Heron's Fountain As A Water Battery

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 211

  • @stevetobias4890
    @stevetobias4890 4 года назад +6

    Alexander had a lot of interesting people surrounding him back in his day.
    Great video Rob, I love the principal of taking electricity from water. Power your lights then quench that thirst.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +3

      for sure mate - to be honest home power generation depends a lot on the resources you have around you

  • @jasonrenneberg7178
    @jasonrenneberg7178 4 года назад +3

    Just use one container, pump water in the bottom, taking up space and compressing the air bubble on top, let the pressurized water out the bottom to discharge. It's called a hydraulic accumulator. Instead of air pressure you can also make the tank a piston and weight it down, this adds sealing issues but has the advantage of constant pressure regardless of state of charge (using a compressed air bubble, the pressure rises as the bubble gets smaller as opposed to having a constant weight pushing the piston, maybe a bellows would work?) you can buy an off the shelf hydraulic accumulator, most well systems include them so the pump can cycle on and off instead of maintaining constant tap pressure.

  • @Scott_C
    @Scott_C 4 года назад +2

    Very interesting thought in combining the inline impeller and Heron's Fountain.
    Watching you flip the battery over throughout the video got me thinking about the "Drinking Bird" evaporative cooling and weight shifting demonstration. If you center balance the larger battery you intend on building, you may be able to flip it on its balance point very easily.
    Just an interesting thought. Looking forward to the large battery build. Cheers.

    • @jtcustomknives
      @jtcustomknives 4 года назад +2

      There was a design I read about 20 or so years ago. It was a bunch of tanks connected in a circle like around the rim of a bike wheel. All the tanks where connected and the bottom tank sat in a bath of hot water. It would evaporate the liquid and move to to the top tank causing it to turn.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      like a Minto wheel mate?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      it's called the Minto wheel mate

  • @DavidMountainEsq
    @DavidMountainEsq 4 года назад +3

    Hi Robert, loving channel as always..I know you have done a few builds lately and deviated as new ideas manifested so if I may suggested patents that built on the Herons Fountain, namely the Hydrautomat . The Hydrautomat is a water-powered water pump that uses air and water pressure to lift water. Its patent is US1444442 . A more advanced version is British patent GB227991 . Both can be viewed on Espacenet or Google Patents. May just add some inspiration...keep going chap love it. May solve the need to rotate the vessels.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +2

      nice post mate - I really appreciate the extra info here - certainly sparked a few ideas - cheers

  • @darrellpidgeon6440
    @darrellpidgeon6440 4 года назад +2

    I always love to see the varied styling that go into these devices. The best ones are like yours; perfect function displayed in simplest fashion. It would be fun to experiment on other configurations. Great food for the creative spark.

  • @ka_okai9
    @ka_okai9 2 года назад +1

    Looking forward to this exploration.
    There are so much favorable dynamics between the interaction between pressurized volumes of air and water. All sorts of mechanical implementations can be delivered perfectly with this very friendly and powerful relation between these two most indispensable gifts from nature.
    Love your videos mister Murray sir, your channel is a blessing to this site.

  • @airtawarsejuk5114
    @airtawarsejuk5114 4 года назад

    the only honest herons fountain I have found with proper explaination. Really looking forward to see how you generate electricity out of it sir. Tq.

  • @igloobearred
    @igloobearred 4 года назад +2

    I've been obsessed with perpetual motion since I was a young boy. Love this. (And all things like it) lol

  • @geodeaholicm4889
    @geodeaholicm4889 4 года назад +1

    very clever & cool as usual. seems likely you could mimic the pressure gain of a lake by making 1 a the containers a plastic pipe of appropriate height for a 2 or multi story building.

  • @preppertechnicianee6013
    @preppertechnicianee6013 4 года назад +10

    I'd like to say I knew this was the design I used in my original shown idea
    Pretty much same fountain
    Definitely gonna be working on more of this this week

    • @nickhadziannis8451
      @nickhadziannis8451 4 года назад +1

      Well done m8 🖖

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      awesome mate - I am not sure - I don't think it cam across well in this video but I respect the work and the idea - love the solution of a deep lake for pressure - it just accused to me that a lot of folks wouldn't have that available -thanks for the inspiration - rob

    • @douglasfuqua7082
      @douglasfuqua7082 4 года назад

      Interesting....possibilities....

  • @MG.50
    @MG.50 2 года назад

    Your discussion of pumping the water to the upper container/tank brought up an old (partial) memory. Back in the 1970s when solar energy experiments were all the rage, I recall a household solar water heating system that was self pumping, thanks to the solar input to the upper unit on the roof. It would draw water from a lower and cooler source, at low rate of flow, and feed it to a channel across the top edge of a solar heating panel, which was sealed of course. The water was heated quite efficiently as it ran through this stage, being deposited into an insulated tank for household use. The tank was high enough that gravity feed distributed it on demand, though probably without much pressure.
    An overflow outlet would deliver excess water back to the source reservoir, where it would cool. I do not recall much more than that, except that I found the "self siphoning" action interesting, since no electrical or mechanical pump, i.e. no additional energy input, was required. The system was closed as far as the liquid transfer, but it seems it was sufficiently open to not be using air compression. My memory shows the water flowing across a sloping solar heated surface, but flowing through tubes with a downward slope (gravity feed) might better assist the siphoning action, though I don't recall this being a feature. The design was so poorly described that I did not understand it initially, and having no immediate need and only reading the article "recreationally", I applied no effort to it and moved on. However it was supposedly a working system in the magazine article author's remote passive solar (the term "off grid" had not been coined yet) home.
    I've thought about revisiting this over the years when such a "self siphoning" or "self pumping" action could have been beneficial, but I never did. I wanted to see if it (probably the overflow function) might be applicable to feeding the upper hydroponic tray from the lower fish tank in an aquaponics setup, making it a closed system not requiring electric or manual pumps to transfer the liquid.
    Now that I am semi-retired I may get around to it. Any ideas, references, or suggeations?
    EDIT: Of course as soon as I closed this video, two offered videos down, I found a Ram Pump, describing its self-pumping action. So long as you had a sufficiently large reservoir of liquid, it should pump constantly.

  • @NorthernKitty
    @NorthernKitty 4 года назад +6

    I like this!! If those containers were inside a giant hamster wheel, you'd only need to roll/spin it to "recharge it". 😊

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard Год назад

    I like the idea of being able to just turn it over like a sand-timer. Something with those buckets with pivot in the centre on a stand so you can just flip it without effort might be quite handy. Imagine a huge version using 120-litre blue barrels! In fact, I wonder if such a thing could generate enough electricity to flip itself over with a motor?

  • @chrisgriffiths2533
    @chrisgriffiths2533 4 года назад +1

    Interesting Gadget. Not bad for Lifting Water above a Certain Reservoir Level.
    Of course Slightly Different to Straight Forward Pumped Hydro.
    The Rotation Idea is Clever. I have had similar ideas myself.
    RMS, Thanks for the History.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      it has caused a lot of interest over the years that's for sure

  • @StringGarden
    @StringGarden 3 года назад +1

    So, I ran into this trying to figure out why my renewable fountain wasn't working. This explained that and so much more. Thank you for a proper explanation. No BS, I love it. With that said, what would happen if you put the jugs on scales?

  • @kevinbenzie2817
    @kevinbenzie2817 4 года назад

    That brass and aluminium pipe arrangement that you placed in the river comes to mind.

  • @mrdewilliams
    @mrdewilliams 4 года назад +1

    I love the way you designed yours to be flipable. It would make an interesting display piece. As a battery, I would have to agree with Somethingsomething. Putting the impeller inline with a downline from the top bucket to the bottom would be more efficient as a water/gravity battery than the pressure of the Heron's fountain.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +2

      maybe mate - but let's face we are all just guessing where to put it lol

  • @aeh8446
    @aeh8446 4 года назад +2

    Very cool, thank you for sharing!!! Thinking mounted on a wheel may be of benefit, has me pondering, thinking along the lines of Minto's Wheel... Seems a bit of "baking time" is in order...lol. Bravo, as always!!!

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +3

      I have often pondered the drinking bird which - I am sure you know is a Minto wheel derived device

    • @aeh8446
      @aeh8446 4 года назад +1

      @@ThinkingandTinkering Yes indeed, throw in a bit of thermal w/ a low temp "working fluid"...
      FWIW, I had once designed an altered Minto's Wheel, oh, 20 years ago, or so... If I remember correctly, had only 9 "pots" on it, 5 were plumbed together as were the other 4... Plus, added mobile weight in a tube for each pot/ spoke, from the hub to the pot... Tried to maximize the mass transfer... Is rpm, high torque, lol. Fun stuff!!!!

