• structural torsion bear - interest check calculations?

    From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Tue Sep 2 21:32:27 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    Hello all

    I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
    bearing torsion.

    I needed "torsion" for the proposed new mechanical part of my rod-mill http://weldsmith.co.uk/greet/min/250722_sk_rodmill_mech.html
    "Rod-mill mechanism - 22July2025 sketch"

    I did all my study off the Wikipedia page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_(mechanics)
    and pages references / linked from there.
    I found other works fairly-much only to "do a double" on what is in
    the Wikipedia pages - what Wikipedia says is validated in that way in
    all aspects I looked at.

    I ran through the "turbo-generator shaft" example - got the same 69cm
    answer for the diameter of what might be the shaft of the 1GW steam-turbo-generator of a nuclear powerstation.

    Anyone interested to see my workings and advise / mentor?

    All is in "flat" text.
    Calculations done using the Lisp of the emacs text-processor - all
    seen "in-line" in the "flat text".

    Regards,
    Rich S.
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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Tue Sep 2 22:00:27 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1v7m0fvdw.fsf@void.com...

    Hello all

    I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
    bearing torsion.

    I needed "torsion" for the proposed new mechanical part of my rod-mill http://weldsmith.co.uk/greet/min/250722_sk_rodmill_mech.html
    "Rod-mill mechanism - 22July2025 sketch"

    I did all my study off the Wikipedia page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_(mechanics)
    and pages references / linked from there.
    I found other works fairly-much only to "do a double" on what is in
    the Wikipedia pages - what Wikipedia says is validated in that way in
    all aspects I looked at.

    I ran through the "turbo-generator shaft" example - got the same 69cm
    answer for the diameter of what might be the shaft of the 1GW steam-turbo-generator of a nuclear powerstation.

    Anyone interested to see my workings and advise / mentor?

    All is in "flat" text.
    Calculations done using the Lisp of the emacs text-processor - all
    seen "in-line" in the "flat text".

    Regards,
    Rich S.

    ------------------------------------------
    I limit my designs to my amateur ability to analyze them. I use on-line calculators so I don't forget anything, and a maximum rotating shaft stress
    of half the ultimate tensile strength, which was verbal advice. Usually they confirm my paper calculations pretty closely. https://amesweb.info/Torsion/torsion-of-shaft-calculator.aspx

    Cold rolled shafting is good and not too expensive. The keyed version is
    easy to attach pulleys etc to. https://www.amazon.com/Precision-Keyed-Shaft-C1018-Shafting/dp/B0DVQGYF5D

    For the sawmill transmission the shaft size was determined by some special ordered and then unwanted (design change) pillow blocks the industrial
    supply dealer gave me a bargain on. They were larger than the calculation
    for the RPM and horsepower. Despite that deal the transmission still cost as much as the petrol engine.


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  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Wed Sep 3 13:14:07 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1v7m0fvdw.fsf@void.com...

    Hello all

    I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
    bearing torsion.

    ...

    ------------------------------------------
    I limit my designs to my amateur ability to analyze them. I use
    on-line calculators so I don't forget anything, and a maximum rotating
    shaft stress of half the ultimate tensile strength, which was verbal
    advice. Usually they confirm my paper calculations pretty closely. https://amesweb.info/Torsion/torsion-of-shaft-calculator.aspx

    Cold rolled shafting is good and not too expensive. The keyed version
    is easy to attach pulleys etc to. https://www.amazon.com/Precision-Keyed-Shaft-C1018-Shafting/dp/B0DVQGYF5D

    For the sawmill transmission the shaft size was determined by some
    special ordered and then unwanted (design change) pillow blocks the industrial supply dealer gave me a bargain on. They were larger than
    the calculation for the RPM and horsepower. Despite that deal the transmission still cost as much as the petrol engine.


    Thanks for the pragmatic "how to get things done" advice.

    I "confess" if I come across an on-line calculator I use it as one means
    to check if my answer is what others get.
    Rourke has a many-terms probably empirical mathematical expression for
    getting "within 5%" the torsion constant of a rectangular shape - and I
    found an online calculator, which enabled me to do some random
    spot-checks - my function concurred with the online calculator :-)

    I also manually once-off key into a calculator as another longstop check. Sometimes have to note the result of "intermediate" calculation of terms
    then key back in those terms later when bringing them all together in
    one. "Just" try to use different methods so there is no propensity
    for the same systematic error to recur and give false validation.

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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Wed Sep 3 10:06:27 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1v7m0fvdw.fsf@void.com...

    Hello all

    I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
    bearing torsion.

    I needed "torsion" for the proposed new mechanical part of my rod-mill http://weldsmith.co.uk/greet/min/250722_sk_rodmill_mech.html
    "Rod-mill mechanism - 22July2025 sketch"

    I did all my study off the Wikipedia page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_(mechanics)
    and pages references / linked from there.
    I found other works fairly-much only to "do a double" on what is in
    the Wikipedia pages - what Wikipedia says is validated in that way in
    all aspects I looked at.

    I ran through the "turbo-generator shaft" example - got the same 69cm
    answer for the diameter of what might be the shaft of the 1GW steam-turbo-generator of a nuclear powerstation.

