On 01/27/2011 04:08 PM, Sameer Verma wrote: > Looking at this thread reminded me of clocks with weight pulleys. I > saw one recently outside UCSF hospital. > http://www.flickr.com/photos/revger/4381874187/ > The weight unwinds the pulley slowly. This is also seen on roasting > jack (For those who attended the OLPC SF dinner/bbq, the Kleiders have > this at their house)
All of these questions are easily answered with some basic physics. E = m g h will calculate how high you need to lift a mass to get a certain amount of energy. I wrote some analysis of a gravitational system in the OLPC wiki: http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Battery_and_power#Pulley_Power I'll quote it here: "The physics of such a gravitational potential energy system are easily analyzed. Assuming the figures on this page of ~6 W draw are reasonable, one would need to haul a 5 kg (11 pound) bucket to a height of 440 meters (1445 feet) feet every hour, and that's assuming perfect conversion of potential energy to electrical energy. The reality would be probably more like 25% efficient, or less, so assume a 2 km-tall tower. Not very realistic. Does the kid carry around and erect an immense derrick of that height every time they need to charge? Alternately, you wouldn't have to lift it as high if you lifted a larger mass. If you only wanted to lift it, say, 3 meters into the nearest strong tree, you could instead carry around an immense, sturdy bucket capable of holding 734 kg (1620 lb) of sand or water, fill that full of sand or water every time you stopped, rig a complex set of pulleys to give sufficient mechanical advantage so that the bucket's weight doesn't fling the child into the low stratosphere, and then haul it up those 3 meters into the tree every hour." Again, I will note that the only way to make the XO reasonably powerable by a child (or an adult) is to reduce its power consumption. -- Alan Eliasen elia...@mindspring.com http://futureboy.us/ _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list Devel@lists.laptop.org http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/devel