mklotz
Well-Known Member
A friend back East has been pestering me to show him how a Ringbom Stirling works. I finally got around to making a video and, knowing how this tribe of codgers loves videos, am passing it along for your enjoyment.
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcHAnVB-knE[/ame]
Noisy little devil, isn't it? Not as bad as one of those infernal ICs but, still, noisy for a Stirling.
The engine is my interpretation of Jerry Howell's plans. It uses a graphite power piston running in an aluminum cylinder. The aluminum displacer runs in a graphite bearing. As with all Ringboms, there is no mechanical connection between the displacer and the rest of the engine. The displacer is driven solely by the pressure fluctuations within the engine.
It's arguably the simplest mechanical Stirling design. (Water piston Stirlings are simpler but they aren't mechanical.)
The cold end of the displacer chamber has a water jacket. A tiny pump, driven by a low-tech rubber band pumps water from the cooling tower through the jacket. The pump is interesting. It's an oscillator engine run backwards. The stainless piston is driven by the pulley. It is encased in a pivoting graphite cylinder that alternately covers and uncovers the inlet and outlet as it rotates.
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcHAnVB-knE[/ame]
Noisy little devil, isn't it? Not as bad as one of those infernal ICs but, still, noisy for a Stirling.
The engine is my interpretation of Jerry Howell's plans. It uses a graphite power piston running in an aluminum cylinder. The aluminum displacer runs in a graphite bearing. As with all Ringboms, there is no mechanical connection between the displacer and the rest of the engine. The displacer is driven solely by the pressure fluctuations within the engine.
It's arguably the simplest mechanical Stirling design. (Water piston Stirlings are simpler but they aren't mechanical.)
The cold end of the displacer chamber has a water jacket. A tiny pump, driven by a low-tech rubber band pumps water from the cooling tower through the jacket. The pump is interesting. It's an oscillator engine run backwards. The stainless piston is driven by the pulley. It is encased in a pivoting graphite cylinder that alternately covers and uncovers the inlet and outlet as it rotates.