biotect
Designer
..
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS POST
**********************************************
4. Some More Information about Capstone Corporation
**********************************************
When it comes to power generation for a local application (for instance, a remote hotel), there is the added benefit that Capstone microturbines are relatively maintenance-free. Just one moving part. And with their “air bearings”, Capstone microturbines need no lubrication. So you can set up a bank of them, and let them run, and run, and run, with almost no maintenance required.
Take a good look at the Capstone website. To date, Capstone's most important market has been localized, small-scale and “distributed” power generation, for instance, off-grid power generation for isolated factories – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capstone_Turbine , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/prodsol/products/ , http://www.microturbine.com/prodsol/products/ , http://www.microturbine.com/prodsol/solutions/ , http://www.microturbine.com/prodsol/solutions/hev.asp , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/Product Catalog_ENGLISH_LR.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C30 Liquid Fuel_331032E_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C65 & C65 ICHPLiquid Fuels_331038F_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C200 Liquid Fuel_331049D_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C600 Liquid Fuel_331051D_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C800 Liquid Fuel_331054D_lowres.pdf , http://www.microturbine.com/_docs/CaseStudyRitzCarlton.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/company/global/ , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/company/locations.asp , and http://www.capstoneturbine.com/company/faq.asp .
And here are some videos about Capstone Corporation in general:
[video=youtube;dDF4QcwFpvo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDF4QcwFpvo&list=PL_4gcvI7N8wC_up4pejc0gGt ZjkRAmAWW [/video] [video=youtube;qCZpXjCQG3Q]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCZpXjCQG3Q [/video]
[video=youtube;WmBNtoXFX5o]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmBNtoXFX5o [/video] [video=youtube;_W_ULVQ0hkY]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_W_ULVQ0hkY [/video]
[video=youtube;wbZPphuPv1w]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbZPphuPv1w [/video] [video=youtube;P3xDZLO34xk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3xDZLO34xk [/video]
[video=youtube;hgwVLvW8PTE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgwVLvW8PTE [/video] [video=youtube;GXrsg8Dn41A]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXrsg8Dn41A [/video]
[video=youtube;J-DE1UCKD_U]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-DE1UCKD_U&list=PLhuA58w83Z-GEGy9o8F7M0wh89ixfoMMJ [/video] [video=youtube;zqNbCkFzRs8]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqNbCkFzRs8 [/video]
Also see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OalMpIKkDQ&list=PL_4Ijw0zlapXqd6U2Mofp-kOGFppng3hS , and for a great animated cutaway of a 200 KW Capstone generator, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koXgr2Q1zyM . For a huge playlist of Capstone vidoes, see https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_4gcvI7N8wC_up4pejc0gGtZjkRAmAWW .
As of this writing, Capstone has shipped more than 6500 microturbines worldwide, mainly “for powering offices, hospitals, hybrid electric buses and for any other industrial use. The 220-people company got a $48 million revenue last year, so their business model is profitable enough to sustain them” – http://www.greenoptimistic.com/2009/12/04/cmt-380-hybrid-car-capstone-microturbine/#.U-yfd3mSf6k .
And in the stationary, non-mobile markets for microturbines, Capstone is the undisputed world leader:
See http://green.autoblog.com/2009/12/0...plug-in-diesel-hybrid-supercar-uses-microtur/ and http://www.capstoneturbine.com/news/story.asp?id=536 .
In short, Capstone is no fly-by-night experimental start-up company, and it probably won't disappear tomorrow. Put another way, Capstone's microturbines are not exotic, experimental technology. If you check out some of the videos above, you will soon realize that the applications of Capstone's generators are so wide and varied, that there seems little danger of the company going under, even if microturbines do not catch on as a major automotive technology.
Sure, microturbines are a potentially “disruptive” technology in multiple industries, especially (and mostly so far) in power-generation. But even here, the technology is not exactly new either – see http://www.retailenergy.com/articles/microturbines.htm and http://www.powerhouseengineering.com/showcontent.php?nav=gt&location=learning/&pointer=d4ggtmicro .
**********************************************
5. The Possible Advantages of Microturbines
So to repeat my list of possible advantages of microturbines (perhaps this time you might be willing to read the full list??):
1. microturbines could be multi-fuel
2. they would be comparatively maintenance-free
3. they would be smaller and lighter than an ICE generator of comparable power
4. they would be low-emissions, or very "green"
5. for service and maintenance, they could be pulled out of the front of the vehicle on a tray, just like a more standard sort of electric generator
Again, the last consideration makes possible a flat-floor cab, and eliminates any need for the cab to tilt forward. Thereby making possible a fully integrated design, fully compatible with 360 degree access to the engine for maintenance.
