Aaragorn
Mechanical
- Nov 20, 2008
- 2
I am trying to reverse engineer a steam turbine similar to the one these guys are using.
I made a two jet version of this using 1/4" steel tube mounted to a 1 1/4" Pipe tee to house the bearing and fed thru the center of the bearing by a 1/2" steel pipe.
The jet in the end of my rotor tubing is one 1/16" hole in each of the two rotors at approximately 14" radius from center of the rotor.
I hooked the thing up to my pressure cooker on the stove to see if it would turn the motor. I couldn't develop sufficient pressures to make it turn. I had a 5' long 3/8" flexible tube from the cooker to the intake. It seemed to me that it didn't have any leaks. So the only venting of steam was thru the two 1/16" holes in the ends of the rotor. I'll bet I never even developed 10 psi during my test despite letting the pressure cooker get going at a rolling boil for several minutes.
it amazes me that only two tiny holes can vent so much and still not produce enough pressure in the system to turn the rotor.
How can I change this set up to generate the kind of pressures I need to turn the generator.
My end goal here is to use a solar collector to make this steam turbine generate power. It's only a 2.5 hp motor and it doesn't take much effort to spin the rotor by hand. But spinning it by hand isn't my goal here is it.
I don't know anything about fluid dynamics and how to make a higher pressure system. Please guide me how to do this.
I made a two jet version of this using 1/4" steel tube mounted to a 1 1/4" Pipe tee to house the bearing and fed thru the center of the bearing by a 1/2" steel pipe.
The jet in the end of my rotor tubing is one 1/16" hole in each of the two rotors at approximately 14" radius from center of the rotor.
I hooked the thing up to my pressure cooker on the stove to see if it would turn the motor. I couldn't develop sufficient pressures to make it turn. I had a 5' long 3/8" flexible tube from the cooker to the intake. It seemed to me that it didn't have any leaks. So the only venting of steam was thru the two 1/16" holes in the ends of the rotor. I'll bet I never even developed 10 psi during my test despite letting the pressure cooker get going at a rolling boil for several minutes.
it amazes me that only two tiny holes can vent so much and still not produce enough pressure in the system to turn the rotor.
How can I change this set up to generate the kind of pressures I need to turn the generator.
My end goal here is to use a solar collector to make this steam turbine generate power. It's only a 2.5 hp motor and it doesn't take much effort to spin the rotor by hand. But spinning it by hand isn't my goal here is it.
I don't know anything about fluid dynamics and how to make a higher pressure system. Please guide me how to do this.