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From:
http://www.i4at.org/lib2/rotate.htm
Wally
Minto's Wonder Wheel
The polygon
wonder wheel is made of individual
containers. (Almost any leak proof container
can be used.) Tubes connect opposite pairs. I
wasn't sure it would run. It runs! Minto
demonstrates wheel's torque; simple pony
brake on output wheel measures hp. Speed is
about one RPM, but torque is
strong.
Wally
Minto's eyes twinkled. "Now that you've got
your pictures on the serious stuff, I want to
show you our latest engine. It's at least 85
percent efficient, never wears out, requires
no fuel or maintenance, costs very little,
and should have been invented 100 years
ago."
I'd just
finished shooting pictures of Minto's
solar-powered, Freon engine/generator set and
I wasn't quite sure if he was kidding about
this newest engine. Four used propane bottles
were hose-clamped to the ends of two pieces
of aluminum angle, each about four feet long.
The angles crossed at 90 degrees at the
center and were mounted on a central hub like
a skinny four-blade windmill with bottles to
swing in the breeze. Each bottle was
connected to its mate on the opposite end of
the angle with steel brake-line tubing. Under
the rig's support was a tank of the type used
to locate leaks in an inner tube.
Low-boiling
liquid, such as Freon or propane, fills one
bottle of each pair. The opposite bottle is
empty and void of air. The liquid collects in
the lower bottle, which is immersed in warm
(solar-heated) water. Heat from the water (or
a solar reflector, or any other source
slightly warmer than the surrounding air)
vaporizes the liquid and forces part of it up
through the connecting tube and into the
empty bottle on top. Gravity does the rest:
The heavy bottle starts down; the lighter
bottle floats up, As each Pair shuttles its
liquid mass back and forth, the whole thing
turns and repeats the process
endlessly.
While I
gazed in disbelief, Wally explained how his
incredible power wheel works (see diagram
above).
A few weeks
later I again visited the Kinetics lab. By
then the propane bottles had evolved into 12
containers of steel pipe welded into a
polygon. The principle remained the same. I
watched as Wally opened the valve to let in a
trickle of water from solar panels on the
roof of his parking shed. The water
temperature was 155 degrees F.
Almost
imperceptibly, the wheel started to turn. The
speed picked up a bit and I timed a
revolution -about one rpm. Minto noted my
misgivings. "Try holding onto the shaft," he
said. I grabbed the shaft firmly - it was as
if I'd tried to stop some eerie, irresistible
force: no sound, no evidence of power, just
pure twist.
"Picture one
200 feet in diameter," he said. This time my
mind boggled. Such a rig might hoist the
pyramids.
Wally
doesn't expect industrialized nations to
scramble for his wheel, and he isn't selling
anything. He's donating it as a "gift to the
world" and expects it will be used in
undeveloped, energy-short areas.
For example,
a practical 33-ft. diameter wheel running on
a temperature difference of as little as 3
1/2 degrees F and producing several
horsepower could pump irrigation water, grind
grain, or saw wood. The materials could be
scrap pipe, and no machining or skills are
needed to build it. Several low-boiling
materials might be used, but propane or R-12
may be best.
Minto
estimates a slightly larger (40-ft.) wheel
with 14 pairs of 1-ft. x 4 1/3-ft. containers
would provide 10,240 ft./lb. of work per
container as each 269 lb. of liquid responds
to gravity through a 20ft. lever arm. At only
one rpm this is 8.69 hp; not spectacular, but
low cost and capable of running steadily for
generations. The slow rotational speed can be
stepped up to whatever is needed, just as
with the old-time waterwheels.
No fuel
would be needed in many cases. The
temperature difference required between the
liquid on the bottom and the top occurs
naturally in many situations: water and air,
light and shade, etc.
Minto has
outlined construction details in a two-sheet
paper entitled "The Minto Wheel." There are
no restrictions on building or experimenting
with the wheel.
Wally
Minto
Sun Power
Systems, Inc.
1121 Lewis
Ave., Sarasota, Fla. 33577
Article By
E. F. Lindsley
Popular
Science March 1976
Details for
the Minto Wonder Wheel - 09/10/01
http://www.keelynet.com/minto/minto2.htm
Feel free to
copy this file or use it as you will. This
file was shared with KeelyNet courtesy of
Bruce Hegerberg from a booklet Minto was
giving away many years ago to get people
excited and building his machines.
It is
intended to be shared freely. If you build
this, please send photos and descriptions of
what kind of results you are getting in
operation to website who also freely shares
information. Its not WHO does it, just that
it GETS DONE.
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