Why is this Propeller Getting So Much Attention?

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Undecided with Matt Ferrell

Undecided with Matt Ferrell

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 500
@UndecidedMF
@UndecidedMF Жыл бұрын
What do you think of Toroidal Propellers? Get an exclusive Surfshark deal! Enter promo code UNDECIDED for an extra 3 months free at surfshark.deals/undecided If you liked this, check out Why Are Floating Wind Turbines So Huge? kzbin.info/www/bejne/bmSpoqSchKmgo8k
@justanothercomment416
@justanothercomment416 Жыл бұрын
Tedium of the constant injection of the "green" agenda misinformation forced into every video.
@zeph6439
@zeph6439 Жыл бұрын
Toroidal shapes are found in nature, so it makes sense to make use of that blueprint.
@andoletube
@andoletube Жыл бұрын
I think they are good.
@keithviolette5870
@keithviolette5870 Жыл бұрын
Matt, The aerospace industry has been experimenting with "Open Rotor" designs for nearly 40 years now. The 20% fuel savings was known about in the 80's, but the noise and perception of passengers riding on a "propeller plane" instead of a "jet", along with fuel prices dropping prevented it from becoming mainstream. My dad has patents on some of this tech dating back to the late 80's and early 90's. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propfan
@isuke01
@isuke01 Жыл бұрын
I read about it some time ago. But PATENTS and this company can dictate the price, since no one else can make those.
@TheRenofox
@TheRenofox Жыл бұрын
I had this idea over 20 years ago after hearing about a plane with toroidal wing, but got told that "if it was any good, someone more educated would have done it already." Thanks a lot, dad.
@The_Infamous_Boogyman
@The_Infamous_Boogyman Жыл бұрын
I understand that pain
@greg77389
@greg77389 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, someone probably did do it already. Just because you're the first doesn't mean you'll get recognized for it.
@benderisgreat95able
@benderisgreat95able Жыл бұрын
That's not the mindset for any invention in human history...
@theravenousrabbit3671
@theravenousrabbit3671 Жыл бұрын
Never, ever listen to someone who says things like that.
@michealdrake3421
@michealdrake3421 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that basically always means "that sounds hard and I'm too lazy" or "that sounds complicated and I'm not smart enough"
@KhanhDinh291
@KhanhDinh291 Жыл бұрын
its fascinating that the more advanced machines get, the more biological they start to look
@laszlodudas7313
@laszlodudas7313 Жыл бұрын
@@rossimartiWhile Evolutionary optimization is a mathematical optimization method.
@untitled795
@untitled795 Жыл бұрын
the term is bio-mimicry
@rossimarti
@rossimarti Жыл бұрын
@@untitled795 as a network engineer, I use principles in biomimicry 🦋 to optimimize networks and resources, to expedite fulfillment of requests, logistics 💫
@lordofthesticks0
@lordofthesticks0 Жыл бұрын
to be fair nature did have a 3.7 billion year headstart in doing trial and error
@oriontigley5089
@oriontigley5089 Жыл бұрын
I feel like "biological look" is subjective.
@rajathpai9573
@rajathpai9573 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised by the absence of mention of the one word most engineers dread "turbulence", the design seems quite genius dealing with the turbulence and the fluid dynamics that come with the wing tip vortices. Dealing with the turbulent flow and harnessing it is definitely more than 2 birds in 1 stone. It's the entire flock :P Definitely looking forward to the developments and applications. Thanks for the wonderful video covering topics like this as always.
@MrBrander
@MrBrander Жыл бұрын
And just imagine what we could achieve when we changed the traditional props on airplanes to these and changed those fan blades on turbofan jet engines to toroidial shapes. Now that would be interesting to see what sort of gains in power and fuel savings we would get there.
@teardowndan5364
@teardowndan5364 Жыл бұрын
@@MrBrander Since turbofans pump directly into the engine's bypass/cooling duct, the outcome would likely be net negative.
@ryanhungerford6448
@ryanhungerford6448 Жыл бұрын
If a toroidal prop dissipates wing tip vortices, I wonder if the same design can be applied to a stationary prop; a wing? Maybe designing a stationary airfoil that incorporates such a design would improve flight capabilities of stationary wing aircraft?