  • @vernepavreal7296
    @vernepavreal7296 4 года назад +1

    Hi love your content, I achieved a science degree 20 years ago despite being blind it was always amusing how lectures got cancelled when the overhead projector bulb failed, however those there and that are my least favourite words can you try to describe just a little sometimes, love your stuff cheers

  • @planktonfun1
    @planktonfun1 4 года назад

    This device is hypnotizing, I can look at it all day

  • @totherarf
    @totherarf 4 года назад +1

    Even if you already know about the device you feature, it is fascinating to have a recap and a further stretching of the imagination in the uses it can be put to!
    impractical it is information learned. A bit like the famous Edison quote!

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      it is the act of exploration that leads to thought in my mind mate

  • @your_utube
    @your_utube 4 года назад +1

    An ideator's day is never dull. Making these devices is a challenge I can see, but what fun, and it shows! HERON WOULD HAVE BEEN PROUD! I tend to find my expression writing code, these days javascript, and ideas just scream out to be tried out. Frustration levels can be high, but I would not have it otherwise!
    They said don't re-invent the wheel, but whoever they were, they have no idea how wonderful it is doing just that. Robert don't ever stop. You are an inspiration to us in the over-50s club.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      thinking needs exercise of the brain and you never know where one thing will lead and I agree ideas just scream tone made lol

  • @PlatinumGordon
    @PlatinumGordon 4 года назад +1

    Great vid mate. Not seen anything like this.

  • @sarchlalaith8836
    @sarchlalaith8836 4 года назад

    If you do 4 in line and name it reversible like you said you could simply mount it on a frame with a stop at the top so they never quite are 90° so as one side empties and the other side fills up it will flip, then flip again, issuing gravity as both generator and battery

  • @thelastofthelemmings6279
    @thelastofthelemmings6279 4 года назад +1

    Do you think if you anchored the center container with a barring attached to a rod that attached to a post, and maybe paint the bottom container black and possibly replaced the air with some sort of gas it would move or tip over once a day just from the difference in temperature fluctuation between night and day?
    (Kind of like that drinking bird?)
    Or maybe just paint one side of the bottom container black and the opposite side of the top container black?
    You could make it as long as you wanted I guess 🤔
    Sort of like a mechanical sundial/grandfather clock?

  • @mushinbujin
    @mushinbujin 3 года назад

    Fascinating!

  • @joohop
    @joohop 4 года назад +2

    Rob What About Using One Of Those Electric Window Motor's To Turn The Unit Upside Down When Needed ? Like An Old Fashioned Egg Timer
    Bless Up Earthling Quality Video

  • @jaype741
    @jaype741 4 года назад

    silicon carbide with graphene or graphite is becoming a popular solid state battery design. Would love to see you give it a try.

  • @azlandpilotcar4450
    @azlandpilotcar4450 4 года назад

    I really like the idea of a water powered energy buffer. Before central electricity generation, when there were canals, reservoirs, and aqueducts all over Northern New York state, people could generate electricity off the water pressure of an open tap using a dynamo. It would be great to see this used, with solar and wind power to charge the system, for a single home or a small neighborhood.

  • @claytonmccormick622
    @claytonmccormick622 4 года назад

    i was delighted by today's offering though the next size up would be something that can turn a car alternator that can give you 500 to 1000 watts output which is about as small as you can go for house sized projects i have always thought that windmills are much better suited to high torque low rpm like you might use to pump water or air then you could use several of your smaller devices to accumulate enough water or air power to run the alternator for a useful amount of time:-)

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      wind power and pumping are an awesome combination - after all loads of farms all across the US had a wind powered pump - of course it would also help even out the peaks and troughs of wind

    • @claytonmccormick622
      @claytonmccormick622 4 года назад

      @@ThinkingandTinkeringexactly and it puts all the complicated high wear bits on the ground were they are easy to ge to.

  • @PhysicsViolator
    @PhysicsViolator Год назад

    That’s a nice idea but the problem with those water turbine generators is that they require a significant amount of water pressure in order to generate electricity , I have 3 of those and I did a few experiments with them so I know they won’t spin that easily and they need some mass to really accelerate..

