A Link to buy this engine here: bit.ly/WP-MiniSterlingEngine Use coupon Code: WARPED for 10% Off Other engine models: www.stirlingkit.com Use coupon Code: WARPED for 10% Off or click link below. www.stirlingkit.com/discount/WARPED
Warped Perception , that was fantastic , my little engine similar to yours , that is some outrageous RPM's , enjoyed the slow motion circle around from above , on your Briggs engine , use a regular cylinder head , cut out the center and use a piece of Pyrex glass or oven tempered glass for the seeing inside the engine
I'm thinking of Stirling Engine swapping my Ferrari, then hiring someone to hold a torch to it whenever I want to drive. It would surely be cheaper than maintaining its current engine.
Well I bet you that I would be able to build you a large version of this engine, if you really wanted to put it in a car... Instead of a turbo exhaust pipe sticking out of the hood, it would be a giant roofing torch with a 3 foot blue flame!!! That may be a really cool project can you imagine!!
@@Jupiter__001_ technically they should have one to be a Stirling engine not a hot air engine. stirling engines are what Robert stirling called his version of a improved hot air engine. One major improvement was that it included a regenerator.
Well being that the generator wasnt connected to anything, and wasnt shorted, the only resistance is the slight amount from the bearings in the generator itself, and mechanical losses due to heat
Wow! I'll bet the company that makes those never envisioned THAT test! In your high speed footage it wasn't even flexing anywhere that I could see. The smaller a thing is the stronger it becomes but that was way beyond it's design I am sure.
Thank you, and TBH I haven't even done anything nuts yet, I've done a lot of cinematography, camera work, and high speed filming for many big movies, coming up soon I'm going to do a whole series recreating techniques I have used for big movies, I'm going to do them as individual episodes here on this channel.
@@michaelesposito2629 That's why you gear it down. There is no such thing as "all HP and no torque", because without any torque, there is no horsepower. Horsepower is just the engine torque multiplied by the rotational speed, then divided by a constant. This engine would likely be able to power a small RC car, it would just have to be geared down to convert some of the rotational speed into torque.
Funny, I am familiar with these engines, and from watching other videos you put out, I said that YOU would probably get 4000 rpm (which is amazing). To apply cold on the other piston, a super easy method is to use electronic duster. Pleas hook a volt meter up to this. Also a solid metal design would be able to take a lot more punishment. Using heat, and cold with a metal design, YOU may get 6k or 7k rpm. Be fun to watch!
@@WarpedYT multi purpose compressed gas cleaner. Can be found at walmart in electronics. When sprayed it becomes super cold and if sprayed while holding upside down a liquid comes out and is super cold. Can cause frostbite. Its cheap, readily found and probably one of the easiest ways to get the Stirling piston cold quickly.
Mine going a lot slower got about 7 volts last I remember, at the rpm his is making, maybe like 10 to 12 volts. I'm not really sure how that whole thing works though
Hello sir, I am vidit vadhera from India , I regularly watch your videos and your perception is just so clear about engines and their working, about Stirling engine you can also try and focus the sunlight from a big lense and see that if the engine works from a renewable heat source.. thanks , take care!! 😀
I have one of these i made during college for some cnc/machining courses, these engines are really cool theres so many ways that you can make them to absorb heat even from your hand to power
I’m actually extremely impressed! I have a new found respect for sterling engines, thanks! If that piston and cylinder we’re stainless you could really work this engine
Just shows you how much of a difference a well balanced engine makes Even with how many moving parts there are, it revved to 4000! Damn. Some old engines could never dream of that haha
The way the light was rotating and the aura from the heat sent me back into an lsd flashback. The way it looked reminded me of visuals while tripping. Still love this video
What a lovely, robust little Stirling! I'm guessing that the hot cylinder is borosilicate (Pyrex), the hot piston soda-lime glass. That she spun that long under those conditions is truly remarkable. Very good production of a cool vid.
The reason Stirling engines are not in our cars today is because they invented the internal combustion engine. Which had faster startup and better throttle response. NASA actually did make one that fixed these problems, but the cost per engine was very high because of the use of exotic materials. On the other hand some military submarines use these engines , and they are said to be much quieter than a nuclear powered. sub. Only down side is they would need more frequent refueling compared to the nuclear fuels rods lasting many years. But would be much safer with out all the radiation.