    Anyone interested to see my workings and advise / mentor?

    All is in "flat" text.
    Calculations done using the Lisp of the emacs text-processor - all
    seen "in-line" in the "flat text".

    Regards,
    Rich S.
    -----------------------------------------
    I suspect the limiting condition may be a combination of drive torsion plus cyclical stress from beam loading of the rods between the drum rollers and
    the pillow blocks. Analysis of cantilevered shafts or those in a rolling
    mill might apply. A simple fix is supporting rollers under the drum rollers. They could be the bare outer races of ball bearings, as used on the blade guides of metal-cutting bandsaws. In bearing specs R is for rubber seals, S for metal shields which have less friction but let fine dust in.

    On a cost sensitive design without machining ability you may end up with a shaft size for which you can find the drive connection, bearings and drum rollers to fit. Then you need to know only the minimum size and exceed it. With machining ability you can turn the shaft end smaller and make custom sleeve bushings for larger bores and inch/metric conversions, and use second hand parts that are still available because other tinkerers couldn't.

    The lathe limits are the distance between centers for shorter shafts and the spindle center bore for longer ones. My lathe will take ~35mm diameter
    through the spindle and ~500mm length between the spindle and tailstock.
    It's a good size for experimental prototypes and demonstration models but
    not to build or repair production machinery. My vertical knee mill with a 6"
    x 24" table is similarly limited to smaller work. They let me demonstrate ideas I can't and don't want to manufacture.

    It might not be evident that pillow (plummer) blocks may mount the bearing
    in a spherical shell that can compensate for shaft to base misalignment.
    They can be tightly fitted and stiff.


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  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Fri Sep 5 11:19:29 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1v7m0fvdw.fsf@void.com...

    Hello all

    I think I have managed to calculate to specify structural members
    bearing torsion.

    I needed "torsion" for the proposed new mechanical part of my rod-mill http://weldsmith.co.uk/greet/min/250722_sk_rodmill_mech.html
    "Rod-mill mechanism - 22July2025 sketch"

    I did all my study off the Wikipedia page https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torsion_(mechanics)
    and pages references / linked from there.
    I found other works fairly-much only to "do a double" on what is in
    the Wikipedia pages - what Wikipedia says is validated in that way in
    all aspects I looked at.

    I ran through the "turbo-generator shaft" example - got the same 69cm
    answer for the diameter of what might be the shaft of the 1GW steam-turbo-generator of a nuclear powerstation.

    Anyone interested to see my workings and advise / mentor?

    All is in "flat" text.
    Calculations done using the Lisp of the emacs text-processor - all
    seen "in-line" in the "flat text".

    Regards,
    Rich S.
    -----------------------------------------
    I suspect the limiting condition may be a combination of drive torsion
    plus cyclical stress from beam loading of the rods between the drum
    rollers and the pillow blocks. Analysis of cantilevered shafts or
    those in a rolling mill might apply. A simple fix is supporting
    rollers under the drum rollers. They could be the bare outer races of
    ball bearings, as used on the blade guides of metal-cutting
    bandsaws. In bearing specs R is for rubber seals, S for metal shields
    which have less friction but let fine dust in.

    On a cost sensitive design without machining ability you may end up
    with a shaft size for which you can find the drive connection,
    bearings and drum rollers to fit. Then you need to know only the
    minimum size and exceed it. With machining ability you can turn the
    shaft end smaller and make custom sleeve bushings for larger bores and inch/metric conversions, and use second hand parts that are still
    available because other tinkerers couldn't.

    The lathe limits are the distance between centers for shorter shafts
    and the spindle center bore for longer ones. My lathe will take ~35mm diameter through the spindle and ~500mm length between the spindle and tailstock. It's a good size for experimental prototypes and
    demonstration models but not to build or repair production
    machinery. My vertical knee mill with a 6" x 24" table is similarly
    limited to smaller work. They let me demonstrate ideas I can't and
    don't want to manufacture.

    It might not be evident that pillow (plummer) blocks may mount the
    bearing in a spherical shell that can compensate for shaft to base misalignment. They can be tightly fitted and stiff.

    Hopefully I've "got" those things.

    As my rod-mill is only 240mm dia. external
    (/ 240 25.4) ;; 9.448818897637796
    9~1/2 inches
    so loading is low.
    You can just about pick up the mill shell full of rods and ore.

    Lathe - yes - the size of the bore through headstock for long rods.

    For this job, between-centres length is going to be the restriction for
    most "hobby" / small lathes
    (* 19 25.4) ;; 482.59999999999997
    The shaft will be about 650mm long.
    That is definitely an "outsourced" job. Fortunately found local
    machine-shop and then have friend who has good industrial lathe.

    Pillow-bearings / plumber-blocks - why are popular... Mass-produced
    with that precision feature of the spherical self-alignment feature so
    that will find its own good alignment between two plumber-blocks...

    All this has been the learning-curve.
    Reason I am not being too hard on myself about why it has all taken so
    long.
    Another "discovery" is that electric motors come in a series of standard
    "frame sizes" and gearboxes are matched to fit - obviously the bigger
    the motor the more power and the bigger the gearbox needed, so yes you
    get a corresponding series of gearbox sizes.
    Etc., etc.