  • @robertjames1259
    @robertjames1259 4 года назад +1

    Yes very good coverage of the different batteries cells
    I'm keeping up on the tesla car batteries lithium phosphate cobalt aluminum carbon advances
    What I really want you to cover is a dry crystal copper zinc cell that is powered by the quantum flux activating piesio crystals with the cashmere effect oscillating the pesio electric crystals. One will make 1.4volts but the amperage is small
    Check John Hutchinsons work
    Please do a show on them as they do not decompose
    Thank you Robert James

  • @TheWorldBelow360
    @TheWorldBelow360 Год назад

    I have messing around with variables of this and have found myself wondering if I have gone and lost my mind.
    And if my next stage of further devolution is a qualifying success, then what goes down, will have to powerfully go up.

  • @Enngel0
    @Enngel0 4 года назад +5

    Awesome!
    Speaking of fluids and gravity, do you know the Japanese shishi odoshi fountain? I've always thought it has a great generating potential.

  • @jasonwitt8619
    @jasonwitt8619 4 года назад +1

    Oh WOW, now you have me interested in this, I want to know how in the world you are going to flip the bigger containers once you have it built, That is going to be one big carousel, LOL - love that steampunk mindset you got going... Awesome

  • @jamest.5001
    @jamest.5001 4 года назад

    I rember this mentioned in school, but our foccas was on the first 'steam engine'
    I have been thinking about as many ways as I can , to generate power on my mini homestead, for my offgrid home. I have a small spring, that can go dry in summer, I was thinking water wheel generator, then I thought a small pumped hydro, I'd like to get atleast 400-500 watts, and use excess solar to ' charge' the system, I have a river close by, I could probably set up a undershot water wheel on pontoons, with the possibility of generating 500 watts plus, but would be a job, in a tough to access area, but with a wheel about 7' dia, and about 8' wide, and slightly dam and deflect the water to go through the water wheel, I'm not sure, but if I could get 1200 watts, 24/7 I don't think I'd need solar! But I'd keep it to charge the batteries faster, at night my consumption drops to below 400 watts, so the solar could charge during the day, and about 800+ nightly, in theory,
    But this system is interesting, building it with 400 gal, containers, and double everything! Do you think it could be 'supercharged' by adding energy to the system, like pressurising the draining chamber? Just 1/8 bar could make a substantial difference, forcing the water out, depending on the diameter of the discharge orifices, adding a hydraulic motor, to spin a generator, or possibly a turbine,
    Have you heard about the gravity generator, a guy in the 30's possibly used it to power his garage with a 100w motor, it amplified the power, using gravity to spin a shaft, the 100 watt motor just wiggled the shaft, so the offset weight, on the shaft is always falling, spinning the shaft, I have seen ppl try to replicate it, by old video clips, they have the weight loose on the shaft, I think it's where they fail. Sorry about the rambling, it's a rainy day here, and we had a earthquake here Sunday! Crazy it was a 5.1 in the NC mountains/foothills. The first in 100years, great video, I guess you can see , it made me think!
    What's NEXT???

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      what about an Archimedes screw as a generator instead of a wheel?

    • @jamest.5001
      @jamest.5001 4 года назад

      @@ThinkingandTinkering yeah maybe! I have always wondered about the effiencey of archie's screw, I haven't seen a true one in operation, there were some hydroelectric generators using it, I also saw. A similar system using a impeller, it seemed to work about the same, I have no data on the operation, if I had a small creek running down hill, it would solve all my power issues! Ha-ha not that lucky!

  • @DeliciousDeBlair
    @DeliciousDeBlair 4 года назад

    If you had any evenly balanced number of these [typically in pairs] so that the rotational balance is relatively neutral, you can set it up so that it automatically trips a lever that makes it roll over to reset it.
    Admittedly, you might need a lot of water volume, as well as vertical height, but, again, if you can easily flip it over like an hourglass, maybe it can continue to run infinitely.
    No, not as 'perpetual motion' but basically, if the rotational balance is very very close to equal, it should require very little force from a passive side motion to rotate the assembly the 90 or 180 degrees one needs to put the next column into position to begin working.

  • @fostroggalf
    @fostroggalf 4 года назад

    Can't wait to see how the scaled up version works with the impeller. Could be interesting paired with a small pump run off solar or one of the wind generators you've been showing.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      my thought too mate - maybe a ram pump if you have a water source

  • @pauldensley5459
    @pauldensley5459 4 года назад +1

    instead of turning it over, use tidal rise to fill the container

  • @superliegebeest544
    @superliegebeest544 2 года назад

    If u would put a vent in the bottle and raise the airpressure with a bicycle pump than u should increase the flow.

  • @anthonymellor174
    @anthonymellor174 Год назад

    This could work with a olds elevator with a uginsky wind turbine to turn the olds elevator to bring water back to top
    And keep on motioning even at night with wind Plus charge battery or hydro generator from a standing pool dispense back from heaight .

