Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?

2008-03-06 Thread thomas malloy
I corresponded with an inventor who had a patent on an engine design 
that sounded similar to this.


R C Macaulay wrote:

Interesting thinking Jones. A proposed valveless, pistonless 
engine/motor concept is being studied whereas the engine is ring 
shaped and drives a cluster of embedded cavity discs positioned with 
the ring. The design approach


Jones  wrote,


The following suggestion, or a version of it, will be


implemented by some perceptive auto manufacturer in
the coming years.






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Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?

2008-03-06 Thread R C Macaulay


Howdy Thomas,
There is a far step from an inventor and an engineer- design team. Mention 
the word inventor and we run. Mention the inventors' work is patented and 
we duck our head waiting for the noise sure to follow.
All engine designs that perform useful work are similar. The difference 
between them are people. Some engines like Cummins diesel have what it 
takes, Detroit diesel don't have it.  It will take  some real work to get 
Cummins to change.


THe Wankel rotary is an example of designers that love to play smartypants. 
They finally got a perfectly useless engine to work.
Down the road aways comes the battery operated jalopy made of bicycle 
components... try applying this technology to high speed diesel motor trucks 
and discover why we need new motor fuels that fuel 500-800 HP truck engines 
and Cat dozers. Hoss power is horse manure.. torque is what a mule's got in 
his rear. This world needs a whole new stable of advanced radical engine 
designs for work engines just like we need energy efficent autos.

Richard


I corresponded with an inventor who had a patent on an engine design that 
sounded similar to this.


R C Macaulay wrote:

Interesting thinking Jones. A proposed valveless, pistonless engine/motor 
concept is being studied whereas the engine is ring shaped and drives a 
cluster of embedded cavity discs positioned with the ring. The design 
approach


Jones  wrote,


The following suggestion, or a version of it, will be


implemented by some perceptive auto manufacturer in
the coming years.




Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?

2008-03-05 Thread Mike Carrell
I don't know if you guys have ever seriously encountered the realities of 
mass production and the mind-set that it *imposes*. For years I was involved 
in mechanization-robotics projects at RCA, principally with the manufacture 
of TV picture tubes. This a complex chemical/mechanical process that at 
first appearance is nearly impossible, but they are made by the million. The 
guys that manage the factory are not stupid and are in daily hand-to-hand 
combat with Mother Nature. If the yield at final inspection falls below 95%, 
the entire enterprise is just an elaborate way to lose money.


I visited two plants in different parts of the country. A particular 
processing step was done differently in each plant, and the management, 
while aware of the alternative, swore that their way was best. Any novelty 
may reduce yield in unforeseen ways.


The Wankle engine has many appealing virtues, but I understand the seals are 
a potential problem, requiring engine teardowns at 50,000 miles. Mazda used 
it in a sports car, and Yamaha in some motorcycles. People have been 
inventing clever IC engine configurations for many years and complaining 
about stupid management all the time. The ability to manufacture 
economically in quantity is a formidable requirement.


There are others -- microelectronics, LCD/plasma displays, VCR recorders --  
which required years to evolved the manufacturing techniques to become 
reliable and economical.


It is all too easy for clueless theoreticians and developers to dismiss the 
skills of manufacturing engineering. I have lived in both worlds and 
acquired deep respect for the latter.


Mike Carrell
- Original Message - 
From: R C Macaulay [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 8:39 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?


Interesting thinking Jones. A proposed valveless, pistonless engine/motor 
concept is being studied whereas the engine is ring shaped and drives a 
cluster of embedded cavity discs positioned with the ring. The design 
approach is to build a planetary transmission with an engine inside . 
The transmission functions both for mechanical drive output assisted by 
the huge torque output with the  large diameter ring primary mover and 
also output electric power from the electric generating features.


Designers have been stuck in the 18th century steam engine rut too long. 
Their approach has been to build an engine and connect it to a 
transmission. Radical new thinking suggests that we should be building a 
transmission and fit an engine/electric generator inside. This thinking 
would allow for the engine exhaust to serve a secondary turbine scavenging 
purpose. The unit assembly shape could  be an inclined pancake shaped 
configuration and ... not use gears but slip discs within the planetary 
reduction system.


These radical new engine/motor concepts fit the theme of your post. New 
engines must be designed for new fuels and not attempt to make new fuels 
fit present engine technology.

Richard

Jones  wrote,

The following suggestion, or a version of it, will be

implemented by some perceptive auto manufacturer in
the coming years.



This Email has been scanned for all viruses by Medford Leas I.T. 
Department. 




RE: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?

