www.greenpowerscience.com This is a small 24v DC geared motor I attached to one of our Small Stirling Engines using plumbing fixtures for a mount. This is a NO LOAD TEST. The maximum voltage was 22v DC and the estimate was 300 mA. So this can produce about 6.5 watts with this simple setup. I am working on a more efficient process. Due to the weather, NO LOADS were tested today but I have tested some LEDs and small DC motors with good results. I will expand this test when we get better sunny days. Summers in the Sunshine State are 150 days of clouds:-)



25 Responses to “STIRLING ENGINE ELECTRIC GENERATOR SOLAR POWER FRESNEL LENS No Load Test”

  1. henrykay01 says:

    I invented a breakthrough renewable source of energy that violates the law of energy conservation. I have a proof that there are phenomena that violate the law of energy conservation. I am looking for $6M for a prototype and patents.
    H. Tomasz Grzybowski
    tel. +48-512-933-540

  2. lawsonrw says:

    in theory sure, but then you’d be converting that heat into electricity… thus your house would be cold, requiring more heat that will be converted to electricity… see the problem? The reason this works is because the heat source (focused solar) is “free.”

  3. dudley825 says:

    Ok so basically the sterling engine is a heat exchanger with pistons. Could one be used as the heat exchanger for a household furnace? You could generate electricity every time you heat your house.

  4. jimbob3514 says:

    so the motor drives the stirling and the lens keeps the rain off the motor and stirling…

  5. samiwifi3 says:

    you,v never been in gulf one day? we see this cloud one day per year , this invention is briliant and not time westing

  6. MrJetjoe says:

    you should consentrate on things that do not use things that you can not control wind sun.. there are better things that are not effected with those problems and wasted time. best of luck to you

  7. uglyengineer says:

    Awesome. First compact practical application for a Stirling I’ve seen.

  8. uglyengineer says:

    What’s the trad-off with a Stirling? You can get high power but low torque or something?

  9. GREENPOWERSCIENCE says:

    @QiuIroX Check our website for links.

  10. QiuIroX says:

    where can I buy this one ?

  11. GREENPOWERSCIENCE says:

    @creamyfilling102 with this set up, a better generator better power.

  12. creamyfilling102 says:

    that great big lense only gives you 6 watts? you should be able to pull damn near 100 watts off of something that big.

  13. rolfinator1 says:

    yeah but considered by the square meters used for the lens solar cells are way more effective

  14. shorty40merza says:

    voltage doesn’t matter power is what matters , he said 6.5 watts thats okay

  15. TheBattleWagon says:

    Sir , Have you looked in to Gingery Tech. manuals? it tells you the Right way to build any and all of this!

  16. rambbo12 says:

    can you send me plans on how you make it or what website

  17. pyhap2ev says:

    put load on it and it wound produce that much voltage.

  18. SWINGREGORY says:

    Cool

  19. pubtor says:

    wooo, cowboy music

  20. jeffmaglio says:

    awesome thanks mark tahiliani

  21. muddymuddymuddmann says:

    Nice pickin Dan,
    LOL Good video, Nice engineering on the mount.
    Muddy

  22. GREENPOWERSCIENCE says:

    The gear makes the difference. It is low amps but still neat. Saves from all the belts and pulleys.

  23. sivve95 says:

    Too genious, I tell you, too genious

  24. Cloxxki says:

    If we had a contest where we could use, say, a spacer of 2×2x2 metres in the open field, how would be use it to gather energy from nature? Sun is hardly ever, so we could place wind mills right above the solar units Wind mills have a small surface anyway. Mirrors everywhere possible to get more light into our 2×2x2 metre box and solar panels.
    Surface space is our limiter. We need stuff to put on roofs, which don’t make noise and don’t take much maintenance.

  25. luc59457 says:

    That is quite neat… I never would have expected 22v from that… I have a 12vdc generator motor I spun at around 1600rpms attached to a cordless drill and I was getting about 9vdc.

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