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Bright Ideas
Albuquerque emergency room physician Sam Slishman is working to launch his Endorphin Power Co., which is a homeless shelter providing drug rehabilitation based on vigorous exercise at on-premises workout stations. However, Slishman also wants his center to help pay for itself by selling the electric power that could be harnessed by his down-and-out population's daily workouts (pedaling, lifting, working the treadmills). Endorphin Power, Slishman says, will be the city's inspirational flagship for "social rehabilitation and renewable energy." [Albuquerque Journal, 1-31-04] ....and john says why not......??? |
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On Mon, 08 Mar 2004 03:07:14 GMT, "asadi"
wrote: Bright Ideas Albuquerque emergency room physician Sam Slishman is working to launch his Endorphin Power Co., which is a homeless shelter providing drug rehabilitation based on vigorous exercise at on-premises workout stations. However, Slishman also wants his center to help pay for itself by selling the electric power that could be harnessed by his down-and-out population's daily workouts (pedaling, lifting, working the treadmills). Endorphin Power, Slishman says, will be the city's inspirational flagship for "social rehabilitation and renewable energy." [Albuquerque Journal, 1-31-04] ...and john says why not......??? Lets see... Giant hamster wheels... Alcoholics... Metered doses of Everclear (an oz. every thousand revolutions or so)... We will bury them. g.c. Who always thought that there was a future in energy production from alcohol. |
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On Mon, 08 Mar 2004 03:07:14 GMT, "asadi"
wrote: Bright Ideas Albuquerque emergency room physician Sam Slishman is working to launch his Endorphin Power Co., which is a homeless shelter providing drug rehabilitation based on vigorous exercise at on-premises workout stations. However, Slishman also wants his center to help pay for itself by selling the electric power that could be harnessed by his down-and-out population's daily workouts (pedaling, lifting, working the treadmills). Endorphin Power, Slishman says, will be the city's inspirational flagship for "social rehabilitation and renewable energy." [Albuquerque Journal, 1-31-04] ...and john says why not......??? 'Cuz it's a slippery slope from there to The Matrix? /daytripper (You look like...um...a "C" cell from here, John ;-) |
#4
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The most efficient humans don't even come close to 1 HP. Lance Armstrong
and the guy who peddaled the Icarus project plane were 1/2 to 3/4 HP peak . If I remember coorectly a man in good shape can crank out 125-150 watts. Have you ever tried one of those bicycles that are connected to a generator driving a light bulb? They have ( or did have ) one at the science museum here. Trying to keep a 75 watt light bulb on is a killer. IF Dr Sllishman gets 125 watt out of someone and keep him working 8 hrs a day he's got a kilowatt hour. Good for about 8.5 cents in Albuquerque. "asadi" wrote in message nk.net... Bright Ideas Albuquerque emergency room physician Sam Slishman is working to launch his Endorphin Power Co., which is a homeless shelter providing drug rehabilitation based on vigorous exercise at on-premises workout stations. However, Slishman also wants his center to help pay for itself by selling the electric power that could be harnessed by his down-and-out population's daily workouts (pedaling, lifting, working the treadmills). Endorphin Power, Slishman says, will be the city's inspirational flagship for "social rehabilitation and renewable energy." [Albuquerque Journal, 1-31-04] ...and john says why not......??? |
#5
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![]() "B J Conner" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... The most efficient humans don't even come close to 1 HP. Lance Armstrong and the guy who peddaled the Icarus project plane were 1/2 to 3/4 HP peak .. If I remember coorectly a man in good shape can crank out 125-150 watts. Have you ever tried one of those bicycles that are connected to a generator driving a light bulb? They have ( or did have ) one at the science museum here. Trying to keep a 75 watt light bulb on is a killer. IF Dr Sllishman gets 125 watt out of someone and keep him working 8 hrs a day he's got a kilowatt hour. Good for about 8.5 cents in Albuquerque. Neither do horses. Horsepower was originally defined as about 746 watts, based on the amount of work a horse can do in a day, not itīs output at any particular time. The term horsepower was actually invented by the engineer James Watt. Watt is most famous for his work on improving steam engines. Apparently, Watt was working with pit-ponies lifting coal, and he needed to define the power available from these animals. He discovered that a pit pony averaged about 22,000 foot-pounds of work in a minute. He increased this figure by fifty percent and set measurement of horsepower at 33,000 foot-pounds of work per minute. This completely arbitrary unit of measure is used to this day. What you seem to be referring to, ( although one has to be careful here, as this is by no means always obvious) is the measure of the actual mechanical energy per unit time delivered to a turning shaft. 1 shaft horsepower = 1 electric horsepower = 550 ft-lb/second. TL MC |
