MacRoadie said:
No, I think he's been more than accommodating and been happy to bring his toys (and make a pretty darned good effort to explain them to the less-scientifically or mathematically inclined).
All he asked was for those who are being dismissive of his hypothesis, which he has attempted to support at most opportunities with science and math, be similarly supportive of their criticisms.
"I am more than happy to provide plenty of references via inbox", and "I could probably cite more than one commercial effort that has failed or re-directed", don't quite measure up.
Is he completely full of it? Quite possibly, but he's more than willing to throw it out there for any and all to review, critique, respond to, or dismiss. Out in the open, not via a private in-box conversation.
And again, the Wikipedia dig is completely uncalled for. Plenty of real work has gone into the vast majority of his posts and I think he's bringing real contribution to the dialog.
You and I have been on here for more years than we both probably care to admit, and we've more often than not been on the same side of most arguments, but I'm gonna say that accusing a guy of "taking his toys and going home" after more than a few well-worded, and supported posts is a bit off base.
Hi MacRoadie,
Fair enough.
Perhaps I am coming from an 'already knowing' attitude.
And, I will admit that is a problem. For me, at least.
My inclination is that if someone were to pitch this technology (not the application, just the technology) in a business plan they would be laughed out of the room.
IMHO, it would be a chase down the rabbit hole to start discussing torque, rpm, brushless dc, operating voltages, duty cycles, intermittent versus continuous, Voltage/Current discharge curves, etc.
Here are a couple of truisms:
1. Higher voltage is better than lower voltage, especially for electro-mechanical purposes. Higher voltage requires more/bigger batteries. Higher voltage also allows for SMALLER components on a weight/output basis.
2. Semiconductors can operate at low voltages. Batteries for cell phones are powering semiconductor devices, not electro-mechanical devices.
Here is a useful chart:
This represents the batteries only.
Please note that whether evaluated on a power or energy density basis, lithium batteries run around 100 w/kg for a one hour duty cycle. This agrees with what GoodTimes has noted above.
It is critical, however, to respect that scaling is non-linear. In other words, you cannot expect to get a 1 watt system for 10 grams. This is particularly true on the electromechanical (i.e. motor) side.
When GoodTimes makes "conclusions" with no background in the field, and no true understanding of the complexities involved, I suppose it strikes a chord.
"
I concluded that a battery to power this would be ~ 90g. Since then, more complete and wider information about lithium ion batteries has come to light. I would revise the estimate to be more like ~ 250g (more conservative) or 125 g (more optimistic). This is based on the same technology and chemistry that is commercially available and on the marketplace, today. ..."
Here is a quote from Daimler's R&D Director that I recall very well: "This is the first electrochemical device we have ever tested that actually met its performance spec." In other words, electrochemistry is the home of modern day snake oil.
If GoodTimes were to invest about four to five more years of research into this area (i.e. after Malcom Gladwell's Outliers 10,000 hour rule of thumb), then I would likely be a lot less dismissive.
In fact, if GoodTimes could truly demonstrate this device I could probably point him towards some VC money and set him on a path to becoming the next billionaire.
Dave.