@@virtualtools_3021 You can power a Stirling Engine with any heat source. You can even run it with extreme cold . The main goal is to have a temperature difference between the two cylinders.
@@virtualtools_3021 True that could be done for sure. On the flip side the Swedish Gotland class submarines actually use hydrogen and oxygen to provide heat to the Stirling engine. This combo of Hydrogen and Stirling engine, has made the Gotland class one of the quietest submarines in the world. Its much simpler and less complex than nuclear. I would like to see alot more submarines with this tech to reduce nuclear waste. And save tax payer money.
@@FalconWing1813 i don't see how the hydrogen and oxygen could possibly be quieter than a rod of uranium, but i do see how it could save money and reduce waste
Amazing. Simple, easy, without complicated maintenance, no lubricant (aparently). This engine can be used for generate electricity at big scale, of course .
A perfect example of the wonders of simplicity. May not be as powerful or versatile or useful as more sophisticated machines of today, but nothing beats the durability and longevity of simplicity.
Stirling engines i would say are maybe the future. I have one of the piston on each side like a gas engine. That thing, after sitting for maybe a year, ran. I love Stirling engines.
I believe that the upper piston was actually graphite with a steel fitting inside. Low friction, doesn't ever melt (it sublimes), easy to machine and soft enough to get along with brittle glass.
I, and a couple other folks, have wondered about power output. It's real easy to get some results with the built-in dyno. Just wire up that belt-drive "motor" with a proper-sized resistor and measure the current. Volts, Amps, Watts!...use an electric model plane Wattmeter that reads out all three. One horsepower equals 745 Watts...use Watts for bigger-looking numbers! One could even set up another brushed motor running off that onboard generator with a fan to move air through an air/water intercooler that would pull heat off the "cold side" of the motor and make for a higher temperature differential. Make sure that the water in the intercooler thermo-siphons like a Ford Model T cooling system so no pump is needed...put the intercooler higher than the heat source with no dips in the lines. Use model plane silicone fuel line for water lines to intercooler. I like the liquid Nitrogen idea also. You could do "dyno runs" stock, stock with intercooling, and stock with nitrogen cooling. THEN you could do runs stock with MAPP gas. Mapp gas with intercooling, and finally MAPP gas with Nitrogen cooling. Maybe reverse the order of the MAPP gas runs so that the damage to hot side happens on the last run. (stock) For stock runs, just pinch off water flow to intercooler. Compare Wattage on all runs for a full test set!
Just a little FYI. In early 2008, true MAPP gas production ended in North America when production was discontinued at the only remaining plant in North America that still manufactured it. However, many current products labeled "MAPP" are, in fact, MAPP substitutes. These versions are composed almost entirely of propylene with minuscule impurities of propane (
I want to see you put one of these and a torch into a radio controlled car or truck. That would be an awesome project. I bet the views would be through the roof.
You can get more power and RPM out of it by using a can of freezer spray on the other cylinder and piston at the same time as using the blow torch on the hot cylinder and piston. The bigger the temperature difference between the two is the key. Thats assuming the freezer spray is not flamable. Love the videos
I have a suggestion for you brother. Use light gases like Hydrogen or Helium as operation gas and keep it under high pressure to maximize the power output and efficiency of Stirling Engines. You can take a look at Cody's Lab for a video on that topic
I wonder if you could water cool the heat sink and make some steal pistons and cylinders to better handle the heat because of better heat transfer. But then again that may prevent it from running, perhaps ceramic piston and cylinder? I really liked that you pulled it apart on video though that was cool, thanks for the video, it has me thinking now lol
replacing the pistons and cylinders with steel would work just fine. Water cooling does in fact improve the sterling quite a bit (as they work on temperature difference, not just heat)
I agree with eternal ponderer below. The limiting factor is probable the engines ability to expel the heat from the other side. Very cool video (I love the 360' slow motion) and Yes, I'm gonna buy one but I won't be blowing mine up. :)
That "conversion into rotational energy" part he just blew by was the main part. Long story short, it's pressure change as air is heated and cooled and temperature change as trapped gas expands and contracts working in unison.
The model is a real work of art. Side note - one of the reasons this type of engine didn’t make it is difficulty in controlling speed and throttle. Takes a while to get going. Not good for a car. Maybe more suitable for a home generator or similar. It’s kind of like a flywheel in that regard.