To this list, I should now also add:
6. used in a serial hybrid solution, microturbines might make it easier to achieve optimal weight-balance in an expedition motorhome
7. they might provide greater design freedom
**********************************************
6. This Thread is about Fully Integrated Expedition Vehicle Design
Now "fully integrated motorhome design" has been a top priority for me from the very beginning of this thread. Just read the first page. Or just read the title of this thread: “fully integrated” is clearly stated, in black and white.
So perhaps fully integrated design is not a top priority for you, Aspire. That's fine: it does not have to be.
But if so, then you are participating in the wrong thread. Fully integrated motorhome design has been a top priority in this thread right from the beginning, and it will continue to be a top priority in this thread. No matter what you write against it, and no matter to what extent you, personally, think it is trivial or unimportant, from your more “practical” or “engineering” perspective. In this thread, fully integrated design is important.
Now if you want to discuss the merits of a more traditional approach, in which cab and camper are separate; in which the cab is COE, and it tilts forwards; and the camper mounts on a pivoting 3-point pivoting sub-frame, then you should read and contribute to the “Pivoting Frames and Mounting Campers” thread instead – see http://www.expeditionportal.com/forum/threads/25494-pivoting-frames-and-mounting-campers . That's the proper place for discussion of more “traditional” and “practical” chassis/camper solutions. But not this thread.
Furthermore, it's probably important to realize that just because this thread has no interest in discussing more traditional approaches, does not mean that participants in this thread are unaware of those possibilities. The participants in this thread have tended to be just as smart as you, Aspire, and they know all about the merits of more traditional chassis designs that have engine tunnels. So again, if you want to discuss the merits of a more traditional approach at length, you are simply participating in the wrong thread.
This is a design thread, and it is a thread interested in possible design innovations, especially those made possible by engineering innovations, like microturbine serial hybrid technology. If that's not your cup of tea, then you are simply participating in the wrong thread. You seem to be getting angry at the whole thread, at the very idea of such a thread, and not at anything that anyone here happens to say. So before posting further, you may want to examine your anger, and you may want to ask yourself whether you want to continue posting in a thread whose central concern -- fully integrated motorhome design -- you hold in such contempt.
**********************************************
6. Blue-Sky Automotive Design
In closing, why do care so much whether my concept vehicle is too “Sci Fi”, or not?
Have you ever been to a degree show at an Art College that teaches product and transportation design??? Have you ever seen the kinds of work that some students produce? Much of it is totally “out there”, to use Haf-E's colloquial expression. Much of it is completely unrealistic, completely unbuildable. And yet at the end of the day car companies who hire transportation design graduates do not seem to care, because they figure that engineering is the job of automotive engineers, not the designers. Put another way, the job of an automotive designer when imagining concept vehicles is to be slightly unrealistic. Slightly impractical. The automotive designer is paid to dream, paid to have his or her feet not firmly on the ground. Because only when automotive designers dream, do some truly new and unusual ideas begin to see the light of day.
For more on precisely this topic, please see post #133, at http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...pedition-RV-w-Rigid-Torsion-Free-Frame/page14 . You should read that post in full. Everything that it contains could have been addressed to you as well.
And while you're at it, you might also want to read post #94, which addresses the question, "What is Practical?", at http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...pedition-RV-w-Rigid-Torsion-Free-Frame/page10 .
Now as you said yourself, most transportation designers would never think of participating in a web-forum like this, because they really do not care whether their ideas are practical or not. I am a bit different in this regard, because I am committed to the idea that only when engineers, designers, and end-users really talk with each other, do truly wonderful new designs begin to emerge.
But "blue-sky automotive design" is not practical, feasible-right-now engineering. It never has been, and it never will be.
All best wishes,
Biotect
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS POST
**********************************************
4. Some More Information about Capstone Corporation
**********************************************
When it comes to power generation for a local application (for instance, a remote hotel), there is the added benefit that Capstone microturbines are relatively maintenance-free. Just one moving part. And with their “air bearings”, Capstone microturbines need no lubrication. So you can set up a bank of them, and let them run, and run, and run, with almost no maintenance required.
Take a good look at the Capstone website. To date, Capstone's most important market has been localized, small-scale and “distributed” power generation, for instance, off-grid power generation for isolated factories – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capstone_Turbine , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/prodsol/products/ , http://www.microturbine.com/prodsol/products/ , http://www.microturbine.com/prodsol/solutions/ , http://www.microturbine.com/prodsol/solutions/hev.asp , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/Product Catalog_ENGLISH_LR.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C30 Liquid Fuel_331032E_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C65 & C65 ICHPLiquid Fuels_331038F_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C200 Liquid Fuel_331049D_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C600 Liquid Fuel_331051D_lowres.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/_docs/datasheets/C800 Liquid Fuel_331054D_lowres.pdf , http://www.microturbine.com/_docs/CaseStudyRitzCarlton.pdf , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/company/global/ , http://www.capstoneturbine.com/company/locations.asp , and http://www.capstoneturbine.com/company/faq.asp .