@stephendoherty8291
@stephendoherty8291 Жыл бұрын
​@@ryanhungerford6448would the lower surface area of your new wing design also cut lift. Winglets already cut the leading edge vortices tip of most commercial passenger aircraft. It could definitely benefit current turboprop noise where these props already offer lower fuel consumption. Would it allow for a faster turboprop speed? I recall some speed limitations were due to leading edge tip damage as the local air nearby went supersonic
@yourmother9359
@yourmother9359 Жыл бұрын
Nah, you do not need that- what you want to know is what will happen when you hit surface of the road, on your way down to a local lake...and how much $$ bills you will lose doing it.
@ast_rsk
@ast_rsk Жыл бұрын
All this talk about the toroidal propellers and async propellers just has me excited that there's still so much potential for improving known working designs. It leaves you wondering or imagining if such a simple change like this yields 20% improvements across the board for multiple mediums... what's left on the table we haven't thought up yet to improve.
@tSp289
@tSp289 Жыл бұрын
There are plenty of things that fit that description. The trick is to get the efficiency to sync up with the cost and existing manufacturing facilites. E.g. there are plenty of hyper-efficient airliner designs, but they mostly require non-standard manufacture and novel materials, which makes them unappealing to companies who have to protect their bottom line.
@payasoinfeliz
@payasoinfeliz Жыл бұрын
toilet paper, for example. just paper on a roll. george costanza thinks it cannot be improved. i think he is wrong.
@shirleyrichard-qv9lw
@shirleyrichard-qv9lw Жыл бұрын
Steam freely rises - condense to liquid power generator as it travels down power hot plate heat water make steam
@danbobway5656
@danbobway5656 Жыл бұрын
@Paya So a bidet is what you are looking for, uses a small amount of water. You feel and are cleaner and you only need one small square of toilet paper to dry with. E Very efficient
@azgarogly
@azgarogly Жыл бұрын
It would be extremely naive to say "such a simple change like this". Because designing that kind of propeller requires a deep understanding of processes going on around spinning propeller, and these are quite complicated. Manufacturing of such a complex shape requires precision computer controlled machines. It is not something that could easily be made in a garage. So, we are producing propellers for almost two centuries, yet there is a room for improvement in that seemingly simple device.
@CDCI3
@CDCI3 Жыл бұрын
For scenes where movement is important to illustrating something (i.e. I can't just pause the video and get enough information), like at 5:12 and 6:01, I would recommend making those clips longer (or putting them on a loop if they're short). I am repeatedly having to skip back, wait 7 seconds for the 3 second clip, try to see what is happening. I eventually just set playback speed really low on those parts, but it breaks up your narration and takes away from how well done everything else is.
@Donovaan
@Donovaan Жыл бұрын
The whole video is too fast to really take in most of the information. I get it that KZbinrs nowadays make their videos (incl. their voice recordings) a bit faster and usually I don't mind, but Ferrell overdoes it and his videos have become unwatchable to me on normal speed. It's a shame.
@Lumencraft-
@Lumencraft- Жыл бұрын
The reason people do that is so that you have to back the video up and re-watch the clip Again. KZbin algorithm interprets that is a high-value engagement.
@charmio
@charmio Жыл бұрын
Edit: There actually might be something more to it... I can't say more so make of that what you will. I work for a marine propulsion engineering company. The props engineering team had a look into this and found the boosted efficiency claims to be wildly overstated, at least for the larger vessels we supply. As with most things, if it seems too good to be true, it usually is. They're a brilliant idea for drones though!
@brucec954
@brucec954 Жыл бұрын
Maybe because large ships props run at lower RPM?
@Tomasu321
@Tomasu321 Жыл бұрын
There's a boating channel on yt that tested the marine props. They seems to be tailor made to the specific engine setup. And the efficiency is mainly during half speed. Going full tilt removes any efficiency benefits and brings it on par with traditional props. But they have pretty fantastic stats when running them in their optimal conditions. Their price makes it somewhat infeasible right now however. How it fairs on huge ships are yet to be evaluated I think.
