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Back in my university days, I attended a short course detailing the production of nuclear graphite. From memory, magnox graphite was made from petroleum coke. This was ground into powder, which was then bound with a glue and compressed into moulds. The green bricks were then baked at very high temperature, resulting in the particles fusing together and the glue undergoing pyrolysis. AGR graphite was produced differently. It was made from graphite that was mined in the US. This had a desirable microstructure.
Natural carbon is about 99% C12 with 1% C13. It would be desirable to seperate the C13, as this absorbs neutrons and creates C14, a long lived radioactive waste product. Concentrated C13 can be inserted into sample tubes within reactors in order to breed C14 if there is a specific use for this isotope. But bulk seperation of C13 would be desirable, as it would greatly reduce the volume and activity of waste upon reactor decommisioning.
Hopefully it isn't carrying protomolecule :-)
The object appears to contain nickel with far less iron than a sol comet. CO2, but little CO or water ice. Strange indeed. But it did form in a different environment to the solar nebula. Different is to be expected. Maybe in the future we will find comets with different isotope ratios or comets full of gold or uranium?
NASA bans Chinese nationals from working on projects.
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/ … y-programs
The Chinese intend to annex the moon as a national possesion. The free nations of the world should unite to ensure that it is not taken by the hostile flag of conquest.
Electricity offers the benefit of being easily transmissible. On the demand side, electrical machinery is also very compact and allows high power density. In factory environments, electrical machines have the advantage that changing factory layout is easy and machinery can be positioned for maximum productivity.
The disadvantages of electricity are inherent complexity in generation, transmission and use. Electrical systems are complex, not suitable for local manufacture and typically require exotic materials and programmable controls. Electric grids are also demand driven. This makes them unsuitable for energy sources that have naturally intermittent supply. Energy storage and backup power tend to be counterproductive, as both impose substantial additional capital and operational costs that makes delivered power very expensive. This problem is clearly evident in European countries that have embraced wind and solar power.
Rolling blackouts have sometimes been suggested as solutions to these problems. Unfortunately, this introduces problems of its own. Firstly, businesses dependant on electrical power lose all productivity when it is cut off. In some cases, loss of power can actually cause damage. Secondly, when power is shut off and breakers fail open, these must be manually reset. This is costly and time consuming.
A potential solution to these problems is to remove certain applications from dependance on the electric grid. Hydraulic and compressed air power systems, are somewhat more cumbersome to install than electrical systems. But they have the advantage of being simpler, similar in terms of efficiency and offering the same benefits of flexibility and power density as does electrical power. Hydraulic systems do not need exotic materials or complexity inmthe ways that electrical systems do. Most components can be made from steel, with limited use of polymers for seals and flexible couplings. This makes hydraulics more suitable for local manufacturing. It is somewhat less practical to use hydraulics to transmit power over long distances. But for local power networks it is straightforward. Power can be switched on and off by opening and closing valves.
In a small hydraulic network surrounding a mechanical windmill, intermittency is easier to manage. With only a handful of different users for the power in close proximity, it is possible to switch off certain loads quickly, by closing valves. Hydraulically powered heat pumps and air compressors can serve as dump loads that will not be active unless wind power is above certain thresholds. Swimming pool heating, heat for cooking, warm water for district heating, cooling for large underground freezers, are all systems that can be engineered with large thermal inertia through thermal mass and insulation. Other more direct mechanical applications, like a laundry and power to a machine shop, need power to be more reliable. Grinding is an application that can be switched on and off, provided that aggregate productivity is maintained across a whole year.
In this way, I can see applications for mechanical windmills providing services for a town. Intermittency is a problem that we can work around at a small scale in ways that is not practical in a large scale electric grid. Hydraulic power transmission allows flexibility and local manufacture of machines in ways that are not possible with electricity.
There are many applications for mechanical power. Historically, wind mills have been used for water pumping, grinding, sawing and polishing. But these machines could be used wherever there is need for stationary mechanical power. My thoughts return to Terraformer's topic about Redoubts, which are all about building infrastructure that is intended to make communities resiliant to failure of the grid and general breakdown of the economy and social functions. At a town level, I can see wind mills being used to do all sorts of things. A few examples.
1. Pumping water from wells, as per SpaceNut's post.
2. Operating a heat pump, providing hot water for various applications and also cold.
3. Compressing air for air tools and for vehicles. Air compression can also generate high heat for cooking and expansion can generate cold.
4. Generating mechanical power - for things like machine shops, laundries, grinding of grains, rocks for rock dust fertiliser.
With hydraulic power transmission, a single windmill could power multiple applications. Applications for generating heat can be treated as dump loads, as heat can be stored in tanks of hot water, solid thermal mass and cold can be stored in ice.
My recent experience building a mechanical windmill has led me to the realisation that this is a technology that anyone can build from very basic materials. Indeed, many individuals on the american frontier produced mechanical windmills from the 16th century onwards. By the 19th century, home built wind mills were a common addition to many homesteads, as detailed in the reference below.
https://core.ac.uk/download/17270953.pdf
In the drive to achieve decarbonisation (reduced dependance on fossil fuels) there is a strong case to be made for mechanical windmills, both for individual homes and larger units serving community and commercial interests. Such mills can provide mechanical power relatively cheaply and can be constructed from brick, stone, wood and iron, with substantial use of recycled materials.
So far, the majority of interest in wind power has been in the development of large units, with the intention of generating electrical power for the grid. However, there is a growing realisation on this board and beyond, that this strategy is not generating value for money for consumers and does not appear to be sustainable from a resource perspective. In addition to the resource requirements for electric wind turbines themselves, the need for inverters, transmission, battery storage (for frequency control) and backup, all contribute to a high cost of delivered energy and unsustainable resource commitments in infrastructure.
Direct mechanical power from wind, largely avoids these problems, as the energy capture systems are simple and no specialised materials are required.
...to be continued.
Fusion startup aims to turn mercury into gold.
https://www.sciencealert.com/us-startup … technology
*This link is not behind a paywall.*
The mercury used to do this much be isotopically seperated Hg-198, which is only 10% of natural mercury. That will add to the cost of the process. After the n,2n reaction, Hg-197 is formed. This has a halflife of 64 hours and decays into Au-197.
******
Another method for producing Au-197 would be to bombard Hg-196 with thermal neutrons in a fission reactor. However, Hg-196 is a rare isotope, representing just 0.15% of natural mercury.
https://www.buyisotope.com/hg-196-isotope.php
Even tiny planets could support ecosystems.
https://www.sciencealert.com/even-tiny- … scientists
The findings suggest that worlds 2.7% of Earth's mass could still support habitable atmospheres. That is a little over twice the mass of Luna.
I have just finished modifying the rotor. I have put a 10mm stainless thread all of the way through it. Now that I have fitted the rope drive, I no longer need the compartment within the nacelle. I have glued the thread into the holes using epoxy and bolted it both inside the compartment and out. The bearings are now bolted onto the thread on both sides using slim nuts.
Slim nuts seem to have a problem with jamming on the thread. I had to use a lot of oil to get them on. They are also vulnerable to over-torquing, as I discovered. But the rotor shouod be strong enough now to take whatever punishment mother nature throws at it. Before I put it back on the tower, I intend to add some additional blades.
This will likely be the last post I issue on this topic for a couple of months, as I am away from home for work for a while.
The rotor is safely back on the ground. I am going to begin upgrades tomorrow after work.
Maybe the US needs a new space agency. One that is run as a partnership between public and private interests. Unlike NASA, it should be devoted to human colonisation and financial profit from space, rather than just sucking the teat of taxpayer dollars for make work projects and nebulous science goals. Other nations could cooperate on joint missions. But to do so, they should accept equitable portions of upfront costs.
Lunar and asteroid mining, orbital manufacturing of power satellites, space habitats and interplanetary ships would be its bread and butter. Research will be goal oriented and will be driven by technological readiness and relevance to financial and long-term human colonisation goals. Things like food production without sunlight, fusion drives, compact fission reactors, etc. We need something that works more like the Dutch East India company than a government agency obsessed with abstract science goals. Scientific research certainly is important. But it needs to go hand in hand with other priorities.