With that much heat input there needs to be an appropriate amount of cooling added to the "cold" side: Forced-air + extra fins or a water-jacket and radiator? The higher the temperature differential the more work that can be extracted = higher RPM. Great vids!
At first I was like 'wait, what, that doesn't make any sense!' and then I remembered how damn quiet a sterling is when it's not being pushed to it's breaking point. You get one balanced and greased just right and that thing makes basically no noise.
Put a heatshield between the hot bulb and the cooler so you have bigger temperature difference. Moreover you can make the cooling area bigger or just use dry ice. That'll give you a real boost to your engine.
Thank you ! I was genuinely very surprised at the quality for that price. add to the fact that it actually runs and it's a real engine and that even brings the value higher. I showed this to some kids and they thought it was a cool toy, then I started it and their face was priceless, trying to figure out how that thing was running....lbvs
Man, I don't know if you just mounted your camera on the ceiling fan or what but that shot looks amazing! I wonder if you could get more RPM by cooling the other side and how much voltage and amps could you get at those speeds!
iWantSomeBuns 69 hot air expands and pushes the piston down and you the cold air pulls the top piston down and it’s just a cycle back and forth until there’s no hot air on the hot piston
basically: Air on the hot side (where the candle/torch is) wants to expand, so it does so, pushing the main piston down. that main piston isn't quite as big as the cylinder, so some air slip around. That air is pulled up into that second cylinder to cool off (the one on the top), once this cooled air is pushed back down, it moves back past the piston to the hot side, rinse and repeat. There's a 90 degree delay built into the engine to give the air some time to move. The colder the cold side gets, the more air it can pull in and cool, and the more air will be able to go back and expand in the hot side. Therefore, the greater the difference in temperature, the greater the RPM.
Its funny seeing all the other sterling videos on TH-cam, nowhere near as fast as this boi went. I can imagine you wanna pump those rpm up even higher. Im thinking a full on oxy torch is in order. Might just cut right through the glass though haha
With the extremely rapid reciprocation of the piston, and the additional friction heat that likely created, I'm not at all surprised that it deformed. I am still surprised that the cylinder didn't, however... Regardless, I found this educational, and highly entertaining.
Yes same here! I am also surprised! Seems like it's made with the same material too!. Probably has something to do with the hot gas flow path through the cylinder, pulling the heat away from the cylinder around the piston and into the heatsink oh, that's my guess.
I do not really like Stirling videos like this, where the speaker do not know too much about that hot air engine basically, but it was a great presentation for the limit of this engine. This alpha displacered type engine is a nicely machined one, and fast. You could increase the speed easily with some wet cooling on the machined aluminium part, but if you can fix the stand first that gives you a much higher speed basically without more heat or cooling because you stoped the negative resonances. Also you should take off that rubber O ring from the generator, that has a pretty high friction. Anyway, the video is cool, good job man! Greetings from Hungary! BLADE
Thanks! Well I know somewhat how about Stirling engines but I have to keep the verbage simple so everybody can understand. now that you comment I did want to put a link to the stirling engine in the description and I completely forgot. As for the little generator, you are absolutely correct oh, I could have got more speed if I had disconnected that belt, I totally could have done that, but this was the very first test and I didn't think it was going to melt the displacer. I'm glad you like it thanks a lot, I'll probably have a couple more coming up soon.
@@WarpedYT I see, people do not really know how it works basically. It's a "mystery", but few popular thinks later everybody wants change the whole world with it, but they don't know why not possible to change it... The stand fixing, the rubber ring, the cooling, and a heat trap what save your red silicon O ring sealing also reduce the heat transfer to the cold side will give you more than a 1000RPM I guess. Good luck! BLADE
It'd be interesting to see if this could be run using sun power, focused through a magnifying lens to create the needed heat. Make the whole configuration reposition-able to allow for the earths rotation so it always has the sun rays focused through the lens. Could this be the next 'green' energy source of the future?
Gosh I really wish to see it blows up after all of that extreme rpm abusing..but it didn't "fortunately"..lol...nice video btw...gon be my next fav channel
You’re melting the piston because you’re adding the heat faster than the heat exchanger can dissipate it. That’s also why the entire thing is hot. This engine isn’t going to fail by blowing up; it will fail by failing to expel the heat With a different (bigger) radiator, and perhaps different gasses, you can increase the rpm. But 4,000 is the max as currently set up - the exchange of heat will not allow to go any faster than this based on current setup Definitely good to know the limit. My pet project is to have this spin fast enough to power a 5v 1A usb charger module (via a capacitor to regulate the voltage)
As a professional Oxygen Not Included player. I highly suggest a massive heatsink fluid? gas? solid? at the cold end, so it dissipates fast but never gets dangerously cool.
