Make a Steam Engine convert to a SOLAR STEAM ENGINE AIR HOG ELECTRICITY


PRODUCING ELECTRICITY 9:50 This video shows how basic steam engines work and offers a different concept to conventional steam engines. In future videos we may show you how to make you own Steam Engines out of regular pipe and car parts. Compressed air simulates steam which can be made with water and concentrated sunlight.

25 Responses to Make a Steam Engine convert to a SOLAR STEAM ENGINE AIR HOG ELECTRICITY

  1. fittingciobb says:

    Free energy technology exists!But the Big corporations spend millions to ensure that information does not spread to the masses,Find this technology at LT-MAGNET-MOTORdotCOM ,The revolution begins!

  2. adriasanthus says:

    Online Asian girls #lushfmlk.info#

  3. TheHeroOfSatan says:

    i can make video like this

  4. funnynabnab16 says:

    hi hi.. i want to ask, how does the turbine turn? as in, i knw the air turns the turbine, but, what causes the ir to turn the turbine? thx.

  5. ebutuou123 says:

    thanks for posts. i love your videos. where are you based?

  6. tashenaevers says:

    what kinda of engine is that? do you know the name?

  7. dickmartn says:

    Everyone always shows us an “AIR” motor and calls it a steam engine. Show us how to make a boiler that will run it for free. SOLAR, and not just a beer bottle full water that busts. Give me something I can use. Using a compressor and solenoid switche cost money…I want it FREE!

  8. smoothntallGWM says:

    So you take 120VAC wall power and at a huge loss, you use that power to compress air. Now you take that air and, again at ANOTHER huge loss you step advance a flywheel, then using that flywheel to turn (again at a loss) a generator to then run some device. Wow – if you only had some modern fancy thing called A POWER SUPPLY ! Wall power could do the work in the first place (much greener, far less Rube Goldberg losses, and much less noise) – oh well, thanks for trying anyway.

  9. buttlub says:

    its a wrist pin

  10. kamixaki says:

    what are u?? what is ur proffecion?? what did u study for?? please tell me i want to study that..and learn more about it…have u reaserched about antigravity???

  11. johneyrico says:

    @GREENPOWERSCIENCE
    wat if you used a baloon on the air motor rather than a solid plastic tube

  12. 6voltage says:

    I like it because i m Mechanical Engineer

  13. deadman12078 says:

    @dickmartn I hear you. It would be cool to see a waterwheel/windmill with a compressor with a storage tank to store the air (energy). Use the stored pressure to run a second compressor/engine to an alternator-battery-inverter.
    At least he gives us ideas and from there we can go forward and tinker. Scrap yards offer great pickings for rock bottom prices. Just need inspiration or a design to steal. :)

  14. samgm2 says:

    @smoothntallGWM

    Yep, he took a 1 hp (about 750 watts) compressor compressing air and managed to recover about 2 watts. Exactly how he defines efficiency, I don’t know. I find these videos sad.

  15. ShutTFup says:

    thanks for the vid Dan.

  16. 2DAREPUBLICAMEXICANA says:

    Dan does the air compressor move with vapor pressure? Thanks

  17. tranman978 says:

    where can i get one of those air hog engines? and how much are they?

  18. californiadude34 says:

    just a random question would it be possible to make a go cart engine out of that

  19. zombierape says:

    I love science

  20. poit187 says:

    Dan, you are an inspiration for humanity.. keep up the good work!!

  21. rosskstar says:

    @samgm2 don’t be a dolt….the idea would be to hook it up to a solar steam generator

  22. xoxoXoieoxox says:

    ur wrong not all steam engines have slide valves my b&s steam engines all have pop up valves controlled buy cam shafts (tweek much??)

  23. flashboyonly says:

    hey, but, would air compresioned will freez all the cilindrer when it pass truh in high speed????

  24. itscloudyagain says:

    cool <3

  25. 77camosoul says:

    The geometry of that bent-rod device is really interesting, I’d love measurements to replicate it in solidworks…

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