2008-03-05 Thread Lawrence de Bivort
Mike, many thanks for this first-hand account of the practical environments
in which manufacturing takes place. One of my 'hats' is that of an
organizational performance specialist and I can say that your description
rings absolutely true. 

When embedded in complex systems, especially ones that have severe cost
constraints, the product of even the brightest brains can look pretty dumb
to those at one or two removes.

My sense is that everyone does the best they can -- all the time. It is
perhaps the greatest tragedy of mankind that we can see better ways of doing
things, but are stopped from pursuing them by the tired 'realities' of
money, competing priorities, and disagreements among ourselves.

Cheers,

Lawrence



-Original Message-
From: Mike Carrell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 9:27 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?

I don't know if you guys have ever seriously encountered the realities of 
mass production and the mind-set that it *imposes*. For years I was involved

in mechanization-robotics projects at RCA, principally with the manufacture 
of TV picture tubes. This a complex chemical/mechanical process that at 
first appearance is nearly impossible, but they are made by the million. The

guys that manage the factory are not stupid and are in daily hand-to-hand 
combat with Mother Nature. If the yield at final inspection falls below 95%,

the entire enterprise is just an elaborate way to lose money.

I visited two plants in different parts of the country. A particular 
processing step was done differently in each plant, and the management, 
while aware of the alternative, swore that their way was best. Any novelty 
may reduce yield in unforeseen ways.

The Wankle engine has many appealing virtues, but I understand the seals are

a potential problem, requiring engine teardowns at 50,000 miles. Mazda used 
it in a sports car, and Yamaha in some motorcycles. People have been 
inventing clever IC engine configurations for many years and complaining 
about stupid management all the time. The ability to manufacture 
economically in quantity is a formidable requirement.

There are others -- microelectronics, LCD/plasma displays, VCR recorders --

which required years to evolved the manufacturing techniques to become 
reliable and economical.

It is all too easy for clueless theoreticians and developers to dismiss the 
skills of manufacturing engineering. I have lived in both worlds and 
acquired deep respect for the latter.

Mike Carrell
- Original Message - 
From: R C Macaulay [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2008 8:39 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?


 Interesting thinking Jones. A proposed valveless, pistonless engine/motor 
 concept is being studied whereas the engine is ring shaped and drives a 
 cluster of embedded cavity discs positioned with the ring. The design 
 approach is to build a planetary transmission with an engine inside . 
 The transmission functions both for mechanical drive output assisted by 
 the huge torque output with the  large diameter ring primary mover and 
 also output electric power from the electric generating features.

 Designers have been stuck in the 18th century steam engine rut too long. 
 Their approach has been to build an engine and connect it to a 
 transmission. Radical new thinking suggests that we should be building a 
 transmission and fit an engine/electric generator inside. This thinking 
 would allow for the engine exhaust to serve a secondary turbine scavenging

 purpose. The unit assembly shape could  be an inclined pancake shaped 
 configuration and ... not use gears but slip discs within the planetary 
 reduction system.

 These radical new engine/motor concepts fit the theme of your post. New 
 engines must be designed for new fuels and not attempt to make new fuels

 fit present engine technology.
 Richard

 Jones  wrote,
The following suggestion, or a version of it, will be
 implemented by some perceptive auto manufacturer in
 the coming years.


 
 This Email has been scanned for all viruses by Medford Leas I.T. 
 Department. 




Re: [Vo]:Tooo obvious for Detroit?

2008-03-04 Thread R C Macaulay
Interesting thinking Jones. A proposed valveless, pistonless engine/motor 
concept is being studied whereas the engine is ring shaped and drives a 
cluster of embedded cavity discs positioned with the ring. The design 
approach is to build a planetary transmission with an engine inside . The 
transmission functions both for mechanical drive output assisted by the huge 
torque output with the  large diameter ring primary mover and also output 
electric power from the electric generating features.


Designers have been stuck in the 18th century steam engine rut too long. 
Their approach has been to build an engine and connect it to a transmission. 
Radical new thinking suggests that we should be building a transmission and 
fit an engine/electric generator inside. This thinking would allow for the 
engine exhaust to serve a secondary turbine scavenging purpose. The unit 
assembly shape could  be an inclined pancake shaped configuration and ... 
not use gears but slip discs within the planetary reduction system.


These radical new engine/motor concepts fit the theme of your post. New 
engines must be designed for new fuels and not attempt to make new fuels 
fit present engine technology.

Richard

Jones  wrote,

The following suggestion, or a version of it, will be

implemented by some perceptive auto manufacturer in
the coming years.