For Calliban re Vision of Deep Space Gravitational Sensing... https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 01#p234101
I like the vision you have described on multiple levels.
It will take a long lived government to pull off a project like that. A realistic concept might be an AI powered "government" that is set up to perform just such data gathering. We already have hints of what such systems might look like, in the highly automated networks of communications satellites already in orbit, along with numerous scientific sensor networks.
the key element not currently demonstrated is self-replication. Once AI sensor collection systems become capable of replicating themselves, they should be able to expand into the entire solar system.
Update: May I tag along with your vision a bit? I would like to see every free flying object in the solar system fitted with a transponder. This will take a while, but it fits in nicely with your vision of trillions of gravity sensors.
Another application of the system you have proposed is solar system defense... A clever alien might be able to enter the system undetected in ordinary radiation, but they aren't likely to be able to avoid bending space time due to their mass, so a detection system on the scale of your vision should be able to not only detect them, but more importantly, detect the ** absence ** of signature in the electromagnetic spectrum.
(th)
I have no idea how practical the idea is. But I envisage the microprobes being mass produced by the billion. The probes would be extremely simple, with a beta voltaic generator, powered by a long lived fission product isotope like technetium-99. The beta voltaic generator would charge up a capacitor. When the capacitor reaches full charge, it releases a pulse of power generating a radio ping. It would do this maybe once every day. Two detectors seperated at different sides of the solar system could triagulate the position of the microprobe. Any change in frequency of the radio pulse would indicate that the probe is experiencing velocity change due to a gravitational field. But each detector would measure the doppler effect differently, allowing both the magnitude and direction of the acceleration to be tracked in real time. Near Earth infrared telescopes could then focus on the area, searching for the IR signature of a body.
I wonder if the probes could be printed onto sheets of polymer? They could then be cut out like stamps. Solar sails could be used to accelerate batches of the probes to solar escape. A flyby of a solar system body like Jupiter could be used to scatter the probes at different velocities.
Technetium-99 is a pure beta emitter with a half-life of 211,100 years. This sets an approximate lifetime for the probe. This isotope makes up about 6% of fission product waste, so should be an abundant material. If ejected from the solar system at 30km/s, 200 trillion km before it becomes defunct. That is 21 light years.
Recent observations of interstellar comet 3I Atlas have revealed that it has a completely different ratio of nickel:iron than solar system objects. It also contains an abundance of CO2, relatively little water ice and less CO than would be expected. This tells us that interstellar objects will have a wide variety of compositions, that will be unique to where and when they happened to form. Objects much older than the solar system will be dominated by water ice, ammonia, methane and hydrocarbons. Objects that formed close to supernovae, may have a higher abundance of heavy elements like gold, platinum or uranium. They will also come in a continuum of sizes. Some will be larger than Jupiter and will be surrounded by extensive, though dark, planetary systems. Many more will be just a few km in diameter.
We do not know which objects are more common. But we don't get to choose. We will find what we find. Finding these bodies will be extraordinarily difficult. Most will emit no visible light. The temperature of the interstellar medium is around 4K. Any body in the medium will be warmer than that. Cosmic rays and impacts will impart small but measurable heating in their crusts. And even small bodies will generate some heat through radioactive decay. So there remains the possibility of detecting infrared signatures. Cosmic rays interacting with bodies will generate secondary particles, some of which may be detectable from background flux at distance.
We could also try active scanning techniques. Trillions of tiny probes equipped with radioisotope powered radio transmitters could be released into interstellar space. These would release radio pulses at intervals. If they experience velocity change through gravitational acceleration, the frequency of the radio pulses will undergo dopler shifting. Far from any star, even small bodies would have very large radii of gravitational influence.