    I have come quite a journey.

    With memory returning after the grim part of just surviving, a friend
    and I were laughing as it came back to me about, having adjusted a milling-machine properly there was swarf "hosing" across the workshop
    and bouncing off the wall at about a 3-inch diameter place 2~1/2ft off
    the floor and cascading around the workshop floor - on a machine which
    had only in that location been known to clatter and produce puffs of
    dust and sparks. The poor technician - scientific but not mechanical -
    grasped for hair he hadn't got and looked anguished to put it mildly -
    crying out "You can't use it like that!". A time-served machinist
    technician who had come to be my guardian-angel said firmly on the
    contrary that is how it should work. A researcher who was a former
    marine engineer on tankers also chipped (?!) in saying likewise. Well
    the poor technician we couldn't "rehabilitate him into society". We had
    to get the sales rep. for the tool company to come along, who politely
    and with detail explained this was the only way to use the tooling. I
    had never met the tooling before, but sensed what it wanted and the
    timeserved machinist was behind my back ready to call "stop" if needed.

    There were others where I laughed about being back in the
    headspace of confidence and "going for it". As for the "liquid nitrogen temperature machining" :-) One grizzly looking industrial metallurgist
    stalled to a stop with jaw dropped when he saw the shaper with cold
    steam pouring everywhere. When I explained "..." briefly he responded
    "I can see WHAT it is you are doing. I just can't believe someone would
    actual do IT!". He'd advised me on weld hydrogen in steels giving me
    some first pointers. What he could see was that I had made a deduction
    about how you could investigate it and was giving it a go. Later I was
    not supposed to hear when he chided my supervisor "So now then who's
    insane?!" as the shaper smoothly trouble-free shaved away cuts, running "hands-off" on auto-feed when it was found that there were no problems
    doing what I visualised, with the tool sloshing back and forth through
    the liquid nitrogen shaving the metal at that temperature (it "freezes"
    the weld hydrogen in-place, "stopping the clock" - so you can do things
    to perpare samples). In many ways what I am going through is
    reconnecting after so many injuries and such an oddessy.

    To an extent, the "post-industrial" "sensibleness" which excluded me
    from this new "sensible" economy has come to this "nose-dive crash"
    where a nation of about 150million people is 4X out-producing a combined
    bloc of about 800million people (Europe and the USA). "financialised"
    for more than a generation and incapable of "regrouping" (?). We can
    make admonishing statements, proclaim we identify and prove damning malfeasance, stand firm and wag our finger at said identified miscreant
    - and be completely ignored and stepped around because it's all
    backed-up by absolutely nothing. To an extent, seeing this endpoint
    come, as anticipated, has been a validation.

    So yes, on with the rod-mill :-)

    Regards,
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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Fri Sep 5 07:45:23 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1zfb9dwwe.fsf@void.com...

    All this has been the learning-curve.
    Reason I am not being too hard on myself about why it has all taken so
    long.
    Another "discovery" is that electric motors come in a series of standard
    "frame sizes" and gearboxes are matched to fit - obviously the bigger
    the motor the more power and the bigger the gearbox needed, so yes you
    get a corresponding series of gearbox sizes.
    Etc., etc.

    I have come quite a journey.
    ---------------------------------------------

    With my formal education interrupted by the Vietnam draft and my natural tendency being hands-on I decided to become the broadly skilled assistant
    who turns theoretical proposals into functioning hardware. I was lucky to
    find a company that would educate me as an apprentice machine builder and designer and learned many of the mechanical and electrical practical details with assistance, plus reading manufacturer's application literature which
    was a great help.

    A chemist may work alone so we learned the hands-on techniques such as weighing, titrating and polishing and etching metal samples for microscopic examination. It appears that electrical and mechanical engineers can keep their hands clean if they choose, I did a job for a Ph.D who didn't know
    that resistors have tolerances, he asked for 8 digit precision from an op
    amp circuit, and for a mechanical engineer and professor who didn't know
    about press-in thread inserts for sheet metal and thus over-designed
    robotics. Few could solder well or make a square cut with a hacksaw. https://www.mcmaster.com/products/pem-style-nuts/

    I read an account by a WW2 Los Alamos engineer who claimed he was the only
    one who could weld what he had designed and thus get what he wanted, many nuclear bomb designers couldn't light a campfire. The brilliant fluid dynamicist Sir Stanley Hooker fumbled a test of making something which gave him his book title, "Not Much of an Engineer".


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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Fri Sep 5 09:39:28 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1zfb9dwwe.fsf@void.com...

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:
    ...

    That is definitely an "outsourced" job. Fortunately found local
    machine-shop and then have friend who has good industrial lathe. --------------------------

    I found that I'd be lucky to get what I carefully specified (TL;DR) and
    could forget about anything IrCOd merely hoped for. My small jobs were always lower priority than bigger jobs for regular customers. Without understanding machining I didn't know the easy versus hard ways to do things. I took a
    night class but it didn't cover enough of the quirks of my R&D assignments which were always about something not done before. That's why I bought a
    lathe and mill once I owned a house to put them in. Being non-salaried I
    could charge for the time I spent on them iteratively machining and redesigning parts. For me that can be easier than fully designing them on paper, as the incomplete part suggests improvements, and a modification in
    the evening may make testing easier the next day.

    I'm in the midst of outsourcing work I don't trust my ability for now, the mild steel flanges rusted off the manifold pipe where it connects to the catalytic converter, and off the exit from the OEM converter. I bought an aftermarket converter locally and machined a mechanically clamped substitute for the manifold flange. The connection is a graphite donut gasketed swivel joint to isolate the engine's motion in its mounts from the exhaust. I just replaced those mounts because the engine had destroyed one and torn the
    other.

    The hotrodder-recommended welders want to replace the swivel joint with a fixed sleeve, apparently standard practice because it's easier for them than replacing a flange in proper alignment. Next time showing the torn engine mount should prove my point that this exhaust joint should remain flexible. I've been making a clamp fixture to hold the new 304 SS flange in position without blocking welding access as my current clamp does, and bought some
    308L MIG wire to loan for this (or use myself) instead of the mild steel ER70S6 they use now, even on stainless. I think I earned the necessary
    respect by calling out the wire type before he looked to check, and having a tank of Argon to loan. Monday I may talk to a supposedly expert stainless exhaust welder if he's feeling better.

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  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sat Sep 6 09:03:51 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    ...
    only one who could weld what he had designed and thus get what he
    wanted, many nuclear bomb designers couldn't light a campfire. The
    brilliant fluid dynamicist Sir Stanley Hooker fumbled a test of making something which gave him his book title, "Not Much of an Engineer".

    I've read "Not Much of an Engineer".
    He "came of age" in the 1960's?

    Great book.

    He was one of the "professional descendents" significantly of Beatrice Shilling. Who is famous for solving the carburation glitch on the
    R.R. Merlin engine (the engine in the "Spitfire" aircraft) in 1940. She
    was going around airfields during the "Battle of Britain" on her
    motorcycle (she was an expert - she used to race at Brooklands during
    the 1930's) fitting that flow-rate-control device which reduced the
    matter to an ignorable "pop". Which Stanley Hooker dubbed "Miss
    Schilling's orifice". He was from a part of the country where that is
    the nature of discourse...
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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sat Sep 6 09:57:39 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1frd00zyw.fsf@void.com...

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    ...
    only one who could weld what he had designed and thus get what he
    wanted, many nuclear bomb designers couldn't light a campfire. The
    brilliant fluid dynamicist Sir Stanley Hooker fumbled a test of making something which gave him his book title, "Not Much of an Engineer".

    I've read "Not Much of an Engineer".
    He "came of age" in the 1960's?

    Great book.

    He was one of the "professional descendents" significantly of Beatrice Shilling. Who is famous for solving the carburation glitch on the
    R.R. Merlin engine (the engine in the "Spitfire" aircraft) in 1940. She
    was going around airfields during the "Battle of Britain" on her
    motorcycle (she was an expert - she used to race at Brooklands during
    the 1930's) fitting that flow-rate-control device which reduced the
    matter to an ignorable "pop". Which Stanley Hooker dubbed "Miss
    Schilling's orifice". He was from a part of the country where that is
    the nature of discourse...

    ----------------------------------

    I also read and liked Nevil Schute's "Slide Rule" which goes into how government funding brings opinionated political interference with
    engineering. Mitre was supposed to isolate the two but that's not possible. The Greenies here want to switch from petroleum to electricity without considering or understanding the consequences; they push for distributed alternate electricity sources but block expanding the transmission lines. A hostile foreign power could hardly imagine a better way to cripple American industry. https://energytransition.org/2025/03/why-the-british-are-still-heat-pump-sceptics/

    R.V.Jones "Most Secret War" (Wizard War), and books on Ultra/Enigma, which related to what I did, are good if you have interest in electronics, radio
    and codes. They are light on the tech but they don't explain what they do mention, it's pretty obvious to someone in the field.

    I assume you know about Bletchley's work, this is a US example of leading
    edge WW2 electronic tech:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIGSALY

    The advances that led to computers were comparable between the UK and USA.
    The general purpose computer was delayed because the developers knew that if they used wartime government funding to create a computer others could use instead of a specialized machine good for only their task such as your Colossus or SIGSALY they would likely lose control of it, which in fact did happen.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ENIAC
    "ENIAC was designed by John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert to calculate artillery firing tables for the United States Army's Ballistic Research Laboratory (which later became a part of the Army Research Laboratory). However, its first program was a study of the feasibility of the
    thermonuclear weapon."

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  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 10:34:54 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    Read R.V.Jones' book too :-)
    "Cockney" - never heard recordings of him speaking, but apparently he
    could switch back to speaking "Cockney" when playing practical jokes on
    folk.
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  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 10:59:17 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1frd00zyw.fsf@void.com...

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    ...
    ...
    ... . A hostile foreign power could hardly
    imagine a better way to cripple American industry. https://energytransition.org/2025/03/why-the-british-are-still-heat-pump-sceptics/

    ...

