geekoftheweek
- Joined Oct 6, 2013
- 1,429
I have a pair of them in my 2004 GMC truck. I never realized just how used to power everything I have become.
I have a pair of them in my 2004 GMC truck. I never realized just how used to power everything I have become.
That elementary class, 1 2 3; that's not six they're showing, it's actually seven. Count the number of lines. Even I can handle that kind of math.
Would you say this is a better idea?"Discount Morgan Freeman"
Speedbump freakin' roadways
Better, no. Doomed to practicality and physics (obviously as the video was 5 years ago) for no more than trivial amounts of power for the cost.Would you say this is a better idea?
That was my thought exactly. And then again, no vehicle is aerodynamically perfect and always leaves turbulence in its wake. I just wonder if there's a way to recover some of the energy wasted on that.Each turbine represents a resistance in the circuit that will pull extra power from the passing vehicle if it's closely coupled to the slipstream.
The problem with recovering power from turbulence here is of course entropy. There is a large random component being converted to hard to recover heat as opposed to laminar flow. Losses in a turbulent flow are much higher than in a laminar flow.That was my thought exactly. And then again, no vehicle is aerodynamically perfect and always leaves turbulence in its wake. I just wonder if there's a way to recover some of the energy wasted on that.
But, then again, even if there were a way to recover some of the lost energy, said energy would be better spent on the vehicle itself than on the street anyway.
So we'll always be back to square one, I guess.
Sure, It's not a closed system, it takes a massive, billions of years old, fusion reactor to keep it running at tiny power levels.Look up the Atmos Clock. As close to a "free lunch" as you can get. It gets energy to store in its mainspring from changes in atmospheric pressure and temperature. A 1°C change in temperature will power it for 4.3 days (turn off the high precision digital HVAC thermostat). It can go for years without being touched. Swiss clockmaking at its best eliminating entropy. But you pay very dearly for what you get...

And of course you recall having to occasionally pedal it halfway through an intersection to shut those butterflies and get a swipe.My old 64 Rambler Ambassador 4 door with a 327 had Trico vacuum operated wipers. That party tank could move. I gave it to a buddy when I left the service.
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Sound. There's noise just about everywhere. Out in rural areas there's less demand for energy and there's less noise. So sound would work better in the noisy environment. Not saying it would be practical, just responding to your ponderings.I just wonder if there's a way to recover some of the energy wasted on that.
Re: Roofing job mix up.Do the right thing.
Exactly. That's why I don't understand other companies that just try to screw you over when they make obvious mistakes like demolition of the wrong house.Re: Roofing job mix up.
The company did the right thing. What was the cost to the company? Let's guess $15K.
The company reaped a bonanza in great advertisement, free publicity, extra goodwill, and new business.
What a bastard, 42 months is too short for stealing people's lives and hopes.Tacoma –A 44-year-old former bank manager from Battle Ground, Washington, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Tacoma to 42 months in prison for Bank Fraud and Aggravated Identify Theft, announced U.S. Attorney Tessa M. Gorman. Brian Davie, a former branch manager at Wells Fargo, used unauthorized cash withdrawals, money transfers, and cashier’s checks to steal over $1 million. Davie targeted elderly and vulnerable customers. Eight victims have been identified. One woman had more than $566,000 stolen from her retirement accounts.
At today’s sentencing hearing U.S. District Judge Benjamin H. Settle said, “The wake of damage in this case is large. It involved multiple victims over some time... Our society depends on the trust of those who hold our finances.”
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Davie continued undetected because he stole from elderly customers who might be less likely to closely monitor their account balances. Some of Davie’s victims had dementia or had limited English skills and did not understand banking transactions. In at least one case, Davie failed to file the paperwork to install a victim’s relative as a co-signer on the victim’s accounts. That failure prevented the relative from being able to monitor the account and detect the fraudulent transactions.