The reverse of this option is the downdraft chimney. For this idea, water is sprayed at the top of the tower, cooling the air, which is then denser than the air around it. The dense air sinks down the tower, flowing through a turbine at the bottom. The plus side it that you don't need a huge greenhouse to make this work. This might be a good option in places with hot climate. Potentially, seawater could be used rather than freshwater. In places that are arid, this would add moisture to the air and could therefore create rain. It would also create a layer of cool air close to the ground, which would reduce the need for air conditioning.
There are some states in the southern US that could benefit from this technology. The towers could be made from thin concrete shells, rather like cooling towers. In additional to generating power, the towers coukd be used to cool urban areas, either by venting cool air at the bottom of the tower creating a dense, ground hugging layer, or by piping cool air to specific buildings.
Individual houses could be cooled using small downdraft towers. This could replace other types of air conditioning and could be entirely solar powered. Alternatively, multiple houses could be clustered around a single downdraft tower, with each supplied with air via buried ducts. A well designed system could provide cool air without any expenditure of power.
saddened to hear your hard work has broken due to mother nature...
It is a setback, but not a disaster. This afternoon I will put scaffolding up around the tower and bring the rotor down. Now that the rotor is able to transmit power via the rope drive, I no longer need the compartment in the nacelle. So I intend to run a threaded rod all the way through it. I also intend to bolt the bearings onto the rod, as epoxy resin isn't strong enough. I am considering adding some additional blades to the rotor in order to increase the torque. But I am away for work for quite a while now, so that may need to wait until around Christmas time.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/eng … 00095.html
The article at the link above is about design and testing of a cooling system for microreactors using electric heaters to simulate a reactor.
(th)
The article concerns microreactors, generating around 100kW of heat. These reactors would be useful on Mars and have the benefit of a high level of passive safety, due to their small size and ability to lose heat radiatively.
But they have other problems. High neutron leakage from small cores tends to drive the need for higher enrichment. Such reactors require more fissile material per kW of power generated, which is undesirable from an economic standpoint. Finally, there is no hope of reactors this small becoming a large scale solution under present regulatory arrangements. The burden of management imposed by organisations like the NRC and ONR would make it very difficult for powerplants smaller than several hundred MW to remain in business.
Of course, the consequences of a nuclear accident scale with power output. A 1000MW reactor presumably carries 1000x the fission product inventory of a 1MW reactor. So an accident in a smaller plant will not have the same societal effects. It may be possible to simplify regulatory arrangements on the basis of this and the high level of passive safety inherent to such a plant.
The title is bogus, as it doesn't really reflect the content. It isn't clear how much mass loss the metallic tile suffered. The orange oxidation was highly visible, but could be a micron thick. Part of the problem likely stems from the use of water as the coolant. This would dissociate into H3O, OH and O when exposed to reentry plasma at temperatures exceeding 3000K. The oxygenated species will then attack the steel. Ammonia may be a better option for coolant. It has a greater heat of evaporation and will dissociate into N2, H2 and H. The free hydrogen will tend to mop up oxygen radicals and ions that would otherwise attack the heat shield. Methane may work even better and there is a ready supply of it in the propellant tanks.
Last night we had a storm that damaged the windmill. It actually ripped one of the spindles out of the nacelle. Of the many ways that this machine could fail, this was one that I never expected. I need to bring the rotor down to repair it. That means putting scaffold back up. Doh!
Tiles would appear to fail the design intent of a reusable heat shield. They are brittle, prone to cracking and suffer substantial abrasion every time they are used. Extensive refurbishment between flights would appear to be inevitable for any radiative or ablative heat shield. If Starship goes down the route of a tile based heat shield, it will be repeating one of the major design problems that ruined the economics of the shuttle.
Metal heat shields with transpirational cooling would appear to be the only option for meeting the design intent of a rapidly reusable craft. This will be very difficult to do, as each of the pores in the heat shield must eject coolant at the correct rate to cool the metal in its vicinity. Unexpected changes in atmospheric density could undermine it. The plumbing within such a shield is going to be complex and heavy. But if transpirational cooling isn't possible / practical, then a reusable Starship isn't practical. There isn't any other technology capable of meeting the design intent.