@J_Urban_
@J_Urban_ Жыл бұрын
@@brucec954 They also have CPP systems (Controllable Pitch Propeller) so they can keep their shafts spinning in one direction regardless of forward or reverse.
@KoRntech
@KoRntech Жыл бұрын
I had to imagine they were, 105%? If they claimed 15-30% it would seem more realistic
@smudgeone
@smudgeone Жыл бұрын
@@KoRntech The 105% was specifically at that 4000 RPM range. This why they only account for about a 20% fuel efficiency increase. If you operate outside that range there is not as much difference. That is usually how sales graphs work, they only grab the best case scenario.
@DrewNorthup
@DrewNorthup Жыл бұрын
Those large ships you mention for the most part don't run on diesel (too expensive), they tend to run on bunker oil (cheap, energy-dense). They also tend to run at an engine rpm less than 400, which these props aren't designed for.
@jonathanbuzzard1376
@jonathanbuzzard1376 Жыл бұрын
Turbulence/cavitation is still an issue in large ships and ducting the propellers would lead to significant energy savings. The problem with ducting propellers in ships is fowling and in drones, the extra mass is an issue. This propeller design avoids both those issues.
@thilokm522
@thilokm522 Жыл бұрын
But engine rpm don't equal prop rpm which should be a lot more relevant for the prop design to be working or not, right? I'm no expert on boats or ships and would expect a cargo ship's prop to run slower than that of a boat but I can't make out why engine rpm should be a central argument
@jonathanbuzzard1376
@jonathanbuzzard1376 Жыл бұрын
​@@thilokm522 Actually in a big ship propeller rpm is probably the same as the engine rpm. However even propeller rpm is irrelevant, what is relevant is the speed of the tip of the propeller, which is a function of propeller rpm and propeller diameter. A big ship has a *much* larger propeller diameter, so the speed of the tip is still high enough that these sorts of propellers would be a significant improvement. If you can work out how to make them for large ships, then a 5% fuel saving means that next time the ship is in dry dock for maintenance if not before it is getting new propellers, even if they cost millions of dollars each.
@DrewNorthup
@DrewNorthup Жыл бұрын
@@jonathanbuzzard1376 More optimized prop shape is important, but a big issue with toroidal propellers in the open sea environment would be near continuous fowling with seaweed (not to mention other flotsam & jetsam). A fowled propeller vibrates violently and has significantly (40-70%) reduced efficiency. If a small inland or coastal boat prop gets fowled it is usually no big deal to stop & clear it-doing that with a huge freighter is another matter altogether. This is why self-clearing prop designs are such a big deal. (I should have added this to my original comment at the time I posted it.)
@colinsutherland8965
@colinsutherland8965 Жыл бұрын
Some basic maths indicates that the tip speed of a 300mm diameter outboard engine at 4000 rpm is the same as that of a 10m diameter cargo ship prop doing 120 rpm
@anton.sysoev
@anton.sysoev Жыл бұрын
The conventional propeller shape also has a great benefit in its ability to allow for a mechanism to change the angle of attack of the blades. This is crucial for aircraft and some wind generators. It is a really interesting and challenging theme for engineers to develop an adaptable toroidal propeller.
@dustrider9306
@dustrider9306 Жыл бұрын
Maybee it seems quite impossible at first, but to change the angle of attack, you can rotate the toroidal shape like a conventional propeller, at least to my understanding.
@brian6739
@brian6739 Жыл бұрын
Turbulence=power loss. Same but different thought.. . Gasoline engines make a bunch of noise. Why are we not harnessing the energy that makes the loud pop. Obviously there's quite a bit of energy still coming out of the engine when the exhaust valves open. It just seems like technology would be better suited to harness this energy other than just a turbo to force the air back in.
@dimitarvenedikov
@dimitarvenedikov Жыл бұрын
@@brian6739 In F1 they use this thing called MGU-H to make the turbo more efficient and to harness some of the lost energy, it's almost like magic.
@kindcanadian5825
@kindcanadian5825 Жыл бұрын
@@brian6739 it's called a turbo
@nathanwells4809
@nathanwells4809 Жыл бұрын
I think variable props at best get around 75-80% more efficient over fixed props. But if there’s a baseline 200% more thrust and less turbulence of vortices (increasing overall lift with smoother air) is a easy upgrade as maintaining a fixed prop over a variable is drastic.
@jameslmorehead
@jameslmorehead Жыл бұрын
I have a micro quad copter that I have been tinkering with various 3D printed toroidal propeller designs. It has a one button takeoff and land function that uses lidar to detect its position off the ground. The higher efficiency propellers throw off the algorithm for this function to a point that rather than coming a meter off the ground and just staying there, it shoots up to 2-3 meters, drops down to half a meter, and fluctuates up and down several times before settling in at one meter.
@tonysu8860
@tonysu8860 Жыл бұрын
You'll get the same benefit more cheaply by simply ducting your propellers. In general though, physical characteristics change with scale so the benefit difference probably won't be much on your micro quad.
@robw2379
@robw2379 Жыл бұрын
One relevant point that is getting little attention is that the benefits over traditional props are barely noticeable until the RPM's get relatively high (evidenced by the graph in this video). So instead of running these torroidal props at a high speed, the alternative is to run larger, traditional props at a slower speed, which most large commercial/military vessels do now. This will be a real game changer for drones and maybe light craft, but it will not reduce the carbon footprint of the shipping industry by half.
@chrismanuel9768
@chrismanuel9768 Жыл бұрын
Why not both? If these are better even at low speed but making propellers bigger is better, why not use these but big?
@xellzor
@xellzor Жыл бұрын
RPM and prop size matters, despite small rpm the tip of prop is really fast due to how massive props are on cargo ships.
@oldfrend
@oldfrend Жыл бұрын
there's a limit to prop size that i think the shipping industry is already well aware of - ship draft. too big a prop would hit the bottom and break off. they really can't get any bigger safely.
@MrDj232
@MrDj232 Жыл бұрын
But if this design works for them they could transport faster without increasing energy use. Faster transport means more profit for shipping.
@twistedyogert
@twistedyogert Жыл бұрын
I remember reading that the engines in cargo ships have a redline of only a few hundred RPM.
@gabrielfair724
@gabrielfair724 Жыл бұрын
"Save two birds with one stone" Very exciting to live today! So much to look forward to. I hope we all can live long enough to see the future
@jaredh2341
@jaredh2341 Жыл бұрын
My first thought when I see this propeller applied to marine applications is thats what those covered submarine props have looked like for years and militaries wanted to keep secret. Crazy how something that has been around for so long and utilized so much is still undergoing improvements to design.
@christiandelao2547
@christiandelao2547 Жыл бұрын
Yeah they had classified the tech that let them not produce bubbles in the water and eliminate the churning sound they would make, I think it might be how long it takes civilian markets to figure it out on their own, but it is pretty shitty they prolly knew the whole time
@oldfrend
@oldfrend Жыл бұрын
unlikely. pictures of american props have leaked before and they were not toroidal. i'm pretty sure this is an entirely new technology.
@rickdeckard1075
@rickdeckard1075 Жыл бұрын
"marinetime" lol
@James_R_
@James_R_ Жыл бұрын
Major Hardware did a couple episodes on the design. I am not a 3d modeler however I noticed that the drone propellers and all the PC fan designs did not have the depth that the boat prop had. A PC fan unlike a drone prop would need higher static pressure for efficiency as the weight is less of an issue compared to a drone application. More depth and less distance between the blades would greatly improve static pressure. It would be interesting to see someone create different designs between depth and possibly more blades to figure out the prop-er applications for this revolutionary concept. - @UndecidedMF I appreciate you letting this stew for a while to see what new comes up before making a video about it.
@Squirreltoken-br549
@Squirreltoken-br549 Жыл бұрын
It would have been cool if this video included a quick reference to Major Hardware testing creative 3d printed designs based on user submissions. Even though it may not be drones or ships, their findings could foster other applications, like you noted this design was on a couple episodes. I like how he reports rpms, flow, sound, etc.