  • @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse
    @Arachnoid_of_the_underverse 4 года назад

    Maybe it would be possible to put two other units at 180 degrees to each on a pivot and have a wind turbine tip it over once equilibrium is reached.

  • @iantheinventor8151
    @iantheinventor8151 2 года назад

    Wonder if the copper & aluminium tubes you demonstrated in another video could be used in conjunction with this

  • @mikberg1824
    @mikberg1824 4 года назад

    Why not using the temperature difference from inside to outside to pump the first container to the second with one way valve (I have in mind Stirling engine principles...gas expansion to hydraulic power

  • @alternativeenergychannel2289
    @alternativeenergychannel2289 4 года назад +1

    Hello sir thanks for your video. Let me share an idea i was experementing before replacing the water turbine and it was working perfect.. basically i took a big sealed container and drill 2 holes on top.. then from the first hole i was filling the container with water and from the second hole i had a valve.. so the water was taking the air place in the container and because the valve was close air was compressing in the tank.. then i was able to start a steam engine basically a 2 stroke engine converted to run on air and it was running for a long time and in very high rpm controlling them with the tank valve as the throttle... A cool idea to replicate it.. i can see a huge potential in a bigger scale for example a city creating energy by its water consumption just running it very simple through a second pressurised tank.. Cheers mate i like your mindset so much !!!

    • @paulmaydaynight9925
      @paulmaydaynight9925 4 года назад

      its always good to recapture and reuse the byproducts of localised work done ,steam engines being more efficient reusing the outlet steam to drive high,medium, and low pressure drives being probably the best known example, reusing turbine outlet air to simply bubble feed a basic trompe sealed triple skinned set of containers to compress each inner tank to higher and higher pressures in a safe free way ...

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      nice one mate - thanks for sharing - I like the idea for sare

  • @surrealnight5230
    @surrealnight5230 4 года назад

    Have you considered adding an air lift water pump? Perhaps powered by a small blower or compressor and solar panel?

  • @craigglewis
    @craigglewis 4 года назад

    Funny this, I was looking at a 3 gear transmission and thinking of using one gear to drive the other, that drive the main gear. So the same with pressure. The falling water added pressure to one container, which adds pressure to another container (Smaller volume, greater pressure), which can push the water back up and have a continuous cycle. Maybe add air bladders, in the system, that can pressurize a little to add in the circulation.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      ii then you would need input energy at some stage mate - here we are turning it by hand

    • @craigglewis
      @craigglewis 4 года назад

      ​@@ThinkingandTinkering Oh, how much energy did you put into building this? I did not know there was a rule about putting in air. Maybe I have too much air to put into this channel. lol Keep hand turning. I can't see myself stand by waiting to turn this every 2 mins, when I can add airpressure and have it run for days/weeks/month/years even. But whatever makes you happy. Your laughter make me smile :)

  • @jeffreyrood8755
    @jeffreyrood8755 4 года назад +1

    I was looking at this a couple of weeks ago. Great video and a great build. This is the first sealed system I've seen.
    A water wheel, or a water mill? To get the water to the top, (upstairs).

  • @monkfu7101
    @monkfu7101 4 года назад

    So this could be the fountain in every major town square coupled with brass and aluminium tubes creating energy !! Hiding in plane sight !!

  • @mahirbalayev5835
    @mahirbalayev5835 Год назад

    You can combine it with Bell siphon

  • @terryendicott2939
    @terryendicott2939 4 года назад +8

    I tried to make a Heron's Fountain but all I got were cormorants and seagulls. And when I flipped it a turn showed up. Is this normal?

  • @katebrehm4651
    @katebrehm4651 4 года назад

    Watching this video also made me think of a system of a constant siphon running you're turbine and something like a pump periodically returning the water back up

  • @michaelschulte996
    @michaelschulte996 4 года назад

    How about using capillary tubes to transfer the water from the bottom container upwards using multiple levels of open containers? No idea if that could work though, but its been on my mind since a long time. Anyway, Heron's fountain, cool

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      you know mate I have no idea if that would work - but in my mind that is exactly the reason to try it lol

  • @htmagic
    @htmagic 4 года назад +1

    RMS, instead of the turbine, why don't you consider a Kelvin water dropper? It will produce DC and the mechanical losses will be nil. I considered doing this on the main water pipe to the house but never got around to it. The current may be small but with a supercap, could you store enough energy to charge a smartphone?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      the current is in the microamp range mate - you would have a challenge generating enough to power.a phone I would think - but still worth looking into

    • @htmagic
      @htmagic 4 года назад

      @@ThinkingandTinkering Didn't the Kelvin water dropper produce a spark? Store the charge in a capacitor and use it to charge a cellphone.

