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N_Cook N_Cook is offline
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Default The mechanical bettery

On 23/08/2020 09:38, nightjar wrote:
On 22/08/2020 21:34, newshound wrote:
On 22/08/2020 19:52, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Sat, 22 Aug 2020 18:39:31 +0100, Max Demian
wrote:

On 22/08/2020 17:27, harry wrote:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QLEERYS5C8

Flywheels aren't the only mechanical batteries available. There are
gravity based batteries like the "accumulators" used to work the
bascules of Tower bridge.

Many years ago I read an article on flywheel-powered shunting engines.
I think it was in 'The Eagle' comic, circa 1955, estimated from where
we were living at the time.

Flywheels have been tried as an energy storage device in modern hybrid
diesel locomotives. They resulted in a reduction in fuel consumption as
compared to a pure diesel, but not as much as a diesel/battery hybrid.

This may have been for use in chemical plants where there could be
explosive vapours. IIRC it's also been used in urban trams or buses.
Not that many new ideas around apart from some of the genuine quantum
stuff.


Chemical plants often used fireless locomotives to avoid the explosion
risk:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fireless_locomotive


Don't know about locomotives , but for road transport ,they came to an
abrupt abondonment. All is fine until there is an accident. The flywheel
dislodges and continues like a much more energetic panjanderam,
demolishing everyone and everything in its very long path.

--
Global sea level rise to 2100 from curve-fitted existing altimetry data
http://diverse.4mg.com/slr.htm