@AmeriMutt76
@AmeriMutt76 Жыл бұрын
My physics game is weak, but in researching Sharrow (before I saw the price, more than my boat!) they made the point that in a ducted situation, the anti-cavitation and tip vortecise benifets reverse and are actually worse in most cases. They were testing for bow-thrusters. Probably not a magic bullet for Major Hardwares fan design test, but always cool to watch the tests
@Laura-S196
@Laura-S196 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@UndecidedMF
@UndecidedMF Жыл бұрын
Thank you Laura!
@NormanInAustralia
@NormanInAustralia Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@UndecidedMF
@UndecidedMF Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@mitchhaelann9215
@mitchhaelann9215 Жыл бұрын
I've wondered how efficient this propeller design would be in a wind turbine.
@daizhanennals1485
@daizhanennals1485 Жыл бұрын
It would make a more efficient blade no doubt. (I used to work on wind turbine blades) but the blades need to be actuated independently (optimize angle of attack during rotation). So this would be difficult, also the blades would require much more material. these blades are already massive(~13tons) , and non biodegradable (they just bury them) So I'm not sure the benefits would outweight the cost. no pun intended. I guess one could reduce the size of the blade to compensate for material and justify it by the increase in efficiency. But the engineering required to manufacture something that large, transport, and repair it. Seem unfeasible/un-Scaleable
@mitchhaelann9215
@mitchhaelann9215 Жыл бұрын
What if they were used in Darwin-style turbines, the ones with the fans bladed laying flat midway up a tower that channels wind from the top down a tube. Consistent power, only one angle, air always flowing the same direction regardless of wind. I've been thinking on the feasibility of 'power chimneys' on top of large buildings, with their air output being funnelled into the building's A/C system, the power running basic services like lights and elevators.@@daizhanennals1485
@twistedyogert
@twistedyogert Жыл бұрын
​@@daizhanennals1485 As for the angle of attack, some aircraft have a propeller where the pitch of the blades can be changed. I don't see why a wind turbine can't do the same thing.
@akyhne
@akyhne Жыл бұрын
@@twistedyogert All wind turbines can adjust the angle of attack..
@akyhne
@akyhne Жыл бұрын
Wind turbine blades are already enormous. It would be impossible to make the blades like that.
@MassageWithKlay
@MassageWithKlay Жыл бұрын
all of these designs just remind me of the fluid dynamics explored by Viktor Schauberger. It's good to see it applied to a workable model. Also with the boat propeller, the major cost is with the fact that it's being machined from billet material, instead of being made from cast bronze. If it were cast, then it would be highly comparable to your average propeller as the volume of material isn't that much greater.
@jopo7996
@jopo7996 Жыл бұрын
As always Matt, your videos are informative and interesting at the same time. You deserve props
@UndecidedMF
@UndecidedMF Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it.
@jopo7996
@jopo7996 Жыл бұрын
​@Undecided with Matt Ferrell Did I just slide a propeller joke by you unnoticed?
@Sal3600
@Sal3600 Жыл бұрын
And full of wishful thinking
@craigduddles5650
@craigduddles5650 Жыл бұрын
@@jopo7996 power to the punsters!
@pohkeee
@pohkeee Жыл бұрын
This has applications in many systems that propel things through fluids (air and liquids) and move the fluids themselves.
@tekannon7803
@tekannon7803 Жыл бұрын
Excellent report. What is astounding is how a propeller's design is really at the heart of the pollution problem. What is second on the list is how to get more power from fuel combustion.
@oldtimefarmboy617
@oldtimefarmboy617 Жыл бұрын
The nice things about noisy drones is when you can zip a drone in and park it a couple of feet above your friends head before they realize what you are doing and then increase the prop speed to make it shoot straight up. Specially when you are far enough away that he can not catch up with you before he tires out and stops. Of course, that means you are going to have to be prepared and not get upset when he eventually does the same to you. Or he figures out a way to accurately drop water balloons on your head, in January, when it is 10 degrees. Lots of fun.
@Eikenhorst
@Eikenhorst Жыл бұрын
The thing you overlooked was that these propellers are indeed much more efficient, and as you showed especially at 3000-5000 rpm. Big container ships however do not have propellers operating at these speeds (because this is very inefficient!) and they run at about 100 rpm. So toroidal propellers probably don't help for this application. For drones, they are more quiet, but not more efficient.
