Like the illusion of Wall Street, with its vast and powerful investment banks, now shuttered, China too is an illusion perpetuated by the Globalists that gave us the 15,000 mile Caesar salad, poisoned cat food and lead based paint on babies' pacifiers. Like the illusion that money would come from thin air to always push housing prices higher, China has spent a generation pursuing its illusion. Pursuing an unattainable dream to be like the West, while 6000 years of its carefully shepherded top soil blows into the sea.
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 7:57 pm Post subject: Hand Cranked water heater?
I am trying to find some place where you can buy a hand cranked water heater and a hand cranked coffee pot. I must not be using the correct search term, but what I am looking for is something sort of like those battery powered radios / lights that you can run off battery power or you can just turn the crank.
Have any of you seen anything like what I am talking about?
I am also looking for any and all hand cranked chargers. Mostly when I search google, all I find are flash lights or documents that talk about them, but never link to one I can buy.
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 9:04 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
Never heard of a hand cranked water heater and I cannot imagine that it works. (I guess you mean that one for the shower). We had an electric water heater and it used up HALF of our electricity use, I really cannot imagine that you crank this with your hands, even not for a tea kettle.
Far more realistic I think is connecting a bicycle to a battery, and this is hard enough, but these constructions exixts.
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 9:53 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
I used a Hudsen Sprayer and a large bucket to take a shower before. You pour a kettle of warm water into the sprayer and then give it a few pumps to create pressure. The one I used held about 2 gallons. It's enough for a basic military shower.
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 10:09 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
Those had cranked lights and radios use about ONE watt of power. The coffee maker uses 600-1000, the water heater about 6000 watts. You'd need a long lever to get those 6000 people all cranking at once....
Joined: Feb 18, 2006 Posts: 374 Location: Minnesota, U.S.A.
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 10:24 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
This might actually be doable with a heat pump of some kind.
The smallest air conditioner (heat pump) that General Electric makes requires 520 watts of input to operate. Too bad your body can only sustain about 100 watts of output through a stationary bicycle.
Does anybody make a heat pump that a dude could operate by lashing it to a stationary bike?
Maybe one of those little wine chests would have a compressor small enough. _________________ "He who makes no mistakes isn't trying hard enough" Genghis Khan
"Everyone here is bribed not to kill each other." foodnotlawns
Coinflation.com
Posted: Sun Aug 24, 2008 11:49 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
There are other ways to heat water without using natural gas or electricity. If you have good sun in your area you can build or buy a solar water heater. They work really well, and can be as simple as a black garbage bag full of water set out in the sun (or one of these camping showers) or as complex as a 40 (or more) gallon setup that is integrated into the existing plumbing in your house. Or barring all that, just build a fire. Safely, of course. Once you've got hot water figured out, all you need for coffee is a good french press and you're set. Although if we're in a situation where both NG and electricity are scarce and very expensive, getting the coffee in the first place might be a larger issue...
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 1:00 am Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
depends were you're living, our solar water heater is a thermosiphon system and is very good for all climates at least as warm as the Mediterranean. As far as I know they can't deal with frost. We don't use the electric booster.
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 8:04 am Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
i used to think about this when i did a lot of bicycling in the hills around Woodside & Portola Valley, what some people call the "Santa Cruz Mountains".
weighing 150 pounds with 25 pounds of bicycles & gear, i was generating 175 ft-lbf/ second, if i was climbing at a rate of 1 foot per second. if i could bear not to stop & look at the view on Highway 35 (looking West through the redwoods towards the ocean), i would keep going to the high point on that particular route (looking East through the redwoods).
for 45 minutes. i think it came out to a 1/4 horsepower, my maximum output.
(disclaimer - it's been a while. it's possible i'm mixing up ft-lbf/ second, a power measure, and watts, and horsepower units.)
i would need a shower from that hand-cranked water heater, but any cold water would be welcome at that point.
short version, what people have already said - it takes a huge amount of human energy output to create enough energy to heat water.
another example - a pool with 12 lanes, 3 people in each lane, each swimming their approximate maximum for one hour.
most of that energy goes into the water of the pool. it's about 100,000 gallons, admittedly, but it doesn't get any warmer. starts at 83 F, finishes at 83 F. of course there is a layer of concrete & then the earth, so the pool water loses some heat through conduction that way (the earth sits at about 55 degrees F in most places, a few feet down.)
bottom line - it's possible. you could set up something where you crank for 3 hours and heat up 1 gallon of water. it would be more efficient to do it naked, otherwise you'll have to wash your clothes & their will be an energy loss there. plus, unless you're somewhere really cold, after an hour most people would be drenched in sweat & say, "the heck with it", and just pour the lukewarm water over themselves.
it's a good example though. if you do the calculations for any significant exercise, converting into watt-hours, counting the calories burned, etc., it becomes obvious what an incredible windfall fossil fuels are, energy wise. _________________ http://www.LASIK-Flap.com/ ~ Health Warning about LASIK Eye Surgery
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 9:55 am Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
heat your water with wood, coal, other biomass, or solar.
replacing "hand cranked" with "bike cranked" was good advice.
like pedalling said, you could generate power on your bike cranked mill for an hour and then take a cold shower .
every power requirement has variable solutions. Your location and personal needs are likely unique.
The most important part of "Planning for the Future" is understanding your energy needs and the energy sources available (human, animal, wood, coal, wind, geothermal, solar, hydro). Then using this energy toolbox to create a system to meet your needs post-peak.
For most people this is a personal project for their residence.
For the community leaders it extends to building resilience into their community as a whole. Some people, like Matt Simmons and Boone Pickens are experienced enough with energy systems to affect an entire region. _________________ "The future power is manpower"
An easier solution may be a sauce pot and a campfire _________________ If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face--for ever."
-George Orwell, 1984
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 11:27 am Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
I have heard of people developing coffee pots that work off a regular 9 volt battery. How long would it take to hand crank enough power to re-charge a 9 volt battery?
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 5:38 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
1000 watts of power is equivalent to 14.43 kcal/min. If your coffee pot is 1 liter in size, it will raise water from room temp to boiling in about 7 minutes with 1000 watts of heat being delivered to the water.
A 9 volt batter will supply 9 volts with at total rating typically of 300-400 milliamphours of energy. IOW, it will supply 9 volts at 400 milliamps for one hour before dying (simplified). That's a total of 3.6 watt hours. According to my calculations that's enough energy to raise the temperature of the water by 5.03 degrees C, not really enough to make good coffee.
You can't heat water with human powered electric, it just takes too much energy (and you can't heat water with a 9 volt battery either).
I have a wood fueled water heater, sure is a lot easier to cut and split wood to fire it than it is to crank a bike for days...
Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2008 7:34 pm Post subject: Re: Hand Cranked water heater?
bobaloo wrote:
A 9 volt batter will supply 9 volts with at total rating typically of 300-400 milliamphours of energy. IOW, it will supply 9 volts at 400 milliamps for one hour before dying (simplified). That's a total of 3.6 watt hours. According to my calculations that's enough energy to raise the temperature of the water by 5.03 degrees C, not really enough to make good coffee.
Hmmm. I get 3 degrees C or 5.5 degrees F.
The ideal temperature for making coffee is reportedly about 200 F. If you figure the water starting at 50 degrees F that's a rise of 150 degrees F or 83 degrees C. So you would be able to make 37cc (about 1 ounce) of coffee with each 9v battery. _________________ "We were standing on the edges
Of a thousand burning bridges
Sifting through the ashes every day
What we thought would never end
Now is nothing more than a memory
The way things were before
I lost my way" - OCMS
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum