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Re: Letter to Tomcat on steam
| tomcat | 24 Aug 2006 19:06 |
> -- > Danny Dot [quoted text clipped - 55 lines] > thermo have been verified extensively. They are used EVERYDAY by engineers > to build machines that produce power and move heat. People tend to see what they believe they will see or what they want to see. The First Law of Thermodynamics simply says nothing lost or gained; it is a mathematical analysis. In other words, heat goes somewhere.
Of course we can divide heat up into BTU's or Calories or whatever. We can then calculate those BTU's or Calories. But what has this got to do with a Steam Rocket?
Yes, it uses heat. But we are dealing with molecular chemistry here, not just BTU's. Immediately we hear about 'perpetual motion' and it's impossibility. [ I always thought the Universe was in perpetual motion, but I guess the second Law of Thermodynamics says no. ] The Steam Rocket appears as though it gets more heat out than in. But, sometimes, energy is stored in ways we don't fully understand, like fire coming from wood.
Water produces energy when exposed to a vacuum because it is releasing energy that kept the water in a liquid state, namely the 1 G & 1 Atmosphere of Earth. This energy is free so why not use it? No violation of the Laws of Thermodynamics here.
Now, that water can be dissociated -- atomized -- and recombine producing the energy of a Space Shuttle Main Engine is getting called 'perpetual motion'. It is not.
It is a fact that 5000 deg. F. completely dissociates water. It is a fact that 2 photons at 266 nm dissociates water. So, it is fact that a combination of heat and lasers will dissocaite water and that water will recombine with an enormous release of energy.
The problem seems to be coming from eveyone recognizing the fact that 5000 deg. F. isn't really that difficult to produce and neither is a laser that produces photons at 266 nm. So, now the whoe idea sounds too fantastic.
But this is no reason to grab onto Sadi Carnot's corpse and scream VIOLATION at the top of your lungs.
As far as huge amounts of power being required, an electric current and a stream of hydrogen gas will produce 6000+ deg. F. easily and quickly. And, if that isn't enough then zap whatever the 'atomic torch' gives you with laser or maser until the water cracks.
And, if all this sounds so impossible because it smells like 'perpetual motion' remember that Earth's energy gave you the water. Water doesn't exist, as water, in Outer Space. In Space water becomes a thin vapor of tiny snowflakes. Also, nobody is talking about recollecting the spent water, which would stop the thrust, to reuse it a second or third time.
Naysayers have to grab onto things when they attack new ideas. Grabbing onto Sadi Carnot's old rotten corpse -- the Father of the Laws of Thermodynamics -- is probably not advisable. Sure, the energy has to come from somewhere, but what do we care where? It can be dark energy for all I care. It doesn't matter.
If it works, use it.
tomcat
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| Danny Dot | 23 Aug 2006 14:42 |
 Signature Danny Dot www.mobbinggonemad.org
>> > I have a Master's in Aerospace Engineering, but started my first two >> > years as [quoted text clipped - 45 lines] > > tomcat I just heard a good discription of this topic on the radio. The person said when we use the laws over and over and over we are verifying them, but we never PROVE the laws of physics to be true. Let's just say the laws of thermo have been verified extensively. They are used EVERYDAY by engineers to build machines that produce power and move heat.
Danny Deger
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| tomcat | 23 Aug 2006 04:31 |
> > I have a Master's in Aerospace Engineering, but started my first two years as > [quoted text clipped - 18 lines] > unfortunately, no one we know belongs." > ~Anonymous Show me the PROOF of 'any' of the Laws of Thermodynamics. Just type up a reply with the PROOF or a Universal Resource Locater for it.
What I believe you will find out is that those SACRED LAWS are conjectures made by promenient men of science that have been hodgepodged together. That is why there used to be 2 Laws and now there are 3 with numbers 4 and 5 on the way.