And here are some videos about Capstone Corporation in general:
[video=youtube;dDF4QcwFpvo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDF4QcwFpvo&list=PL_4gcvI7N8wC_up4pejc0gGt ZjkRAmAWW [/video] [video=youtube;qCZpXjCQG3Q]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCZpXjCQG3Q [/video]
[video=youtube;WmBNtoXFX5o]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmBNtoXFX5o [/video] [video=youtube;_W_ULVQ0hkY]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_W_ULVQ0hkY [/video]
[video=youtube;wbZPphuPv1w]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wbZPphuPv1w [/video] [video=youtube;P3xDZLO34xk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3xDZLO34xk [/video]
[video=youtube;hgwVLvW8PTE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgwVLvW8PTE [/video] [video=youtube;GXrsg8Dn41A]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXrsg8Dn41A [/video]
[video=youtube;J-DE1UCKD_U]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-DE1UCKD_U&list=PLhuA58w83Z-GEGy9o8F7M0wh89ixfoMMJ [/video] [video=youtube;zqNbCkFzRs8]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zqNbCkFzRs8 [/video]
Also see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7OalMpIKkDQ&list=PL_4Ijw0zlapXqd6U2Mofp-kOGFppng3hS , and for a great animated cutaway of a 200 KW Capstone generator, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koXgr2Q1zyM . For a huge playlist of Capstone vidoes, see https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL_4gcvI7N8wC_up4pejc0gGtZjkRAmAWW .
As of this writing, Capstone has shipped more than 6500 microturbines worldwide, mainly “for powering offices, hospitals, hybrid electric buses and for any other industrial use. The 220-people company got a $48 million revenue last year, so their business model is profitable enough to sustain them” – http://www.greenoptimistic.com/2009/12/04/cmt-380-hybrid-car-capstone-microturbine/#.U-yfd3mSf6k .
And in the stationary, non-mobile markets for microturbines, Capstone is the undisputed world leader:
Capstone Turbine is the world's leading producer of clean-and-green, highly efficient and reliable microturbines. Capstone's 30-kilowatt microturbines are installed in hybrid electric buses, trolleys and transit shuttles around the world.
Hybrid buses with microturbines operate in such U.S. cities as New York, Baltimore and Charlotte, and internationally in London, Tokyo, Paris, Rome and Auckland. The microturbines reduce bus greenhouse-gas emissions and extend the range of these state-of-the-art hybrid-electrical vehicles.
"The vehicle market is not a new market for Capstone," Jamison said. "In fact hybrid-electric vehicle applications always have been part of Capstone's vision since the company was founded in 1988."
He continued, "The first microturbines Capstone designed and built were integrated into automotive applications. But like all new technologies, timing is everything and our initial hybrid design for cars was ahead of its time, so the company turned to the more mature stationary power markets. Now, more than two decades later, hybrid-electric vehicles are gaining interest in the market and people are taking another look at microturbines as electric-vehicle battery chargers and for public charging stations.”
….
“Earlier this year, a C30 liquid-fueled microturbine was successfully integrated into a Ford S-Max people carrier in the United Kingdom by Langford Performance Engineering Ltd. You can see more information about the Langford Whisper hybrid electric microturbine vehicle at http://www.capstoneturbine.com/news/story.asp?id=512.
The Capstone CMT-380 is a fun hybrid car with tremendous performance. Although it is not in Capstone's business plan to start manufacturing complete cars, the limited production CMT-380 and Langford Whisper hybrid demonstration vehicle are intended to showcase the technology and demonstrate value proposition of microturbines as electric vehicle range extenders," added Jamison. "Both Capstone and Langford have been in discussions with automotive industry companies, and these concept and demonstration vehicles help showcase the technology and generate public awareness of the benefits of microturbine technology."
See http://green.autoblog.com/2009/12/0...plug-in-diesel-hybrid-supercar-uses-microtur/ and http://www.capstoneturbine.com/news/story.asp?id=536 .
In short, Capstone is no fly-by-night experimental start-up company, and it probably won't disappear tomorrow. Put another way, Capstone's microturbines are not exotic, experimental technology. If you check out some of the videos above, you will soon realize that the applications of Capstone's generators are so wide and varied, that there seems little danger of the company going under, even if microturbines do not catch on as a major automotive technology.
