Yes, but what is the conversion rate of the person - Calories in - power out. A human generates a lot of heat.
Yes, but what is the conversion rate of the person - Calories in - power out. A human generates a lot of heat.
From memory humans are about 1hp peak for very brief bursts (sprinters etc.) but about 0.1-0.2hp sustained.
I'm guessing that humans are probably less efficient in terms of mechanical work done divided by heat energy out. A sweating human in a breeze could probably dissipate a hell of a lot of energy as heat.
Correct - an internal combustion engine is only 25 - 30% efficient due to heat rejection.
Just curious because I'm always interested in TOTAL energy cycles. is their a doctor in the house?
I remeber reading once that peanut butter has a higher calorific value than gasoline...
What? I didn't say anything about it, it was indy who was arguing for what was it, 1324? Meh, I was just talking to Janis mostly, trying to avoid any conversation which involved indy.
As for the internal combustion engine, curious fact is our most efficient energy in terms of the thermodynamic efficiency is the diesel engine, but its still quite a bit below the carnot engine
1-3-4-2 bitches. Except for the new crossplane R1 which is 1-3-2-4.
lol, thats an awesome firing order.
Lol Dare, yes, the carnot engine is the hypothetical engine where the maximum possible efficiency is observed, due to no process being fully thermodynamically reversible it can not be achieved.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuderi_Engine
Just remembered this from a lecture given a few months ago by one of the Audi high-ups.
Interesting idea really, one of the key aspects that the guy mentioned was that it allows much higher combustion chamber temperatures which are key to efficiency.
Edit: Also a few other neat parts like allowing the fuel to be sprayed directly into the hot pre-compressed charge air without having the hassle of injecting into the combustion chamber. This has some pretty big advantages for predictable fuel-air mixing etc. Their main selling point seems to be the after-top-dead-centre firing...
hmmm, I'm guessing the intake valve on the combustion cylinder is still partially open at TDC to give a high enough compression ratio? I'm kinda struggling to see any benifits over the conventional cycle tbh.
Some of my personal favourites are the steam based 6 stroke and the supercharged two stroke (only diesel so far as can't direct inject petrol yet)
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
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