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The Pack Rat Workshop Minto Wheel Page 1 |
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The Wallace Minto wheel is a very simple device. It works simply by using the pressure generated by a liquid that has a very low boiling point. The liquid is pumped from the lower tank to the upper one and gravity does the rest. The simplest method of heating the liquid is by submersing the lowest tank and a tank of hot water. This can be supplied by solar panel extremely easily. The basic minto wheel operates at a very slow speed. This is normally less than 5 rpm and normally only 1 or 2 rpm. What the wheel can supply is alot of torque at that slow speed and so it can be geared up to a higher speed. The basic wheel as generaly built has some limitiations though due simply to the way it is constructed. Most designs tend to heat the entire lower tank of fluid and then try to pump it through a fairly small pipe to the opposite tank. In the pics along the bottom of the page you can see one of the original wheels and a "Mother Earth's News" version they built to try out the idea. (click any of the pics for larger views) |
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This is one of my first ideas to do away with the limitations I mentioned above. First instead of heating all the liquid each time this method will only heat a small amount of the liquid between the bellows and the outside of the container. This contaner will provide a large heat transfer surface to the operating liquid. This will allow me to use a much smaller amount of the liquid. Just enough to create the needed pressure and no more as what will actually be transfering back and forth will only be water. This pressure will act on the water filled bellows inside of the container to transfer the water to the opposite bellows through a pipe at least 1 inch in diameter. This should allow the operating liquid (propane, dichloromethane, freon R-12 or R-11, etc......) to condense into liquid and flash boil at a faster rate allowing a faster rotation. The right pic is a Minto type teeter-totter incorporating some of my suggested improvements. I didn't draw the tanks into the picture but the ends would dip into the hot tanks at the bottom of the cycle just as a wheel. |
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This is a modification by Stuart Brown. It solves one of the main problems with heating all the operating fluid by using a flat plate under each container to transfer the heat into and out of the fluid at a faster rate. |
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The next three are my attempts at designing one of these that would be cheap to build. They use small throwaway propane cannisters as the boiler tanks and wheel inner tubes inside pvc pipes to pump the water. The gas heats up, fills the tubes and the water is forced out the pipe to the opposite pipe. |
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Adam Hayek , one of the other members of the Yahoo Minto group had an interesting idea about using check valves and a different piping setup for a wheel design. His version uses 13 tanks and hooks them up every 5 tanks with a check valve to force the fluid in the counter clockwise direction. His design is a bit more complicated but it should be more efficient that the regular setup. If clear tubing could be used this one would be very interesting to watch while operating. |
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I used his idea and drew up my own version of it. This one is a bit simpler but I think it would work much better than the original also. Overall it works like the normal minto type wheel. I have it broken up into 2 different fluid circuits in this pic. The check valves force the fluid in one direction causing the wheel to turn in a counter clockwise direction. The third pic is a combination of Adam's piping scheme and my idea of coil type heat exchangers instead of tanks. This is one single loop like Adam's design above but only using 8 heat exchangers for drawing simplicity. |
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This equates out to about .25 hp or after driving the alternator about 15 amps at 12 volts to a battery charging system. |
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