The Laws of Thermodynamics are taken far too seriously. They 'appear' to be as solid as a steel anvil, but are in fact pipe dreams from the minds of men that were never acquainted with Quantum Mechanics.
I maintain that if all pertinent knowledge is known then they would seem to be 'self evident' truths. But that in no case is all pertinent knowledge available. Why? Because everything is tied in with everything else in the Universe. Now, that is 'real' complexity.
Be careful of what you believe in, it just might sneak up and bite you.
tomcat
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| Herb Schaltegger | 18 Aug 2006 12:44 |
> I have a Master's in Aerospace Engineering, but started my first two years as
> a civil engineer. I have taken and Aced more than one thermo class -- I Aced
> all of my classes -- I had a 4.0 GPA. Also I have two cousins and one best > friend that work in power plants/ship steam turbine engine rooms and have had
> MANY discussions on thermodynamics from a technician/operator point of view.
> I think my knowledge of thermo is more than addiquate to talk in this group > :-) Then you, your GPA and your cousins should all realize that "tomcat" is an idiot, a liar (ask him about flying Tomcats for Naval Intelligence, har har har . . .) and just killfile him.
 Signature Herb
"Everything is controlled by a small evil group to which, unfortunately, no one we know belongs." ~Anonymous
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| Danny Dot | 18 Aug 2006 02:15 |
 Signature Danny Dot www.mobbinggonemad.org
>> I know you love the 1600 to 1 ratio of water going to steam. I just >> thought [quoted text clipped - 26 lines] > class. You'll learn more about steam power cycles than you're likely > to ever need. I have a Master's in Aerospace Engineering, but started my first two years as a civil engineer. I have taken and Aced more than one thermo class -- I Aced all of my classes -- I had a 4.0 GPA. Also I have two cousins and one best friend that work in power plants/ship steam turbine engine rooms and have had MANY discussions on thermodynamics from a technician/operator point of view. I think my knowledge of thermo is more than addiquate to talk in this group :-)
Hell a 10 year old kid and a computer is welcome to post here -- as he should be :-)
Now having said that I would LOVE to take another class in thermo. I love the subject. Do you have any recomendations on a class, based on my posts, where I could benifit. I am not kidding. I just retired and am probably going to take some classes to expand my knowledge. I would very much like to hear your recommendations on where I could learn more. I love to learn. Thanks for your post.
Danny Dot www.mobbinggonemad.org
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| Herb Schaltegger | 17 Aug 2006 22:48 |
> I know you love the 1600 to 1 ratio of water going to steam. I just thought > of this. Early steam engines used this but it was going from steam to water [quoted text clipped - 14 lines] > I have never heard of any engine that the power cycle was based on water > turning the steam -- only hot steam cooling is all I have heard of. I advise both you and Tomcat to take an engineering thermodynamics class. You'll learn more about steam power cycles than you're likely to ever need.
 Signature Herb
"Everything is controlled by a small evil group to which, unfortunately, no one we know belongs." ~Anonymous
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| Danny Dot | 17 Aug 2006 21:22 |
I know you love the 1600 to 1 ratio of water going to steam. I just thought of this. Early steam engines used this but it was going from steam to water that generated power.
Forgive me because I do not know the details -- I have never designed an engine of this type or studied the design in detail. But the very early steam engine's power stroke was done by filling the chamber with steam, cooling it to the point the water turned from steam to liquid. This would produce a vacuum. It was the pressure of the air on the piston against the vacuum created by steam condensing to water on the other side that drove the piston. This allowed for a steam engine that didn't need metals that could withstand high pressures. If I remember correctly a 5 horsepower engine of this type was as big as a house. But it you didn't have a stream to dam and create work from a water wheel, this was a good deal. Pumping water from mines was an early use of these engines.
I have never heard of any engine that the power cycle was based on water turning the steam -- only hot steam cooling is all I have heard of.
 Signature Danny Dot www.mobbinggonemad.org
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