- Apr 7, 2003
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Originally posted by: Harvey
Originally posted by: PaperclipGod
How is this an improvement over simply stiffening the suspension, then? Less energy stolen by a cushy spring = more energy left to the cars momentum.
"Simply stiffening the suspension" is not the objective. It's intended to soften the ride for the passengers. If the system produces more energy than it uses, and it can store that excess energy for later use, the system is producing a net gain in efficiency.
Right, I understand the purpose of suspension. My confusion stemmed from thinking that the way the MIT guys achieved this energy recovery was by replacing the resistance of the spring with the resistance of their hydraulic energy recovery device. If you had an exactly tuned replacement of the spring with the hydraulic system, the ride comfort would be the same. But as soon as you begin increasing the resistance of the hydraulic system (to produce recoverable energy), you also decrease the ride comfort. Instead, the way I now understand it, this hydraulic system sits on top of the spring, in place of the damper. This works because the spring is still able to fully absorb the shock of hitting a bump, which also displaces the damper. As the hydraulic damper attempts to re-attain equilibrium, the hydraulic fluid flowing throw the impeller recovers energy that would otherwise be lost as heat.
Originally posted by: Harvey
Originally posted by: PaperclipGod
That's not what the MIT guys designed, though. They're not re-using waste heat, they're using the actual force of hydraulic fluid through an impeller to "recover" energy. Yes, if they were actually using waste heat to recover energy, I'd agree with you... but I'd also say they'd have better luck using the engine block.
So they're not going through the wasteful transition from mechanical energy to heat. It's still using the energy that would otherwise be wasted as heat to drive their system. If it's not used, that same energy would otherwise eventually be wasted as dissipated heat.
Think of it in more macro terms. Roads are not infinitely smooth so a car travelling down a road WILL produce mechanical shock energy. This shock absorbing system extracts more energy from the vibration than it requires to operate, and converts the excess to a usable, storable form.
It's a law of physics know as the law of conservation of energy.
Conservation of energy
The law of conservation of energy states that the total amount of energy in an isolated system remains constant. A consequence of this law is that energy cannot be created or destroyed. The only thing that can happen with energy in an isolated system is that it can change form, that is to say for instance kinetic energy can become thermal energy. Because energy is associated with mass in the Einstein's theory of relativity, the conservation of energy also implies the conservation of mass in isolated systems (that is, the mass of a system cannot change, so long as energy is not permitted to enter or leave the system).
Another consequence of this law is that perpetual motion machines can only work if they deliver no energy to their surroundings, and also that devices that produce more energy than is put into them without losing mass (and thus eventually disappearing), are impossible.
Einstein's theory of relativity expands the concept to address the equivalency of mass and energy.
Right... that's exactly why I was perplexed as to how this system was working, which i initially understood to use the mechanical energy of the spring itself (or its MIT counterpart) to "recover" energy, which would mean (thanks to the law you just taught me) that the suspension was just stealing energy from the cars own momentum. It'd be like using a generator to power a fan to blow air through a windmill, and then celebrating the energy recovery.