That was pretty cool! Curious if it would have turned a tiny bit more rpm if you took the generator belt off... I would think it's creating a little bit of drag on it, especially being overdriven like it is too.
A Link to buy this engine here: bit.ly/WP-MiniSterlingEngine
Use coupon Code: WARPED for 10% Off
Other engine models: www.stirlingkit.com
Use coupon Code: WARPED for 10% Off or click link below.
www.stirlingkit.com/discount/WARPED
Warped Perception on the website it says it runs at 1700-2000 rpm. I assume that is incorrect.
Do they ship internationally? Can't find anything on their site
Do they sell rebuild kits? ;0) maybe have some titanium parts made by ToT and AvE. Heh
Warped Perception , that was fantastic , my little engine similar to yours , that is some outrageous RPM's , enjoyed the slow motion circle around from above ,
on your Briggs engine , use a regular cylinder head , cut out the center and use a piece of Pyrex glass or oven tempered glass for the seeing inside the engine
Warped Perception 8:37 the engine did survive the first test. It was still operational.
Since it works with temperature variance, hit the other side of the heat exchanger with liquid nitrogen and you should get faster RPMs.
Funny, that's one of the first things I thought of. I may try that in the future
@@WarpedYT yes!
@@WarpedYT Or it might shrink the cylinder and lock it up. Only one way to find out.
@@grants169 Or crack if theres big temperature difference. Like hundreds of degrees.
Also fill the cylinders with helium, it will run faster
I'm thinking of Stirling Engine swapping my Ferrari, then hiring someone to hold a torch to it whenever I want to drive. It would surely be cheaper than maintaining its current engine.
Samcrac
Sounds like sam,s on crack ....
😂😂😂😂😂
Well I bet you that I would be able to build you a large version of this engine, if you really wanted to put it in a car... Instead of a turbo exhaust pipe sticking out of the hood, it would be a giant roofing torch with a 3 foot blue flame!!! That may be a really cool project can you imagine!!
Great idea for a future video.... large scale it baby
@@WarpedYT Time to contact Garage 54
I think you spelled Stanley Steamer wrong
1:26 No, this isn't a miniature version of a Stirling engine, this IS a Stirling engine.
No, it is a Stirling version of a miniature engine.
Lol I wanted to make this comment. Thank you
@Craig Roop Not all Stirling engines have a regenerator.
@@Jupiter__001_ technically they should have one to be a Stirling engine not a hot air engine. stirling engines are what Robert stirling called his version of a improved hot air engine. One major improvement was that it included a regenerator.
@@kraklakvakve no, it is a stirling miniature of a engine version
The generator is creating drag, you should remove the belt to get even higher RPMs.
Yes
Why tho, this is a toy, not that efficiency matters
Well being that the generator wasnt connected to anything, and wasnt shorted, the only resistance is the slight amount from the bearings in the generator itself, and mechanical losses due to heat
if overheat is issue then just submerge it in liquid nitro!!10k rpm confirmed
@@KitKitChanIsaac yes! Nitro=sp33d
You can put ice on intercooler and maybe runs at 5000 rpm
Wow! I'll bet the company that makes those never envisioned THAT test! In your high speed footage it wasn't even flexing anywhere that I could see. The smaller a thing is the stronger it becomes but that was way beyond it's design I am sure.
I have a stirling engine and tried to do this myself... then realized I’d be sad if it broke and stopped lol.
I love your slow-mo shots, they're so cinematic compared to other channels!
Thank you, and TBH I haven't even done anything nuts yet, I've done a lot of cinematography, camera work, and high speed filming for many big movies, coming up soon I'm going to do a whole series recreating techniques I have used for big movies, I'm going to do them as individual episodes here on this channel.
@@WarpedYT That sounds very interesting! I'm looking forward to it.
Warped Perception Keep it up, these shots were amazing!
@@WarpedYT what music was used during that slo-mo sequence?
Put that thing in a rc car see if it'll push it along! Great video!
Awesome idea !!!
