![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 08:12:31 -0800, bildan wrote:
On Jan 11, 6:56Â*pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 12:47:53 -0800, Tom Gardner wrote: 2) If everyone turns their thermostats one degree closer to the outside temperature, drives a smaller car, and switches off phone chargers when not in use, will an energy crisis be averted? My sister pointed out recently that British people tend to keep their houses warmer than we did/do in NZ, so turning down the thermostat is not a hardship - just put on a pullover over your T-shirt in winter. Smaller cars is a problem for us in the trailer towing fraternity. My main gripe with the current crop of electric and hybrid cars is that nobody mentions towing, that I've seen anyway. There's one exception: Aptera say NO TOWING up front. I guess the same goes for many of the rest but they're too chicken to mention it. Hungry chargers are just stupidly bad technology and should be banned. Chargers that use no power[1] when they're plugged in but not connected to anything have been around for at least 8 years, so there's no excuse for selling one that burns power when its under no load. Anyway, I just looked at four chargers I happened to have handy and here's what it shows they burn when plugged into the mains and disconnected from the things they charge: 18 month old Lenovo laptop PSU (65w o/p) Â* Â* Â* Â*0 Â* watts. my much older Thinkpad 560Z PSU (54w o/p) Â* Â* Â* 1.9 watts. iPAQ 3630 PSU (10w o/p) Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* 2.0 watts. 2001 Motorola T250 phone charger (2.5w o/p) Â* Â* 0 Â* watts. [1] I recently bought myself a power meter for a tenner from Maplins. It which reads to 0.1 watts, so a reading of 0.0 should mean 50 mW consumption or less. These power meters are simple to use: they have a 13 amp plug on the back and a 13 amp socket on the front, so you just plug them in between the wall and the device you want to measure. -- martin@ Â* | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org Â* Â* Â* | I suspect the concept of "powered trailers" will pop up more frequently. This is not an unproven concept since the mining industry has used it for years. If you use a load cell to measure the push-pull loads at the trailer hitch, the data can be used to control electric motors in the trailer wheels. If a glider trailer housed a large battery, possibly charged with a large solar panel on top and wheel motors, it could minimize the loads imposed on the towing vehicle by essentially powering itself. The wheel motors would also provide regenerative braking. The whole car-trailer combo then becomes a parallel hybrid which permits the use of a much smaller and less powerful car. The fuel savings while towing would be small compared to the fuel savings achieved by driving a small, fuel efficient yet tow capable car when not towing. The energy capacity of the trailer battery pack coupled to an inverter could also power things like power tools and polishers when parked at the airport. That sounds good, practical, even. I've seen film of power trailers behind Landrovers which seemed remarkably good at ploughing through mud in off-road tests. Do you know if there are stability problems with these rigs at highway speeds? I ask because I expect mining trailers would be somewhat slower and the film didn't show anything operating at much over 10 mph. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
contrails | No Name | Aviation Photos | 3 | June 22nd 07 01:47 PM |
Contrails | Darkwing | Piloting | 21 | March 23rd 07 05:58 PM |
Contrails | Kevin Dunlevy | Piloting | 4 | December 13th 06 08:31 PM |
Contrails | Steven P. McNicoll | Piloting | 17 | December 10th 03 10:23 PM |