I got on this forum originally to see if there were any hints about alternative uses of bicycle systems including brushless hubs as power transmission/conversion elements. The new regenerative controller seems very promising. Does anyone have any reference material for this?
Here's the concept. I've designed several small windmills which use bicycle wheels (hubs, gear clusters, rims, even tires). I think they could be really good utility power-systems, including a complementary (to solar) source of electric power. I've monkeyed around with using them to pump water (lifting and dropping a PVC pipe with a foot vale in hand-driven well using an off-center cam) and turning small bench tools (grinder), but haven't tried electric power generation.
This is mostly due to a lack of an appropriate electric generator. A brushless hub with an *efficient* regenerative braking controller *might* be a good solution. Not because it is cost-effective, but because it can: A) Be intrinsic to the windmill/flywheel system; or B) be multi-use (used on a bicycle when needed); or C) Part of a hybrid system (couple an existing windmill to a bicycle (on a stand) to yield a dual-power system...
A) is appealing because getting useful work from a windmill is tricky....
1)The damn thing wants to point into the wind and mechanical takeoffs have to be flexible or "follow" the orientation.
2) Chain and belt-drive systems are inherently power-robbing.
B) Is appealing because I don't use a Bicycle more than for short round-trips...
1) I would only need to take the windmill "offline" now and then.
2) It provides a mix of convenience (transportation) and utility (power generation).
C) The hybrid is appealing but also has drawbacks.
1) More easily "converted" ... lift the bicycle from it's stand, disconnect from larger battery system, ride away.
2) Convenient to allow "pedal power" to make up for or augment wind-power.
3) The intermediate drive system could provide direct mechanical work when not generating electricity.
4) The system *still* suffers the same mechanical losses as a belt/chain drive.
D) It is even conceivable that this could be run in "reverse" using electricity to replace/augment the wind/pedal energy to pump water or drive a tool-system. This is the most marginal use I suspect.
I was also intrigued by the discussion about the use of various 18V cordless tool systems. I'm a Ryobi man, myself and suspect they don't have the same duty cycle as DeWalt/Rigid/??? but I would rather own a dozen 18V plug-n-play NiCads than expand my lead-acid bank.
I think my windmill designs could be made to work even in (sub)urban (not just rural) settings... Rooftops and/or even fire-escape platforms with enough standoff.
- OffGrid