These things are all HP and no Torque
@@michaelesposito2629 That's why you gear it down. There is no such thing as "all HP and no torque", because without any torque, there is no horsepower. Horsepower is just the engine torque multiplied by the rotational speed, then divided by a constant. This engine would likely be able to power a small RC car, it would just have to be geared down to convert some of the rotational speed into torque.
Go further, get a big sterling & put it on a go cart!
Funny, I am familiar with these engines, and from watching other videos you put out, I said that YOU would probably get 4000 rpm (which is amazing). To apply cold on the other piston, a super easy method is to use electronic duster. Pleas hook a volt meter up to this. Also a solid metal design would be able to take a lot more punishment. Using heat, and cold with a metal design, YOU may get 6k or 7k rpm. Be fun to watch!
Awesome!. Electronic Duster?
@@WarpedYT multi purpose compressed gas cleaner. Can be found at walmart in electronics. When sprayed it becomes super cold and if sprayed while holding upside down a liquid comes out and is super cold. Can cause frostbite. Its cheap, readily found and probably one of the easiest ways to get the Stirling piston cold quickly.
OR - configure a small fan to the output wheel crank and aim it at the cold cylinder. Maybe it’ll feed itself to some degree
Mine going a lot slower got about 7 volts last I remember, at the rpm his is making, maybe like 10 to 12 volts. I'm not really sure how that whole thing works though
Hello sir, I am vidit vadhera from India , I regularly watch your videos and your perception is just so clear about engines and their working, about Stirling engine you can also try and focus the sunlight from a big lense and see that if the engine works from a renewable heat source.. thanks , take care!! 😀
I have one of these i made during college for some cnc/machining courses, these engines are really cool theres so many ways that you can make them to absorb heat even from your hand to power
That piston looks like someone got ahold the big nitrous jets.
That's the same thing I thought when I first saw it !
Oh, very interesting engine! Beautiful slow motion!
Thank you !
Beautiful slow motion indeed !
I’m actually extremely impressed! I have a new found respect for sterling engines, thanks! If that piston and cylinder we’re stainless you could really work this engine
for the heat, can you put a magnifying glass to harness the sun, then on the other end generate electricity. Just for fun.
Yes you can any type of heat will make this sterling engine run.
It’s been done.
Oh thats how solarpanels work! multiple mini Sterlings with generators
@@vattenpoken368 you're kidding right?
No that sounds pretty true i thought
Make the crank smaller, get the generator off with the belt and make the cold side touch liquid nitrogen.
I have this exact same model from sunny tech I ordered on amazon for 95$ and its so well balanced compared to the rest of my collection, it runs great
Just shows you how much of a difference a well balanced engine makes
Even with how many moving parts there are, it revved to 4000! Damn. Some old engines could never dream of that haha
The way the light was rotating and the aura from the heat sent me back into an lsd flashback. The way it looked reminded me of visuals while tripping. Still love this video
Seriously just thinking the same, looks so similar to me.
What a lovely, robust little Stirling!
I'm guessing that the hot cylinder is borosilicate (Pyrex), the hot piston soda-lime glass.
That she spun that long under those conditions is truly remarkable.
Very good production of a cool vid.
The "Glass tubes" are actually quartz. I clicked the link,the engine is only 70 bucks!
Nice! Order confirmed! Great deal even without the black friday discount code! Thanks!!!
This one's really good , the rotating and reciprocating masses are so well balanced here in this engine , surprised to see so less vibrations
I'm giving her all she's got!
The reason Stirling engines are not in our cars today is because they invented the internal combustion engine. Which had faster startup and better throttle response. NASA actually did make one that fixed these problems, but the cost per engine was very high because of the use of exotic materials. On the other hand some military submarines use these engines , and they are said to be much quieter than a nuclear powered. sub. Only down side is they would need more frequent refueling compared to the nuclear fuels rods lasting many years. But would be much safer with out all the radiation.
Uh couldn't you just power these with nuclear heat? Like a more efficient RTG?
@@virtualtools_3021 You can power a Stirling Engine with any heat source. You can even run it with extreme cold . The main goal is to have a temperature difference between the two cylinders.
@@FalconWing1813 yeah, uranium rods for the heat so it won't need refueling and seawater for the cold side
@@virtualtools_3021 True that could be done for sure. On the flip side the Swedish Gotland class submarines actually use hydrogen and oxygen to provide heat to the Stirling engine. This combo of Hydrogen and Stirling engine, has made the Gotland class one of the quietest submarines in the world. Its much simpler and less complex than nuclear. I would like to see alot more submarines with this tech to reduce nuclear waste. And save tax payer money.