Producing a reusable heat shield, that can stand up to pressures of several bar, whilst exposed to plasma with temperature up to 10,000K, and do it repeatedly without heavy refurbishment, has got to be one of the most difficult problems in modern engineering.
For Calliban re rope fusion join ... https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 47#p234047
Congratulations on making that work!
I noticed the rope looked as though it might have plastic material... That should handle moisture well. However, I didn't think of heat binding and appreciate your telling us of your success with that method.
If you'll indulge a further inquiry ... are you planning to put rollers where the rope appears to rub against the platform at the top of the tower, under the mill?
(th)
I had bought some rollers from Temu. However, when I fitted them to the table where the rope is seen to rub, they produced a lot of noise and friction in operation. Oil and grease didn't seem to help, so I removed them. This evening, I installed some brass rollers from an old set of windows that my father had dismantled. These are about 100 years old, but work better than the Chinese imports made in 2025.
I also took your advice and added an idler wheel, as the rope was too loose to grip the pulley under a strong wind. Tomorrow the forecast for my location shows a 20mph westerly wind. This shoukd be sufficient to power the windmill even with the trees attenuating the wind. Once the trees are gone, the wind should be sufficient to drive the machine most days. I could add another set of blades to the rotor to increase the torque generated in a given wind. But I would rather not, as weight is already significant and adding blades is a lot of work.
For Calliban re completed machine! https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 41#p234041
Congratulations on carrying this project from start to finish, and for sharing your vision and progress with this community, and with the larger readership of the forum we cannot measure but hope exists.
A detail that might of of interest to those who work a bit with rope, is how you achieved the splice to pass smoothly over the pulleys. The traditional method of intertwined lines takes some time, but the long splice can pass through a pulley.
Here is a YouTube video Google found, showing the construction of a long splice. Mark the braider shows how to use a special tool designed for the purpose. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QA5NW6SQOk
The video is for our readers, of course, with the thought you might have done something similar.
(th)
The rope I used was 6mm polypropylene. I joined the two ends by melting them together and then compressing the joint with pliers to get it the same diameter as the rope. I kept melting and compressing until I was satisfied that the two ends were fully bonded. The result looks a bit messy, but is strong enough for what I need and doesn't seem to have problems with the pulley.
Polypropylene is strong and cheap; I was able to buy 30m for just a few $ on amazon. The only problem is that it has low surface energy and cannot be glued. It is also difficult to tie to itself. But it melts at 120°C which is achievable with a lighter.
The completed machine with rope drive attached.
I have attached the rope drive to both pulleys. The machine is now fully finished. I will put some additional pictures on tomorrow. Unfortunately, adding the rope has added a lot of friction to the device. I don't think it will work that well until the trees are gone.
I don't want to contaminate your purity of essence, but if wind is you motor on occasion, could it be possible to have a parallel source of motor from an electric grid? Off peak power perhaps?
So with the wind you have to work when the wind blows, but with off peak power, you have your choices do, or don't' do.
I am not talking about your Hobbie project which is wonderful, rather, supposing Humanoid Robots become actually useful, then one could do some work around the homestead, but at times work with the wind or with off peak power, if that is available at a reasonable price. This of course would be a different installation.
A robot could work at night, where most humans would not. Wind may blow at night.
Ending Pending
I'm sure that it is possible to use the grid for backup power. But that requires that the turbine generate electricity and that there is some means of switching between the turbine and the grid for power. My project uses the wind to generate direct mechanical power without electricity. This is much simpler to do and I was able to make all of the equipment from simple and mostly recycled materials in my home workshop. Purely mechanical systems are things that most people can build for themselves, using low embodied energy materials.
The machine is now finished!
The final step is to instal the rope drive for the clutch. That is a couple of hours work, which I will save for tomorrow. The rotor seems to be turning OK in the wind. It won't be up to full power until the trees blocking the westerly winds are removed. These are conifers and have become diseased. I will be cutting them down over the next few months.
In the mean time, I will be making tools that can be driven by the cone clutch. The stone tumbler will be the first, as I intend to use this as a dump load that is connected whenever the machine is not powering other tools.