity as the guy with batteries.
Would this not have, erm, issues with going round corners?
Originally posted by: BrownTown
But, in order to go very far the rotational inertia would have to be very since even to get the bus to move 1 mm you have to overcome the buses inertia with the inertia in the flywheel. However cornering I don't think is too much of a problem since you are ratating along the axis of the flywheel, so you aren't really forcing it to change direction, just speed up or slow down a tiny amount on each turn. However, if they flywheel was up-down and you tried to turn than i can see serious problems.
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: dkozloski
I read a paper that stated that for input/output efficiency it's hard to beat a wound up rubber band. Busses have been operated in Germany for years that use a huge flywheel under the floor for energy storage. The bus stops at a recharge station and uses electrical energy to spin up the flywheel so you could make the claim you are storing electricity with at least the same veracity as the guy with batteries.
Would this not have, erm, issues with going round corners?
The flywheels were flat under the floor of the bus and drove a device that was similar to a starter generator in a turbine engine. The device could be switched to be used as a motor to spin up the flywheel or converted to a generator to supply power for a prime mover to power the bus. There was a small aux generator for use if the bus got stuck in traffic and the flywheel slowed to much. It seems to me these are used in Germany. The routes and the bus are designed so that the bus can get all the way around the route easily.Originally posted by: f95toli
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: dkozloski
I read a paper that stated that for input/output efficiency it's hard to beat a wound up rubber band. Busses have been operated in Germany for years that use a huge flywheel under the floor for energy storage. The bus stops at a recharge station and uses electrical energy to spin up the flywheel so you could make the claim you are storing electricity with at least the same veracity as the guy with batteries.
Would this not have, erm, issues with going round corners?
Why not just use two flywheels rotating in the same plane but in opposite directions?
Originally posted by: dkozloski
The flywheels were flat under the floor of the bus and drove a device that was similar to a starter generator in a turbine engine. The device could be switched to be used as a motor to spin up the flywheel or converted to a generator to supply power for a prime mover to power the bus. There was a small aux generator for use if the bus got stuck in traffic and the flywheel slowed to much. It seems to me these are used in Germany. The routes and the bus are designed so that the bus can get all the way around the route easily.Originally posted by: f95toli
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: dkozloski
I read a paper that stated that for input/output efficiency it's hard to beat a wound up rubber band. Busses have been operated in Germany for years that use a huge flywheel under the floor for energy storage. The bus stops at a recharge station and uses electrical energy to spin up the flywheel so you could make the claim you are storing electricity with at least the same veracity as the guy with batteries.
Would this not have, erm, issues with going round corners?
Why not just use two flywheels rotating in the same plane but in opposite directions?
Originally posted by: BrownTown
OK, so I was right, there only really can source power on the seconds to minutes range? Seems pretty darn useless for any real world applications.
Originally posted by: BrownTown
OK, so I was right, there only really can source power on the seconds to minutes range? Seems pretty darn useless for any real world applications.