@@FalconWing1813 i don't see how the hydrogen and oxygen could possibly be quieter than a rod of uranium, but i do see how it could save money and reduce waste
Amazing. Simple, easy, without complicated maintenance, no lubricant (aparently). This engine can be used for generate electricity at big scale, of course .
That's a really neat sterling kit. I ordered one for my brother!
Thank you, make sure you use the discount code!!
Ooh! Ooh! Ooh! It's THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD! ♥
A perfect example of the wonders of simplicity. May not be as powerful or versatile or useful as more sophisticated machines of today, but nothing beats the durability and longevity of simplicity.
Nice job, I like the content! And you hit 500k subscribers, congrats!!
Thank you ! .. yeah I just haven't posted any videos but I'm back on the TH-cam stuff now
Stirling engines i would say are maybe the future. I have one of the piston on each side like a gas engine. That thing, after sitting for maybe a year, ran. I love Stirling engines.
The slow motion pan at 3:15 was a thing of beauty
Slo-mo walkaround of the running motor looked pretty cool... loves me some reciprocating motion.
You should try to make or get a metal piston and cylinder so it won’t melt and you can hit it with an icy acetylene torch!
The acetylene torch was going to be my third test in this episode, but since it didn't make it through the first well you saw what happened...lol
They sell ones with metal already.
That little engine is a champion
This is great stuff. Back in the 50's I always wanted a mini steam engine. I've seen these as well. Good stuff!
I believe that the upper piston was actually graphite with a steel fitting inside. Low friction, doesn't ever melt (it sublimes), easy to machine and soft enough to get along with brittle glass.
JOHNNY Q90 has multiple videos on sterling engines . Great video Mat
Stirling engine is surely satisfying to watch.... I have no idea why??!!!
1:14 my eyes bugged
Such a slowmo footage, huh!!! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
So do love to see majority of your ones!
Phuckin delicious am telling you
I, and a couple other folks, have wondered about power output. It's real easy to get some results with the built-in dyno. Just wire up that belt-drive "motor" with a proper-sized resistor and measure the current. Volts, Amps, Watts!...use an electric model plane Wattmeter that reads out all three. One horsepower equals 745 Watts...use Watts for bigger-looking numbers!
One could even set up another brushed motor running off that onboard generator with a fan to move air through an air/water intercooler that would pull heat off the "cold side" of the motor and make for a higher temperature differential. Make sure that the water in the intercooler thermo-siphons like a Ford Model T cooling system so no pump is needed...put the intercooler higher than the heat source with no dips in the lines. Use model plane silicone fuel line for water lines to intercooler.
I like the liquid Nitrogen idea also.
You could do "dyno runs" stock, stock with intercooling, and stock with nitrogen cooling. THEN you could do runs stock with MAPP gas. Mapp gas with intercooling, and finally MAPP gas with Nitrogen cooling. Maybe reverse the order of the MAPP gas runs so that the damage to hot side happens on the last run. (stock) For stock runs, just pinch off water flow to intercooler.
Compare Wattage on all runs for a full test set!
Insane video insane camera work
holy carp that slow mo shot was amazing SHOW IT EARLIER IN THE VID i was just about to leave the vid
Dude, you have one of the coolest Channels I've ever come across!
Just a little FYI. In early 2008, true MAPP gas production ended in North America when production was discontinued at the only remaining plant in North America that still manufactured it. However, many current products labeled "MAPP" are, in fact, MAPP substitutes. These versions are composed almost entirely of propylene with minuscule impurities of propane (
Je pense être le seul Français à regarder cette vidéo
Continue j'adore ce que tu fait 👌🤘
I want to see you put one of these and a torch into a radio controlled car or truck. That would be an awesome project. I bet the views would be through the roof.
4k RPM noises sound powerful!
3:08 I sat there a realized wow we created this!
Imagine how much power that generator produces with the engine going that fast...
A full size can run a water pump with wood and fire! This is a great motor! Never seen one before!! Old people must have used this on farms!!!
nice teaser at the end! Can't wait to see what that's all about!