    • @mikeguitar9769
      @mikeguitar9769 4 года назад +1

      Yes but first run the high-voltage and low current power source through a primary winding of a transformer with many turns on it. in series with that you could have a spark gap to switch the transformer on and off. then on the secondary winding have fewer turns. Then use diode(s) to rectify the current and charge a capacitor. Then add a 5 V regulator or a switch mode power supply to charge a phone.

    • @htmagic
      @htmagic 4 года назад

      @@mikeguitar9769 It's DC. You'd have to charge it then bleed it through a capacitor.

  • @LaggedBehind
    @LaggedBehind 4 года назад

    I may have a dumb idea. Is there a way to integrate a siphon somewhere in the system to refill one tank once the other empties with out turning the whole thing?..... Might not work....

  • @alchemicalshaman
    @alchemicalshaman 4 года назад

    I've been thinking lately about a crossover between gravity battery and water battery. I wonder how efficient it would be to use a pulley with two buckets on same cable. Filling bucket up high then the weight running a small generator, emptying at bottom, while the alternate bucket is being filled at top. Cycle repeats.

  • @Parietal1951
    @Parietal1951 Год назад

    Hello,
    I realize this video was posted some time ago. I fact, I have viewed your 4 cell update to this concept.
    However, in this video you mentioned that you were going to build a version of this concept with 20l buckets and an impellor generator. This now brings me to my question.
    Have you completed this "20l buckets and an impellor generator" project?
    If you have completed such, then please foreward me a link for that. I would be quite interested in seeing what energy it might produce for you.
    I really enjoy most of your videos and believe you are doing some really fun stuff!
    Have a great time!
    Thanks
    2023/05/04
    ----

  • @jeremyvolland8508
    @jeremyvolland8508 Год назад

    I am not sure I get it. What benefits would this have over a simple pumped hydro setup?

  • @goldensongs8123
    @goldensongs8123 2 года назад

    Very nice sir 💐🙏🇮🇳

  • @michaeltucker8645
    @michaeltucker8645 4 года назад

    Add a ton of 10watt micro generators in every tub going down maybe.

  • @b1rdp00p
    @b1rdp00p 4 года назад

    Vascular action could transport the water

  • @jamest.5001
    @jamest.5001 4 года назад

    I have a crazy question, could this be slightly modified, and used with multiples, and put on a wheel and Axel. With the water causing it to rotate slowly? Like perpetual motion? Just a crazy idy! Like have a fire under the wheel, or concentrated solar, to help move it along, like air/sream pressure pushing water to a offset container, causing rotation, when it moves, cooling, pulling the water back, but before it cools, another setup, pushes water to a chamber, causing rotation, it would be slow, but torque would be upto the diameter, and the water volume! Possible ???

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      yes mate but you would need the extra energy from the fire I think to keep it moving

  • @TrentTationnaiseXization
    @TrentTationnaiseXization 4 года назад +1

    While we are here. I've always enjoyed the idea of a hourglass with a generator in the middle.

  • @proteinman1981
    @proteinman1981 4 года назад

    Wouldn't this be the same as storing water in a tank and simply using the pump as a generator? The amount of energy available will be E = mass*gravity*height minus inefficiencies. This is pretty cool though to watch.

  • @m3sca1
    @m3sca1 4 года назад

    Why not use the salty water drops and graphene generator at the fountain head...i wonder if the water imbalance of masses could be used to tip it over when it's "flat".

  • @joshf4959
    @joshf4959 Год назад

    I made a huge one out of 55 gallon plastic barrels

    • @joshf4959
      @joshf4959 Год назад

      I was going to add a tesla turbine and connect an alternator or stator motor from a generator to it and some batteries to charge up

  • @dylanl2258
    @dylanl2258 Год назад

    I think you might run into water pressure issues with those containers.

  • @paulpease1788
    @paulpease1788 4 года назад

    Is there a way to pressurize on side and maintain the pressure until the water is completely through then allow that pressure to reverse tanks? Sorry if that is a stupid question

  • @ShadowGPSDFX
    @ShadowGPSDFX 4 года назад

    Awesome video!!!

