Cylinder Hydroelectric Concept to Propel a Ship Floated?
Is it possible to build a cylinder hydroelectric generator to propel a ship or even use it to power up the ship while anchored? One online think tank had an interesting discussion about this very concept recently and the entire dialogue went from ocean wave generation to onboard ship power and then up in the shy to power blimps as well? Indeed you should have been there for this conversation. As one think tank member stated;
Well if what you say is true about the cylinder that means you can use it to propel a ship, which creates its own waves and that could drive the propeller. Or if sitting there it can generate its own power by having holes at the water line to let water into the cylinder system from the side which the waves are coming in. Charge up batteries and go again?
On a lighter than air craft you could propel it forward and with air you could use molecular re-alignment by frequency waves (EM) to thicken the air to move the cylinder. Since the aircraft is lighter than air it would simply float there and then could collect energy until it wanted to go somewhere?
Another thought would be to laser align the molecules of water in the cylinder making them act more dense, pushing on the cylinder harder within the confines. Then as the water escapes and releases the spring up and generates energy that way too, we collect the aligned water molecules and separation by electrolysis would be a piece of cake, one more step and we have fresh water. Therefore you could have something similar to the Fieldstone Energy Concept; fieldstoneenergy.com/pdfs/WaveEnergy-Bigpower matrix.pdf” target=”_blank fieldstoneenergy.com/pdfs/WaveEnergy-Bigpower matrix.pdf
Well what about a machine which makes fresh water like the US Navy ship which brought fresh water to the Indonesians after the Sumatra Quake and Tsunami? Build the platform on a ship, oilrig, anything and power to run it too while it sits there. Just thinking out loud, but we all hope that this article might propel thought in 2007.
Lance is a guest writer for ourspokanemagazine.com/ Our Spokane Magazine in Spokane, Washington
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