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![]() "Mike Connor" wrote in message ... "B J Conner" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... The most efficient humans don't even come close to 1 HP. Lance Armstrong and the guy who peddaled the Icarus project plane were 1/2 to 3/4 HP peak . If I remember coorectly a man in good shape can crank out 125-150 watts. Have you ever tried one of those bicycles that are connected to a generator driving a light bulb? They have ( or did have ) one at the science museum here. Trying to keep a 75 watt light bulb on is a killer. IF Dr Sllishman gets 125 watt out of someone and keep him working 8 hrs a day he's got a kilowatt hour. Good for about 8.5 cents in Albuquerque. Neither do horses. Horsepower was originally defined as about 746 watts, based on the amount of work a horse can do in a day, not itīs output at any particular time. The term horsepower was actually invented by the engineer James Watt. Watt is most famous for his work on improving steam engines. Apparently, Watt was working with pit-ponies lifting coal, and he needed to define the power available from these animals. He discovered that a pit pony averaged about 22,000 foot-pounds of work in a minute. He increased this figure by fifty percent and set measurement of horsepower at 33,000 foot-pounds of work per minute. This completely arbitrary unit of measure is used to this day. What you seem to be referring to, ( although one has to be careful here, as this is by no means always obvious) is the measure of the actual mechanical energy per unit time delivered to a turning shaft. 1 shaft horsepower = 1 electric horsepower = 550 ft-lb/second. TL MC It doesn't have to be a turning shaft. If you can throw 55 ten pound bricks over a 10 foot wall in one second your a one horsepower engine. Work is force times distance, Power is the rate at which work is done. If someone else throws the bricks over in 5 minutes samework, less power. If I remember correctly ( which I seldom do) Watt used a unit of horse power because mine owners used horses. If your selling steam engines to replace horses it was handy to tell the customer that it would replace X horses. |
#7
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![]() "B J Conner" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP It doesn't have to be a turning shaft. If you can throw 55 ten pound bricks over a 10 foot wall in one second your a one horsepower engine. Work is force times distance, Power is the rate at which work is done. If someone else throws the bricks over in 5 minutes samework, less power. If I remember correctly ( which I seldom do) Watt used a unit of horse power because mine owners used horses. If your selling steam engines to replace horses it was handy to tell the customer that it would replace X horses. Maybe I am just a drunk Irishman throwing bricks over a wall, while taking alternate swigs from my everlasting Guinness bottles? Whatever, I will accept that. It was quite coherent. After re-reading what I wrote, I am not entirely sure I wrote what I meant anyway. TL MC |
#8
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![]() "Mike Connor" wrote in message ... "B J Conner" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... SNIP It doesn't have to be a turning shaft. If you can throw 55 ten pound bricks over a 10 foot wall in one second your a one horsepower engine. Work is force times distance, Power is the rate at which work is done. If someone else throws the bricks over in 5 minutes samework, less power. If I remember correctly ( which I seldom do) Watt used a unit of horse power because mine owners used horses. If your selling steam engines to replace horses it was handy to tell the customer that it would replace X horses. Maybe I am just a drunk Irishman throwing bricks over a wall, while taking alternate swigs from my everlasting Guinness bottles? Whatever, I will accept that. It was quite coherent. After re-reading what I wrote, I am not entirely sure I wrote what I meant anyway. TL MC That what you get for hanging around Wolfgang. |
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