    The blatant fake is concealing that electricity coming into the home is
    only 50% of the energy value of the gas burned at the power-station.
    So if you got a 4-to-1 pumping ratio in the house, that's only 2-to-1 on
    CO2 emission. Getting 4to-1 pumping ratio is achieved by well-to-do
    geeks in an ideal set-up. Typical ratios are less.
    *** 50% of the gas's calorific value goes directly to heating the
    environment if you have an electrically driven heat-pump ***


    Self-serving fake 2
    If lowest CO2 emission were the goal - >>> run a heat-pump at the home
    on natural gas!!! <<<
    Then you are back to 100% of the heat of the gas into the home. Then
    any heat-pumping is a bonus.

    National security - you could put other fuels down pipelines. In tough
    times you could gasify coal. In Britain we do have coal which is
    reasonably accessible.

    In the "fly-over" stated in the USA, ground-source heat-pumps are
    reputed to work well.


    Security danger 2
    If the electrically powered heat pump has to "turn on a
    resistance-heating element to defrost the heat exchanger" the load on
    the electricity grid would go up about 8-fold - and this would happen simultaneously across a large proportion of installations at the same
    time - which would surely "crash" "the grid".
    People would die.

    The ones who wrote that article are purveyors of a narrative.
    Evaluate its value - at the lowest end of the scale?


    Apparently fuel-powered heat-pumps to exist for large installations -
    the Government does know that as seen in a report I once read - but no
    effort has been made to miniaturise these things - no competions,
    challenges to universities, etc.

    Finally - if heat pumps don't work and people are forced to use
    resistance electric heaters you are suddenly selling twice the amount of
    gas and making 4X the profit on that - 8X the income - so there is good
    reason to have a view which has remarkable-and-surprising (!)
    omissions...

    Regards,
    Rich S.

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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 09:12:12 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m1ecsioa6i.fsf@void.com...

    Apparently fuel-powered heat-pumps to exist for large installations -
    the Government does know that as seen in a report I once read - but no
    effort has been made to miniaturise these things - no competions,
    challenges to universities, etc.
    ----------------------

    Co-generation of heat and electricity doesn't appear economically practical
    at the single home scale, and they are needed without delay at different times. if it seemed a possible answer I'd be exploring it. A heat pump requires electricity or engine-driven shaft rotation, the most difficult and inefficient forms of energy to produce though the most valuable. In this climate the needs for winter heating and summer air conditioning are both
    high and electricity and hot water are continuous. The best price I've seen for reputable(?) LiFePO4 batteries to provide a continuous supply from intermittent generation is over $200 per kilowatt stored, before
    installation. Look at how much you use per day.

    Thermoelectric and small turbines are far too inefficient, piston power not far behind. Grid power benefits from the complex engineering practical at large scales. Without it, as with steam locomotives, fuel efficiency is very low.
    https://www.trainorders.com/discussion/read.php?10,1017631
    "However, even the late U.S. power likely failed to exceed 6% in regular service."

    https://www.pcienergysolutions.com/2023/04/17/power-plant-efficiency-coal-natural-gas-nuclear-and-more/

    https://www.reddit.com/r/OffGrid/comments/yxrw69/electricity_from_the_wood_stove_best_way/

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  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 10:39:41 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Jim Wilkins" wrote in message news:109k0bs$3kpqc$1@dont-email.me...

    Co-generation of heat and electricity doesn't appear economically practical >at the single home scale, and they are needed without delay at different >times, if it seemed a possible answer I'd be exploring it.

    When I was involved with the Milstar satellite network a request came
    through to develop a 50W fuel powered generator to power laptops and satcom radio terminals in the field, ie Iraq. That's about 1/15 HP. They used to
    have a soldier-cranked one.
    https://www.ebay.com/itm/126861624359
    I've only heard about what they finally got, Google failed me. It didn't
    sound like a DIY project.

    All I could contribute was a WW2 dynamotor 24V to high voltage converter for aircraft radios, to show 50W done with conventional copper windings and iron laminations. Later I worked with Segway motors of somewhat smaller size and considerably higher power (proprietary info) due to advanced magnets. I have some discarded prototype motors without the safety disconnect to use as DC generators, perhaps hand cranked or with a windmill or model heat engine. I haven't because one $50 solar panel produces as much or more power than a human can continuously, estimated at 75W.

    The better emergency solution is a little Honda generator I bought
    reasonably and fixed, and for which I made a gas tank pressurizer to prime
    and fully drain it for safe indoor storage. It can charge used time-expired hospital VRLA batteries that I couldn't claim as a Form 5695 tax deduction, unlike batteries bought new and subject to tighter IRS rules. After a storm
    my time is more valuable clearing snow / ice from the driveway.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 20:21:14 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    Motor powers pump ("compressor").

    It "only" has to achieve 1-to-{approaching2} to beat 1-to-4 of a
    an "immaculate installation" mains-electricity powered heat pump.
    (not the full 2-to-1 because the heat from the motor also goes into the
    house)
    If I reckon this correctly.
    The energy security of having motor-powered heat pumps with different
    fuels would surely be an advantage.
    I would gladly have some sort of heat-pump running from my
    central-heating oil if it saved energy and fuel costs.
    Suppose it were a little turbine of absymal efficiency - all its exhaust
    heat worked or wasted goes into the house then anything it heat-pumps is
    a bonus.
    Have I got something wrong here?