You can get more power and RPM out of it by using a can of freezer spray on the other cylinder and piston at the same time as using the blow torch on the hot cylinder and piston. The bigger the temperature difference between the two is the key. Thats assuming the freezer spray is not flamable. Love the videos
I have a suggestion for you brother. Use light gases like Hydrogen or Helium as operation gas and keep it under high pressure to maximize the power output and efficiency of Stirling Engines. You can take a look at Cody's Lab for a video on that topic
the amount of EFFORT it took to break this bad boy
I wonder if you could water cool the heat sink and make some steal pistons and cylinders to better handle the heat because of better heat transfer. But then again that may prevent it from running, perhaps ceramic piston and cylinder? I really liked that you pulled it apart on video though that was cool, thanks for the video, it has me thinking now lol
replacing the pistons and cylinders with steel would work just fine. Water cooling does in fact improve the sterling quite a bit (as they work on temperature difference, not just heat)
I'm sold ,!
Great vid , totally thank you so much.
☘️
What he sees during max rpm run: 👌🏻 What we see: Engine.EXE has stoped working
I have this exact model i bought it like two years ago and i am happy to see this 😂
I agree with eternal ponderer below. The limiting factor is probable the engines ability to expel the heat from the other side. Very cool video (I love the 360' slow motion) and Yes, I'm gonna buy one but I won't be blowing mine up. :)
You have a little tiny generator on it! Awesome!
That "conversion into rotational energy" part he just blew by was the main part. Long story short, it's pressure change as air is heated and cooled and temperature change as trapped gas expands and contracts working in unison.
The model is a real work of art.
Side note - one of the reasons this type of engine didn’t make it is difficulty in controlling speed and throttle. Takes a while to get going. Not good for a car. Maybe more suitable for a home generator or similar. It’s kind of like a flywheel in that regard.
Love this engine, just bought one for my 9 yer old for Christmas.
Maybe it never took off commercially because of the lack of torque!!
Good Vid :-)
I love your experiments. Dont stop making those videos💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Love it man! Good stuff! Would love to watch them machine and assemble these engines.
Thank you, I agree !
Happy Thanksgiving to your family Happy Thanksgiving everybody🦃🦃🦃🦃🦃🦃🦃🦃🦃
Thank you, you as well!! Happy Thanksgiving
With that much heat input there needs to be an appropriate amount of cooling added to the "cold" side: Forced-air + extra fins or a water-jacket and radiator? The higher the temperature differential the more work that can be extracted = higher RPM. Great vids!
the swedish navy use sterling engines to power submarines, and used one to 'sink' the USS ronald reagan in wargames
That's very interesting, I'm going to have to look that up.
At first I was like 'wait, what, that doesn't make any sense!' and then I remembered how damn quiet a sterling is when it's not being pushed to it's breaking point.
You get one balanced and greased just right and that thing makes basically no noise.
DFX2KX and you think nuclear in subs is noisy?
They are compared to a Stirling engine, nuclear reactors need a lot of coolant and the pump are pretty noisy
Super cool! Totally a complete video!
Those camera shots where amazing.
Thank you
Put a heatshield between the hot bulb and the cooler so you have bigger temperature difference. Moreover you can make the cooling area bigger or just use dry ice. That'll give you a real boost to your engine.
Lol thanks. I bought one because of your video.
Thank you ! I was genuinely very surprised at the quality for that price. add to the fact that it actually runs and it's a real engine and that even brings the value higher. I showed this to some kids and they thought it was a cool toy, then I started it and their face was priceless, trying to figure out how that thing was running....lbvs
Amazing shots man!
Man, I don't know if you just mounted your camera on the ceiling fan or what but that shot looks amazing!
I wonder if you could get more RPM by cooling the other side and how much voltage and amps could you get at those speeds!
I really don’t understand how the heck this engine works
iWantSomeBuns 69 hot air expands and pushes the piston down and you the cold air pulls the top piston down and it’s just a cycle back and forth until there’s no hot air on the hot piston
basically:
Air on the hot side (where the candle/torch is) wants to expand, so it does so, pushing the main piston down. that main piston isn't quite as big as the cylinder, so some air slip around. That air is pulled up into that second cylinder to cool off (the one on the top), once this cooled air is pushed back down, it moves back past the piston to the hot side, rinse and repeat. There's a 90 degree delay built into the engine to give the air some time to move. The colder the cold side gets, the more air it can pull in and cool, and the more air will be able to go back and expand in the hot side.
Therefore, the greater the difference in temperature, the greater the RPM.
Its funny seeing all the other sterling videos on TH-cam, nowhere near as fast as this boi went.