Sure, microturbines are a potentially “disruptive” technology in multiple industries, especially (and mostly so far) in power-generation. But even here, the technology is not exactly new either – see http://www.retailenergy.com/articles/microturbines.htm and http://www.powerhouseengineering.com/showcontent.php?nav=gt&location=learning/&pointer=d4ggtmicro .
**********************************************
5. The Possible Advantages of Microturbines
So to repeat my list of possible advantages of microturbines (perhaps this time you might be willing to read the full list??):
1. microturbines could be multi-fuel
2. they would be comparatively maintenance-free
3. they would be smaller and lighter than an ICE generator of comparable power
4. they would be low-emissions, or very "green"
5. for service and maintenance, they could be pulled out of the front of the vehicle on a tray, just like a more standard sort of electric generator
Again, the last consideration makes possible a flat-floor cab, and eliminates any need for the cab to tilt forward. Thereby making possible a fully integrated design, fully compatible with 360 degree access to the engine for maintenance.
To this list, I should now also add:
6. used in a serial hybrid solution, microturbines might make it easier to achieve optimal weight-balance in an expedition motorhome
7. they might provide greater design freedom
**********************************************
6. This Thread is about Fully Integrated Expedition Vehicle Design
Now "fully integrated motorhome design" has been a top priority for me from the very beginning of this thread. Just read the first page. Or just read the title of this thread: “fully integrated” is clearly stated, in black and white.
So perhaps fully integrated design is not a top priority for you, Aspire. That's fine: it does not have to be.
But if so, then you are participating in the wrong thread. Fully integrated motorhome design has been a top priority in this thread right from the beginning, and it will continue to be a top priority in this thread. No matter what you write against it, and no matter to what extent you, personally, think it is trivial or unimportant, from your more “practical” or “engineering” perspective. In this thread, fully integrated design is important.
Now if you want to discuss the merits of a more traditional approach, in which cab and camper are separate; in which the cab is COE, and it tilts forwards; and the camper mounts on a pivoting 3-point pivoting sub-frame, then you should read and contribute to the “Pivoting Frames and Mounting Campers” thread instead – see http://www.expeditionportal.com/forum/threads/25494-pivoting-frames-and-mounting-campers . That's the proper place for discussion of more “traditional” and “practical” chassis/camper solutions. But not this thread.
Furthermore, it's probably important to realize that just because this thread has no interest in discussing more traditional approaches, does not mean that participants in this thread are unaware of those possibilities. The participants in this thread have tended to be just as smart as you, Aspire, and they know all about the merits of more traditional chassis designs that have engine tunnels. So again, if you want to discuss the merits of a more traditional approach at length, you are simply participating in the wrong thread.
This is a design thread, and it is a thread interested in possible design innovations, especially those made possible by engineering innovations, like microturbine serial hybrid technology. If that's not your cup of tea, then you are simply participating in the wrong thread. You seem to be getting angry at the whole thread, at the very idea of such a thread, and not at anything that anyone here happens to say. So before posting further, you may want to examine your anger, and you may want to ask yourself whether you want to continue posting in a thread whose central concern -- fully integrated motorhome design -- you hold in such contempt.
**********************************************
6. Blue-Sky Automotive Design
In closing, why do care so much whether my concept vehicle is too “Sci Fi”, or not?
Have you ever been to a degree show at an Art College that teaches product and transportation design??? Have you ever seen the kinds of work that some students produce? Much of it is totally “out there”, to use Haf-E's colloquial expression. Much of it is completely unrealistic, completely unbuildable. And yet at the end of the day car companies who hire transportation design graduates do not seem to care, because they figure that engineering is the job of automotive engineers, not the designers. Put another way, the job of an automotive designer when imagining concept vehicles is to be slightly unrealistic. Slightly impractical. The automotive designer is paid to dream, paid to have his or her feet not firmly on the ground. Because only when automotive designers dream, do some truly new and unusual ideas begin to see the light of day.
For more on precisely this topic, please see post #133, at http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...pedition-RV-w-Rigid-Torsion-Free-Frame/page14 . You should read that post in full. Everything that it contains could have been addressed to you as well.
And while you're at it, you might also want to read post #94, which addresses the question, "What is Practical?", at http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...pedition-RV-w-Rigid-Torsion-Free-Frame/page10 .
Now as you said yourself, most transportation designers would never think of participating in a web-forum like this, because they really do not care whether their ideas are practical or not. I am a bit different in this regard, because I am committed to the idea that only when engineers, designers, and end-users really talk with each other, do truly wonderful new designs begin to emerge.
But "blue-sky automotive design" is not practical, feasible-right-now engineering. It never has been, and it never will be.
All best wishes,
Biotect
Last edited: