wait this thread is 60 posts long and noone mentioned the movie 'Brazil'! WTF
I was going to watch another movie actually today but when I saw this I was like "meh why not". That is a crazy movie on par with Russia's Solaris movie.
But yeah... exactly like that.
[quote name='Sirisian' timestamp='1315612415' post='4859807']
Cycling in outside/cold air into the system is an option. Are you worried about transporting cold items or just ones that can't get too warm? Would be interesting to build cold capsules for things that need to stay frozen. I could finally ship people blue moon ice cream without resorting to insane methods.
No, I'm talking about preventing the heat from friction from melting your system. You state that it will somehow be air cooled, but that's a lousy way to dissipate heat, especially if you're just using air pumped from outside. You keep dismissing major flaws as if they are trivial.[/quote]
oh sorry. I'm not dismissing it. I see what you mean now. You're talking about the heat on the capsule. We calculated before 44 N of force which would be converted into heat. To do that we need distance since work acts over distance W = F * d. Now 44 N * 2905 miles = 2.057×10^8 J of energy. We have to make an assumption that half the heat is put into the PVC tube walls and half goes into the canister. This might be a flawed assumption but that would be 1.029×10^8 J of energy added to the capsule along the whole trip. We're assuming a worse case where no heat is dissipated into the air. Okay we can imagine the surface that the energy is added to as a cube of plastic. Now when we evenly distribute the energy the temperature rises.
Reading material. ABS has a specific heat of 1.54 J/g C. If we put all that energy into a 1 cm^3, aka 1.04 grams, of ABS plastic it will rise 1.029×10^8 J / (1.54 J/g C * 1.04 grams) = 64250000 C. Notice if we assume it expands through the whole shell and we calculate that with
radius 15 cm and it's 0.5 cm thick with caps 0.5 thick and it's 60 cm long you get 3440 cm^3 and a raise in temperature of the whole canister by: 18677 C. Not bad even without losing any heat energy throughout the whole trip.
Now I know you might think that's a lot of heat energy to build up, but it just means that the system would need dissipate that. The continuous air rushing by might do that. However, if that doesn't help then another way would need to be designed. Again I'm not an engineer so I lack the proper material sciences class to make a clear prediction. (I do have a few physics classes under my belt if you want me to do other calculations).
Please show me these basic 50k to 100k cfm blowers.
Here's one. Can you be more specific though. There are hundreds of them on the Internet. Some go up to
440K cfm. I can't tell if you're skeptical that they exist or that they're basic enough? It's an electric motor connected to a fan so they use electricity. I imagine some run on 3-phase which isn't as basic.
The main goal would be to keep the system as simple as possible. These blowers can be made redundant so the system is fault tolerant. However I think an air-ducted fan system might be magnitudes more efficient. I'm not versed in blowers though. This would need serious engineering work.