Seebeck Effect Powered Fan

heat fan

Why not get more work out of your wood stove? this device uses the Seebeck Effect to run a fan that will move air from your stove to other parts of your room. Its a clever idea alright, it’s pretty much the same thing that powers space craft except your not using burning wood as your heat source – your using the natural decay of nuclear materials.
As I encourage everyone to play with science whenever possable, I’ll tell you how you can make your own Seebeck Effect electrical generator.
You’ll need the following:

      A steel nail – 4″ long will do
      Some copper wire – stranded about the diameter of a coathanger
      A candle – nice sized on a sturdy base
      A volt meter of some sort – you could use a small motor if you wanted but you might not see any movement on your first try
      Something to hold the nail with, it’s going to get hot.

Strip the insulator from the copper wire and wrap some around the nail.
Around a four inch nail I’d wrap about six inches of wire in a space of apx. one inch.
Connect the leads of the meter to the nail and the wire and hold the wrapped part of the nail in the flame of the candle.
You should see a small voltage show up on your meter. Pretty cool, eh?

Yes, you can build bigger ones out of better materials but at some point you end up melting your experiment. I suppose if you had some good thermocouples (thats what the bimetal junctions are called) and some very low voltage LEDs you could build a sundial that you could read from inside your house. Leave a comment if I lost you anywhere.
Anyway, the bimetal strips in the little fan are doing the same thing as the wire and nail, just that they are built of metals that have a better energy coefficient. A pretty good use of science if you ask me.

Ecofan Woodstove Fan

science, thermal, clever, neat

Self Hheating Can Hacking…

Pyro cup

I saw a whole stack of these at the grocery store a few weeks ago and the first thing through my mind wasn’t “Hum, I wonder if the coffee tastes good?”. Hell no! It was “Oh yeah! Self heating cans! I have to buy a few and take them apart!” Well my lack of money got the better of me and I put the idea of exploring new tech away for a while. I figured it was an exothermic reaction of something coming in contact with water. I used to play with that when I was a kid. I have a bit of fun my heating cupric sulfate over a flame until it turned from blue to white. Once it was cooled if you added water to it you would get quite a bit of steam and some nice ‘SSSS’ sounds to boot! What fun. Well, I lived in the sticks what else was I going to do? (Someone ask me about ‘ Pink Fizzing Smoke’, now that was fun! 🙂 )
I know you get the same thing from one of the heaters in an MRE, but that uses iron powder to do the same thing. I think the by product of that is hydrogen though. Not what you want being generated in your car on the way to work. (“Mmm, that coffee sure smells good [FWHUMP!!!] AIEEE!!!” Yeah, that would be PR nightmare wouldn’t it?)
These use calcium oxide and water to make heat, I don’t think there is any gas created by this reaction. Any chemists out there care to comment?
MAKE has a great pictorial on how the new Wolfgang Puck self heating coffee cans. Go buy a few before they are all recalled because of an idiot who can’t read the directions.

Wolfgang Puck self heating can hacking…

science, chemistry, neat, clever

FirefoxfoxIE

FirefoxIE

This is… wrong? I don’t know, I’ll have to check this out. I hope someone didn’t write an extension that will auto install porn popups and tracking software just to make the experience all that more like the real IE.

For those who want to keep all of the convenience of the Internet Explorer browser plus gain all the security of the Firefox browser and more, there is an alternative.

Firefox Browser – FirefoxfoxIE – IE look and feel for Firefox

firefox, internet explorer, evil, clever

Home Hydrogen Fueled Rocket

rocket

I think I might have mentioned this a while ago but it’s cool enough that I can do it again.

Hydrogen Fuel Rocket
Now you can generate the fuel of the future and launch a rocket into orbit! The Estes hydrogen fuel technology uses water to generate the hydrogen fuel needed to blast a sleek rocket 200 feet into the sky. This set comes complete with a hydrogen fuel generating launch system, a four-point system check, a remote push-button ignition, propellant crystals, mixing bottle and two ready to fly rockets. Minor assembly acquired. Requires 6 D-size alkaline batteries – sold separately. Recommended for ages 10 and up with adult supervision for those under 12.

  • Length: Launch Platform: 20.5 in. (52 cm); Helicopter Rocket: 11 in. (28 cm); Bounce Rocket: 11 in. (28 cm)
  • Recovery: Helicopter and bounce
  • Fins: Plastic and foam
  • Maximum Altitude: 200 ft. (61 M)
  • Notes: Requires 6 D-size alkaline batteries – not included

Estes Hydrogen Fuel Rocket

rockets, hobby, hydrogen, aerospace, kids

Space Ring Could Shade Earth and Stop Global Warming

Ringed Earth

This plan reminds me of a book by Piers Anthony called “Rings of Ice”. Things didn’t work out all that well, the Earth ended up getting flooded with all the comet ice that was used to build the rings.
The idea in sounds too close to the ice ring idea to me. Putting lots of little hunks of stuff in orbit to me sounds like a big mistake. Wouldn’t the rings be right where all of our telecom satellites are at right now? Plus as it might light up the night time sky as much as a full moon, wouldn’t that have an effect on the animals (and us!) that live here?
As long as we’re taking about potential bad things to do to our home world, what about building shadow squares? At least those would be farther away from the Earth and thus out of the way of most things we put in to orbit. We might figure out a way to turn them off or somthing if they end up working a little too well…
Now, if someone wants to build a sun screen to put over Phoenix I’d be all over that. It’s &%#% hot here!

Space Ring Could Shade Earth and Stop Global Warming

space, crazy, science, mad, evil