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Hybrid with a super flywheel and a supervariator

 

Hybrid with a super flywheel and a supervariatorHybrid cars are becoming increasingly popular all over the world. This is caused not only by their fuel efficiency, but also by environmental requirements, which are constantly being tightened, and hybrid cars reduce emissions of unburned hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides into the atmosphere by 85%.

Most hybrids currently have two engines. This is an internal combustion engine (hereinafter ICE) and an electric motor. An electric motor, as a rule, has less power than an internal combustion engine, but all the same, heavy batteries or fuel cells are needed for its operation. They take up a lot of space in the car and increase its weight.

For example, Toyota Prius II, which is considered one of the best hybrids, has an engine of 75 l / s, an electric motor of 67 l / s, fuel consumption in the city of 4.3 l / 100km, and an overall efficiency of 37%. Mileage only on batteries - 10 km. Battery weight 50 kg.

However, it is possible to make hybrids with a fuel consumption of 1l / 100km, 97% efficiency and a tenfold reduction in exhaust toxicity!

This possibility consists in the use of a super-flywheel and a supervariator instead of batteries and an electric motor. A super flywheel differs from a conventional flywheel in that it is not monolithic, but twisted from a tape or thread. In this way, its energy intensity is increased and the danger of rupture is practically eliminated.

Super-flywheels are kinetic energy storage devices. The creator of the super flywheel is a professor at Moscow State Industrial University, doctor of technical sciences, professor Nurbey Vladimirovich Gulia.

A supervariator is a device with a continuous flow of power, which allows you to smoothly change the gear ratio of a car’s transmission in the range of 25-30 with an efficiency of 97% both during acceleration and during braking (recovery). A car with such a device can have a speed of 5 to 150 km / h (5x30 = 150).

The energy intensity of a super-flywheel can be thousands of times greater than the energy intensity of the best chemical batteries. For example, a carbon fiber super-flywheel based on nanotubes weighing 20 kg can provide a continuous mileage of a passenger car of 200 thousand km.

It would be possible to untwist it at release of the car and drive without using gasoline at all. If we take ordinary materials, then a 20 kg fiberglass flywheel stores enough energy for 500 km run of a passenger car when it is unwound. The number of energy storage-return cycles is practically unlimited.

Technologies for maintaining long-term rotation of the super-flywheel and energy transfer are developed. Russia in this direction has priority thanks to Professor N.V. Gulia. There are patents and practical examples. The world's first patent for a super-flywheel N.V. Gulia received back in 1983.

A hybrid of this design assumes an internal combustion engine of about 10 l / s, a super-flywheel of several kg and a supervator. The engine only works when spinning the flywheel and reducing its speed by 2 times. It starts for a short time at revolutions corresponding to the maximum efficiency, so the fuel consumption is very small. The drive efficiency is 97%. Acceleration and deceleration can be very intense, because The energy consumption of a super flywheel is huge.

By launching such a hybrid into mass production, Russia could take its rightful place in the list of industrial countries. Money, developments, patents - all this is available. Only political will is needed.

See also at bgv.electricianexp.com:

  • Super Flywheels - New Energy Storage Batteries
  • Vehicle electrical system
  • Robert Alexander’s super-efficient motor generator
  • Nanogenerators - universal energy generators
  • A subjective look at an affordable modern electric car

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    Comments:

    # 1 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    It would be desirable for the author to give some calculations of the super-flywheel - how much energy needs to be spent for the primary spinning of the flywheel so that it would “give the remaining 200,000 km of energy”, the speed, which bearings can be used. And about gyroscopic forces should not be forgotten (when cornering and bouncing the car). The idea is naturally very good, and there are options for its implementation, but not as large as the author cites, and you need to go in small steps.

     
    Comments:

    # 2 wrote: Someone | [quote]

     
     

    The numbers, of course, are bright. But I do not think that the use of CVTs and direct mechanical transmission is appropriate: His Majesty is friction. Including air. It is easy enough to calculate that huge turns are needed to obtain decent values ​​of stored energy. Carbon fiber provides only strength. The stored energy is proportional to the weight and squared angular velocity. At such speeds, there will be significant losses due to the air surrounding the flywheel. I'm not talking about bearings. The only option: suspension on magnets and in a vacuum. And the transmission of energy is electric.

     
    Comments:

    # 3 wrote: Igor | [quote]

     
     

    Here are those who commented on the article, read Gulia himself, his books are available online, for example on a filibust, and there you will find answers to all your questions.

     
    Comments:

    # 4 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    The main problem of wind energy is where and how to store energy during strong winds. If the super-flywheels and supervariators are as good as they praise them here - why not store up some of the energy in the super-flywheels? Although, in a mechanical system ... It is unlikely that a super-flywheel will allow energy to be stored well for more than a few minutes.
    To save energy when driving in a car in the city - acceleration - braking,
    this is a good decision...

     
    Comments:

    # 5 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    In Gulia, the book says that a super-flywheel (naturally in a vacuum and on a magnetic suspension) can rotate for two or three days without a significant loss of speed. The numbers are incredible of course, but he knows better. Generally a great book, easy to read.

     
    Comments:

    # 6 wrote: | [quote]

     
     

    I really don’t know how promising this idea is. My knowledge in this area is very limited, so here I am not an expert.
    But...
    But I know that for many decades there have been developments on economical and environmentally friendly engines on WATER (many people know what huge hidden energy water has, which is a compound of O and H).
    And I also know that it is precisely the international oil lobbies, which have never benefited from the advancement of such technologies, to give these developments.
    Therefore, it seems to me that the technologies described in this article are slowed down for the same reason. Therefore, the author’s words about political will (at the end of the article) are really golden words.

     
    Comments:

    # 7 wrote: Vitaly Zhukov | [quote]

     
     

    Supermahovik professor Gulia - a long-standing Russian invention. And they pump energy one and a half megawatts into one installation mounted on a truck semi-trailer. One such flywheel can store up to one hundred or more kilowatts! This is huge energy, unattainable for other batteries. And he can work for 20 years. It's time to save the planet’s oil and oxygen, people's health depends on it.

     
    Comments:

    # 8 wrote: Yuri | [quote]

     
     

    Such equipment has long been used in aviation (aircraft engine starters) and much earlier than the inventions of Professor Gulia.