    The electricity "grid" here is very fragile. We in our village had a
    three-day power cut last winter.
    We have enough population to have traffic queues at juntions and into
    towns during "rush hour".
    In Britain most homes have "TN-C-S" earthing.
    That is otherwise known as "PME" - Protective Multiple Earthing.
    The Earth is provided by the substations.
    In Cornwall they dare not do that - you can only have "TN-C-S" where the
    cables are underground, secure and protected. IN Cornwall most are on poles and pylons.
    The risk of losing your Earth while some power is getting through is too high. I am painting a picture of a fragile supply?

    I haven't researched this much I admit.

    Hinckley Point C is years in build and you have a feeling these "huge"
    nuclear power stations are not the answer.
    Seemingly lofty dreams strung on lamentable realities.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Richard Smith@null@void.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 20:22:57 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:

    "Jim Wilkins" wrote in message news:109k0bs$3kpqc$1@dont-email.me...
    HP. They used to have a soldier-cranked one. https://www.ebay.com/itm/126861624359

    Like it...
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 18:53:50 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m17byajcgl.fsf@void.com...

    The electricity "grid" here is very fragile. We in our village had a
    three-day power cut last winter.

    ----------------------
    I've lost power for over a week several times, after ice storms brought down trees onto power lines. Trees next to the road are too risky for us to cut down as they grow and lean into the opening, and quite expensive to hire out if a crane must take branches down sequentially, often the case near houses. Many people have portable or permanent generators and roof solar is fairly common here. Although winters can be Norwegian our latitude is slightly
    south of Marseilles. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-ice-storm-update-1.7499357

    Wood heat, kettle hot water and a 12V fridge/freezer nearly give me energy independence. The hot water can be poured into the washing machine to wash, with a cold rinse. Garden sprayers modified with sink spray hoses are enough for a hot shower. Planning ahead is the biggest disadvantage especially on cold mornings. I schedule appointments for noonish or later.

    For watching and recording TV I have an antenna and low power demand laptops running Windows 7 Media center, with USB TV tuners. The microwave, coffee
    pot and main refrigerator are on grid power though the refrigerator can
    start and run from an APC1400 sine UPS during an outage or a storm when late night lightning or grid loss is likely, and the others briefly from a generator.

    An inverter that senses load and shuts off when not needed would increase battery life, the APC's ~50W idle power nearly equals the compact fridge's draw. But the APC was free (to fix). Some models of UPS are intentionally crippled against long term misuse on battery power, especially those that
    lack a fan and can overheat with battery capacity larger than designed for.
    A smaller one of mine shuts off after 30 minutes on battery.

    I first added a sink spray hose to the shower head with a Y adapter to wash the wife's dog during cold weather, and we liked it for ourselves enough to remove the fixed head. Unlike commercial units it shuts off when released, saving expensive electrically heated water. The extended hose reaches and helps clean the sink and toilet. The house was all electric, the cost of winter heat is why I bought the wood stove. One KWH costs $0.21, it has
    peaked over $0.30. Those who signed up for various percentages of alternate energy pay more to feel superior.

    The long haired dog tolerated the bath as long as her head was outside the curtain, she was willing to learn only what was mutually agreeable, yawning
    or howling offended her dignity, and no perfumed shampoo. She learned to "Shake!" water off on command, in the tub and not again until outdoors. It
    was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to remember right vs left. Golden retrievers can be smart and eager to be appreciated
    but have their limits, for her about 30 words and phrases. I've read that monkeys aren't much better, dogs just don't have the hands or facial
    muscles.
    https://www.progress.com/blogs/dog-chimp

    After I moved the bird feeder away from the clothesline a nuthatch (bird) fussed to attract my attention and then when I pointed toward it, out of
    sight in the woods, understood and flew that way.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Sun Sep 7 22:04:49 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m17byajcgl.fsf@void.com...

    Motor powers pump ("compressor").

    It "only" has to achieve 1-to-{approaching2} to beat 1-to-4 of a
    an "immaculate installation" mains-electricity powered heat pump.
    (not the full 2-to-1 because the heat from the motor also goes into the
    house)
    If I reckon this correctly.
    The energy security of having motor-powered heat pumps with different
    fuels would surely be an advantage.
    I would gladly have some sort of heat-pump running from my
    central-heating oil if it saved energy and fuel costs.
    Suppose it were a little turbine of absymal efficiency - all its exhaust
    heat worked or wasted goes into the house then anything it heat-pumps is
    a bonus.
    Have I got something wrong here?

    --------------------------------------
    I think you are exactly right, the problems are how to build it economically and how to adjust the balance between hot air, cooled air and hot water demands. About half the fuel energy into a motor goes into the exhaust and
    is difficult to recover, the Titanic's turbine is a good example of
    capturing the energy from cylinder exhaust, and the complexity thereof even with the ocean as the cold sink. The issue is that cost and difficulty of recovery increases inversely to temperature differential, as with condensing locomotives. Stirling engines that operate on a cup of hot water have very
    low power compared to smaller hot-burning model airplane engines that would fall into the cup. Trevithick's and Evans' increases in steam engine
    pressure and temperature finally made it light and powerful enough to move practical vehicles, a century after steam power first appeared.

    https://www.borstengineeringconstruction.com/Lister_Engine_Photos.pdf
    After the detailed description of his installation:
    "So why use costly fossil-fuels and complicated approaches at all when
    free renewable energy and simple approaches are now readily available?
    So these days we recommend using micro hydro power and solar power given rapidly improving battery technology and associated capability and low cost power inverters."

    One might answer undependable availability. I chose locally abundant, free, renewable and cheaply storable solid fuel for heat and solar only for loads that require electricity. Today was overcast with rain and the panels
    produced only about 5% of their rating. Having had a few overcast days I needed to switch to a spare to avoid the freezer stopping from low voltage overnight. The batteries have and need terminal voltage meters and charge/discharge current meters to show state of charge (SOC), which isn't
    as evident from the almost constant voltage of an LiFePO4 as with Li-ion,
    AGM or flooded lead-acid.

    https://www.thespruce.com/high-efficiency-condensing-furnace-1824740
    The second condenser adds cost and complexity, it must tolerate acidic condensed combustion products without developing toxic leaks into the living space. Also the fire needs motorized forced draft since there's none from
    the flue. My wood stove doesn't burn well until the flue temperature approaches 100C.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnot_cycle
    Achievable efficiency falls off as Th approaches Tc; as the temperature difference driving the engine decreases.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Countercurrent_exchange
    It makes the condenser more efficient.
    As a kid I spent many hours trying to design a countercurrent heat exchanger for air that I could fold from cardboard and then flashing, or aluminum foil on a frame of dowels. The best I came up with crossed the currents perpendicularly, with angles sealing the corners. Antiparallel flow made the end manifolds too difficult for my limited fabrication abilities. https://iaq.na.panasonic.com/erv/balanced-home-elite-erv


    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Gerry@geraldrmiller@yahoo.ca to rec.crafts.metalworking on Mon Sep 8 00:10:07 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    On Sun, 7 Sep 2025 18:53:50 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
    <muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:

    "Richard Smith" wrote in message news:m17byajcgl.fsf@void.com...

    The electricity "grid" here is very fragile. We in our village had a >three-day power cut last winter.

    ----------------------
    I've lost power for over a week several times, after ice storms brought down >trees onto power lines. Trees next to the road are too risky for us to cut >down as they grow and lean into the opening, and quite expensive to hire out >if a crane must take branches down sequentially, often the case near houses. >Many people have portable or permanent generators and roof solar is fairly >common here. Although winters can be Norwegian our latitude is slightly >south of Marseilles. >https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-ice-storm-update-1.7499357

    Wood heat, kettle hot water and a 12V fridge/freezer nearly give me energy >independence. The hot water can be poured into the washing machine to wash, >with a cold rinse. Garden sprayers modified with sink spray hoses are enough >for a hot shower. Planning ahead is the biggest disadvantage especially on >cold mornings. I schedule appointments for noonish or later.

    For watching and recording TV I have an antenna and low power demand laptops >running Windows 7 Media center, with USB TV tuners. The microwave, coffee >pot and main refrigerator are on grid power though the refrigerator can >start and run from an APC1400 sine UPS during an outage or a storm when late >night lightning or grid loss is likely, and the others briefly from a >generator.

    An inverter that senses load and shuts off when not needed would increase >battery life, the APC's ~50W idle power nearly equals the compact fridge's >draw. But the APC was free (to fix). Some models of UPS are intentionally >crippled against long term misuse on battery power, especially those that >lack a fan and can overheat with battery capacity larger than designed for. >A smaller one of mine shuts off after 30 minutes on battery.

    I first added a sink spray hose to the shower head with a Y adapter to wash >the wife's dog during cold weather, and we liked it for ourselves enough to >remove the fixed head. Unlike commercial units it shuts off when released, >saving expensive electrically heated water. The extended hose reaches and >helps clean the sink and toilet. The house was all electric, the cost of >winter heat is why I bought the wood stove. One KWH costs $0.21, it has >peaked over $0.30. Those who signed up for various percentages of alternate >energy pay more to feel superior.

    The long haired dog tolerated the bath as long as her head was outside the >curtain, she was willing to learn only what was mutually agreeable, yawning >or howling offended her dignity, and no perfumed shampoo. She learned to >"Shake!" water off on command, in the tub and not again until outdoors. It >was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do >that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to remember >right vs left. Golden retrievers can be smart and eager to be appreciated >but have their limits, for her about 30 words and phrases. I've read that >monkeys aren't much better, dogs just don't have the hands or facial >muscles.
    https://www.progress.com/blogs/dog-chimp

    After I moved the bird feeder away from the clothesline a nuthatch (bird) >fussed to attract my attention and then when I pointed toward it, out of >sight in the woods, understood and flew that way.
    I had a mixed breed who used to tease me by offering her left paw when
    i told her to shake a paw, also, the only way I could give her
    medication was to let her off her outdoor tether after clipping on her
    leash - I guess, to her, this meant that I was the boss.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Mon Sep 8 09:57:32 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Gerry" wrote in message news:c9lsbkhhisq2b1gv8fs4ffcbmff20502pb@4ax.com...

    I had a mixed breed who used to tease me by offering her left paw when
    i told her to shake a paw, also, the only way I could give her
    medication was to let her off her outdoor tether after clipping on her
    leash - I guess, to her, this meant that I was the boss. --------------------------------

    They are aware of the pecking order. My mother's Doberman quickly recognized me on it and did whatever I asked. It clearly knew what I wanted, simple things like go to where I pointed, lie down and stay there, as mine would.
    The dog understood exactly where the property boundaries were and would
    break off chasing a cat or squirrel at them and stand guard.

    I think Mom acquired the dog from an elderly friend who could no longer keep it. It must have been well trained but not by her, she had no authority with animals, that was my job. The wild rabbits around here stop running away
    when they recognize me and sometimes sit nearby nibbling clover and watching me work. Maybe I'm protection from hawks.

    A neighbor acquired an unruly black lab that appeared untrained, and would
    nip at my legs. I finally grabbed under its lower jaw and pressed the lips against the teeth while firmly telling it to stop.

    The dog instantly stopped testing and respected me and would do whatever I asked. I didn't want to embarrass the owner so I took the dog for a walk in the woods to see what it knew or picked up on, such as investigate a burrow opening I pointed at, and break off running around when asked to follow me, not "heel" but pay attention and come along, my phrase was "this way". Those were things I'd taught my dog to do, normal dog actions instead of useless tricks which mine would quickly learn and then refuse to repeat. I learned when to stop asking.

    Teddy Roosevelt took a vacation between being elected and assuming the Vice Presidency, hunting livestock-killing mountain lions with dogs in Colorado. The dogs were very friendly, even cuddly with humans yet rough on each
    other, constantly challenging for dominance. When they caught a lion, which are faster sprinters but lack a dog's endurance, the lower ranking pack members would cooperate by grabbing and pulling legs, tail, ears to
    immobilize it, then a strong dominant dog would close in on the head. A lion could kill a single dog easily, the pack wouldn't allow it to concentrate on one member.

    Roosevelt waded into the fights and killed lions with a knife, as a bullet might hit a dog. https://www.boone-crockett.org/adventures-archives-theodore-roosevelts-worlds-record-cougar

    "Theodore Roosevelt is the only U.S. president with his name in the Boone
    and Crockett records. And as far as we know, herCOs the only hunter to kill a WorldrCOs Record with a hunting knife."

    When Obama was on Bear Grylls' TV show his guard detail wouldn't let him
    step off the road.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Tue Sep 9 10:36:19 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Gerry" wrote in message news:c9lsbkhhisq2b1gv8fs4ffcbmff20502pb@4ax.com...

    On Sun, 7 Sep 2025 18:53:50 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
    <muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:

    was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do >that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to
    remember
    right vs left.

    I had a mixed breed who used to tease me by offering her left paw when
    i told her to shake a paw, ...
    ------------------------------

    I taught mine to shake right to right or left to left, as the person
    offered. That was likely what confused her/it (spayed). The same side would
    be easier.

    On an introductory flight lesson the engineer instructor told me to turn
    right toward a mountain he named, that was on the left.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Gerry@geraldrmiller@yahoo.ca to rec.crafts.metalworking on Tue Sep 9 23:28:01 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    On Tue, 9 Sep 2025 10:36:19 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
    <muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:

    "Gerry" wrote in message news:c9lsbkhhisq2b1gv8fs4ffcbmff20502pb@4ax.com...

    On Sun, 7 Sep 2025 18:53:50 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
    <muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:

    was funny when people asked her to "shake" expecting a raised paw. She'd do >>that as well on a "Paw" command, with much swapping while trying to >>remember
    right vs left.

    I had a mixed breed who used to tease me by offering her left paw when
    i told her to shake a paw, ...
    ------------------------------

    I taught mine to shake right to right or left to left, as the person >offered. That was likely what confused her/it (spayed). The same side would >be easier.

    On an introductory flight lesson the engineer instructor told me to turn >right toward a mountain he named, that was on the left.
    I've worked under engineers with that problem!
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jim Wilkins@muratlanne@gmail.com to rec.crafts.metalworking on Wed Sep 10 07:42:40 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.crafts.metalworking

    "Gerry" wrote in message news:cvr1cklp9j8p7vfi4b1u0amhm9nj6b9e18@4ax.com...

    On Tue, 9 Sep 2025 10:36:19 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
    <muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:

    "Gerry" wrote in message
    news:c9lsbkhhisq2b1gv8fs4ffcbmff20502pb@4ax.com...

    On Sun, 7 Sep 2025 18:53:50 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
    <muratlanne@gmail.com> wrote:

    On an introductory flight lesson the engineer instructor told me to turn >right toward a mountain he named, that was on the left.

    I've worked under engineers with that problem!
    --------------------------

    Several Mensa members I knew admitted to dyslexia. I wonder if it's a sign
    of too much spatial ability (simultaneously) rather than too little. Printed words can dissolve on me if I'm very tired.

    During a Mensa meeting the psychologist speaker suddenly said "ELEPHANT", paused, and polled us on what image first came to mind. I was the only one
    who visualized both a picture and the word.

    Saunier's classic textbook on metalworking just appeared on Gutenberg: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76850

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