I can imagine you wanna pump those rpm up even higher.
Im thinking a full on oxy torch is in order. Might just cut right through the glass though haha
This clinging compressor noise they make at high speed - sounds healthy when it's intended...
3:10 most beautiful thing I've ever seen
☝😎
Woa.. best Channel. Good job
With the extremely rapid reciprocation of the piston, and the additional friction heat that likely created, I'm not at all surprised that it deformed. I am still surprised that the cylinder didn't, however... Regardless, I found this educational, and highly entertaining.
Yes same here! I am also surprised! Seems like it's made with the same material too!. Probably has something to do with the hot gas flow path through the cylinder, pulling the heat away from the cylinder around the piston and into the heatsink oh, that's my guess.
i love the way u said "oh yea!"
Now super cool the cold side at the same time
Yes please do more small engine videos!!
I think they are super cool especially in slow motion and especially seeing how much they can take !
I have a couple suggestion's...1.wood gas powered go-cart...2.steam powered go-cart...do you think you can do it?
The cold side piston is probably graphite, made under the airpot brand - look it up - virtually frictionless but with a really tight seal
I do not really like Stirling videos like this, where the speaker do not know too much about that hot air engine basically, but it was a great presentation for the limit of this engine. This alpha displacered type engine is a nicely machined one, and fast. You could increase the speed easily with some wet cooling on the machined aluminium part, but if you can fix the stand first that gives you a much higher speed basically without more heat or cooling because you stoped the negative resonances. Also you should take off that rubber O ring from the generator, that has a pretty high friction. Anyway, the video is cool, good job man! Greetings from Hungary! BLADE
Thanks! Well I know somewhat how about Stirling engines but I have to keep the verbage simple so everybody can understand.
now that you comment I did want to put a link to the stirling engine in the description and I completely forgot.
As for the little generator, you are absolutely correct oh, I could have got more speed if I had disconnected that belt, I totally could have done that, but this was the very first test and I didn't think it was going to melt the displacer. I'm glad you like it thanks a lot, I'll probably have a couple more coming up soon.
@@WarpedYT I see, people do not really know how it works basically. It's a "mystery", but few popular thinks later everybody wants change the whole world with it, but they don't know why not possible to change it... The stand fixing, the rubber ring, the cooling, and a heat trap what save your red silicon O ring sealing also reduce the heat transfer to the cold side will give you more than a 1000RPM I guess. Good luck! BLADE
If you take the rubber band off going to the generator it increases RPM greatly 👍🏻
It'd be interesting to see if this could be run using sun power, focused through a magnifying lens to create the needed heat. Make the whole configuration reposition-able to allow for the earths rotation so it always has the sun rays focused through the lens. Could this be the next 'green' energy source of the future?
Exactly
Gosh I really wish to see it blows up after all of that extreme rpm abusing..but it didn't "fortunately"..lol...nice video btw...gon be my next fav channel
wow that's a cute little engine. Perhaps a few more revs if you put some ice on the chiller.
This engine is almost as powerfull as the 5,000 RPM motor!
You’re melting the piston because you’re adding the heat faster than the heat exchanger can dissipate it. That’s also why the entire thing is hot. This engine isn’t going to fail by blowing up; it will fail by failing to expel the heat
With a different (bigger) radiator, and perhaps different gasses, you can increase the rpm. But 4,000 is the max as currently set up - the exchange of heat will not allow to go any faster than this based on current setup
Definitely good to know the limit.
My pet project is to have this spin fast enough to power a 5v 1A usb charger module (via a capacitor to regulate the voltage)
If you increase the temp difference like putting a ice cube or something to cool off the piston/heatsink make it faster? Happy Thanksgiving btw
Yep! some of the low temperature ones can work with nothing but room temp and an ice cube.
Great buildquality of that engine. That it took all that punishment, without breaking, is pretty amazing. 🇩🇰🙋🏻♂️😷👩🏻🚀🇺🇸
As a professional Oxygen Not Included player. I highly suggest a massive heatsink fluid? gas? solid? at the cold end, so it dissipates fast but never gets dangerously cool.
I agree!
That was pretty cool! Curious if it would have turned a tiny bit more rpm if you took the generator belt off... I would think it's creating a little bit of drag on it, especially being overdriven like it is too.
hook up a multimeter to the leads on the DC motor to see actual power output, also try running high pressure air over the second cylinder to cool it