  • @awsome869
    @awsome869 4 года назад

    Awesome

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      cheers mate

    • @awsome869
      @awsome869 4 года назад

      Cheers! Thank you so much for all the information you put out! You make it very comprehensible and I have learned alot!

  • @craigmccarthy9484
    @craigmccarthy9484 4 года назад

    Could you use a ram pump to push the water back to the centre unit

  • @bigonprivacy2708
    @bigonprivacy2708 2 года назад

    Hi Robert, did you ever make the 3 bucket version?

  • @mikeladd5880
    @mikeladd5880 4 года назад

    What about running a small ram pump to increase the preasures into the impeller and possibly recerculating the system

  • @sarahhoward9081
    @sarahhoward9081 4 года назад

    Couldn't you have 2 "standard units" connected together, one filling the other and vice-versa as they empty? Perhaps with the turn of a valve?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      you could - but you could also just add another fountain tank to the top then use. the transferred water to run the second fountain tank

  • @jamescunliffe9872
    @jamescunliffe9872 4 года назад

    Freeon gas in an enclosed loop and a temperature differential? Not sure of spelling or if I remember correctly lol:)

  • @jidun9478
    @jidun9478 4 года назад

    Do you think there is some way this fountain could be arranged as a Kelvin water dropper and take the charge to a capacitor for continuous charging and use? 🧐

    • @jidun9478
      @jidun9478 4 года назад

      Maybe using the air head as the separation for the difference of potential.

    • @jidun9478
      @jidun9478 4 года назад

      Oh bother I see impossibilities with it and it would have definitely been done long ago surely🤪

    • @jidun9478
      @jidun9478 4 года назад

      Well maybe using two or three fountains where they feed each other's head pressure. Hmmmm.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      water droppers don't produce a lot of amps mate - volts for sure

  • @jmsfabrication7821
    @jmsfabrication7821 4 года назад

    Rob, are you familiar with that water-ram (or ram-pump), thing that people supposidly use off-grid to pump water without any power?

  • @unpopuIaropinion
    @unpopuIaropinion 4 года назад +2

    How would you classify Robert? An Engineer, an inventor or something else?
    I aspire to become like him some day, I dont know where to start and what knowledge I need to get, which is why I am asking.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 4 года назад

      Science communicator. The role of a person who takes complicated an obscure science and presents it in a form that the layperson can understand without needing to study calculus.

    • @sirsteamtrain7913
      @sirsteamtrain7913 4 года назад +1

      Just start learning, then learn to explain it to anyone. Then do something with that information. Its remarkable how much one person can do. Go live the life you want .

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +2

      I am just a guy interested in stuff mate and I ask questions and try stuff - it's the trying that matters I think

  • @Mangomesh
    @Mangomesh 4 года назад

    Your videos inspire me @Robert Murray-Smith
    .

  • @georgemckenzie2525
    @georgemckenzie2525 2 года назад

    I wonder if the micro turbine outperforms a permanent battery installed within invertable hourglass ?

  • @hyperhektor7733
    @hyperhektor7733 4 года назад

    my first read was HEROINE FOUNTAIN...

  • @NeoShameMan
    @NeoShameMan 4 года назад

    Okay I have a dumb idea, 2 of these thing side by side, in opposite direction on a wheel, one discharge as the other charge. The thing is, given a good pivot, how much energy it would take to turn the wheel upside down?
    I don't think it would be quite a perpetual motion machine (there is a lot of implicit ambient energy too for the system to work, like the heat to keep water liquid, gravity, the support of the ground), but the idea is that generally tangential energy needed is less than moving the whole system.
    Simple men can turn wheel weighting tons, obviously those heavy wheels have evenly distributed weight, while this is a liquid so the mass is not only unequally distributed, but that distribution change over time. Anyway the idea is that maybe it can make the system just a bit more efficient with a slight push of external work that make the system rotate when charge discharge cycle is complete...
    Probably dumb, I need to figure out the math.

    • @JonnyDeRico
      @JonnyDeRico 4 года назад

      If you can start it easy then the potential energy is low. So stopping is easy too. No advantage sorrx

    • @NeoShameMan
      @NeoShameMan 4 года назад

      @@JonnyDeRico that's the point, rotation is not where the energy is, it's in the water gravity and air pressure, if we can rotate cheaply, we just restart the system. It's not meant to rotate as a way to produce energy. Rotation is the way to restart the charge discharge, ie we do a 180° after each cycle, and that mean inputting energy, hopefully not too much.

    • @NeoShameMan
      @NeoShameMan 4 года назад

      @Henry I think you misunderstood the premise, it's not meant to extract energy from the rotation, the rotation is basically resetting the system, like you reset an hourglass. The question is how much the resetting (180 ° rotation) cost after a discharge. There is nothing to "balance out". Given we can close valve (to keep the mass in check and not move around) and have counter weight on the wheel, if the rotation cost is low, we increase the system efficiency.

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      worth a look at mate - but I think you know yourself the math needs working out first I would think

  • @pulesjet
    @pulesjet 4 года назад

    LOL, Just yesterday I seen those Impeller generators on the BangGood site.

  • @robinfielding9506
    @robinfielding9506 4 года назад

    That's cool wonder if it can be made to turn by itself?

  • @asstronix6657
    @asstronix6657 4 года назад

    Nice! Autark Energy, dream of mankind as always 🙏

  • @MihailoMilankovic
    @MihailoMilankovic 4 года назад +1

    Off topic - any ides on generating electricity from burning alcohol? Like an alcohol generator. Couldn't find one, except one German company, selling a commercial solution, with Stirling engine for around 10K euros... :O thanks for replying anyone :)

    • @mikeguitar9769
      @mikeguitar9769 4 года назад +1

      Engine, thermoelectric generator, fuel cell...

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      mike has given some nice ideas mate

    • @MihailoMilankovic
      @MihailoMilankovic 4 года назад

      @@mikeguitar9769 Ok, I'll look those up, thanks. What do you mean by 'engine'? Which engine?

  • @nickhadziannis8451
    @nickhadziannis8451 4 года назад +1

    Why is their no love button on YT

  • @michaelvaughn2287
    @michaelvaughn2287 4 года назад

    Is there such thing as ionized magnetized water or vinegar ? I know you can do this to hydrogen gas can it be done to a liquid ?

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      I don't know

    • @michaelvaughn2287
      @michaelvaughn2287 4 года назад

      @@ThinkingandTinkering do you understand why I'm asking, because magnetized ionized flowing liquid in a tube with copper coils around the tubes would produce electricity .

  • @daddydog6963
    @daddydog6963 4 года назад

    How about a Minto wheel could you do something on that.

  • @OligosFew
    @OligosFew 4 года назад

    Is there a way to use a solar heater run through soil to cool and incorporate a tesla turbine as it is suppose to be so efficient?

  • @tinkbig5689
    @tinkbig5689 4 года назад

    hey how can a trompe pump be added?

  • @Kyannibal
    @Kyannibal 2 года назад

    Hey. I don't know if you read comments on old videos however i have a design for making this possible

  • @Sedgewise47
    @Sedgewise47 3 года назад

    🤔But why 12 “dislikes”?

  • @edwardk1212
    @edwardk1212 3 года назад

    I came for the Heroin Fountain...hmmm.

  • @coilsmoke2286
    @coilsmoke2286 4 года назад

    I fear you will get almost nothing ...That generator expects many PSI and lotsa flow ... Noble idea though ... Thanx again!

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад

      mains pressure here in the UK is on average 1 bar - but you are right I don't expect to be lighting my house with this anytime soon lol

  • @designerzen
    @designerzen 4 года назад

    Seems a bit wasteful letting the water just dribble out of the top of the impeller when you could connect it to a Kelvin Water Dropper and reclaim some power!

  • @ryanheznts4540
    @ryanheznts4540 4 года назад +2

    Make a fusion reactor

  • @RandomSmith
    @RandomSmith 4 года назад

    Just wait til it rains to fill up the battery :-)

  • @tasa4904
    @tasa4904 4 года назад

    This is interesting. It got me thinking that if you could use gravity to passively assist in recharging, you could potentially generate more power than you need to put in to rotate the system. But that would make it a perpetual motion machine. Yeah, I think I was being too optimistic about the power generator's efficacy.

    • @karlmyers6518
      @karlmyers6518 4 года назад

      This really bugs me. Surely the system can be beaten 🤔. Ever the optimist lol

    • @ThinkingandTinkering
      @ThinkingandTinkering  4 года назад +1

      yeah the power generated here is tiny - it just looks like more because we can see it do something

  • @stevenw4549
    @stevenw4549 4 года назад

    A liquid hour glass. You have to put energy into it to keep it going by turning it over. So it runs on gravity.