@justanothercomment416
@justanothercomment416 Жыл бұрын
Completely correct. Most of the information provided in the video is extremely inaccurate and misleading.
@webdactic
@webdactic Жыл бұрын
Why are they not more efficient for drones?
@tmi1234567
@tmi1234567 Жыл бұрын
​​@@webdactic I think it has to be optimised for drones. It's hard to say
@justanothercomment416
@justanothercomment416 Жыл бұрын
@@webdactic For tri/quad+ type drones with fixed pitched props, they likely are more efficient. But he also showed drone airplanes, which are likely to provide little benefit. Specially with larger drones where variable pitched props are already common. For things like boats and tri/quad+ drones, which have a large RPM window, constantly speeding up and slowing down, especially with a large transition period (such a boat coming onto plane), benefits are likely to be found. For others, where variable pitched props are already common (wind turbines, most airplanes), benefits are likely to be significantly reduced or all but absent.
@Eikenhorst
@Eikenhorst Жыл бұрын
@@justanothercomment416 The MIT page on this states that it ""achieves thrust comparable to that of a multirotor drone propeller" not more. Probably because the efficiency loss of wingtip vortexes in air is significantly less than in water where cavitation is a huge problem. There is an inherent inefficiency with dirty air in the toroidal design and even at the high RPMs a drone operates at, it seems this is still slightly more than the gains from the reduced vortex drag.
@jsc1436
@jsc1436 Жыл бұрын
We looked Into this as well at our university. It seems most comparisons they Made were not with State of the art props en thus their efficiency gains are overestimated. Another slight issue is their inability for pitch control, limiting the use for windturbines and aircraft. Still a great video!
@stdesy
@stdesy Жыл бұрын
Just having less noise would be enough for some applications
@7000fps
@7000fps Жыл бұрын
Matt is just is a "NEATO" cheerleader ----he cries Go ,STUFFF! yea! now where are my blind followers, click- like my prettieszzz
@ernestbidon5027
@ernestbidon5027 Жыл бұрын
I didn't need to look at it, "105%" efficiency told me everything I need to know.
@andrewallen9918
@andrewallen9918 Жыл бұрын
Hi Matt, I discovered this propeller a few months ago; I contacted someone I know in the electric boat industry; they told me they already knew about Sharrow, had tested it extensively and found no noticeable difference in efficiency; such a shame as electric boats need all the efficiency gains they can get due to battery range restrictions.
@ernestdambach8925
@ernestdambach8925 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like your friend needs to improve their testing methods.
@johnchaple1075
@johnchaple1075 Жыл бұрын
Maybe they work best in sharrow water.
@yolo_burrito
@yolo_burrito Жыл бұрын
@@ernestdambach8925 it’s possible that the electric boat uses larger slower props due to electrics better torque at low speeds. ICE outboards basically use the water as a torque converter.
@michaelharrison1093
@michaelharrison1093 Жыл бұрын
It might be that this toroidal prop is not going to make much of a difference for an electric powered boat on the basis that electric motors have very flat efficiency curves. If you consider an ICE the efficiency curve shows a dramatic reduction as you move from the peak torque (peak thermal efficiency) operating condition.
@andrewallen9918
@andrewallen9918 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelharrison1093 Yes, that will have an impact however Sharrow also talks about the hydrodynamics which is separate from the engine/motor dynamics.
@karelfortl2365
@karelfortl2365 Жыл бұрын
Díky!
@UndecidedMF
@UndecidedMF 11 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@MehreKat
@MehreKat Жыл бұрын
Finally, a satisfying video! You answered all of your initial questions from beginning to end. Both micro- and macro-applications were considered and the mechanical aspect was fairly visible. Thanks!
@hctim96
@hctim96 Жыл бұрын
This is great, tnx for the info. It kinda sorta reminds me of the little winglets on the aircraft wings to reduce tip voratces. If you look at a jet landing in the rain you see the spirals coming off the wing tips.
@jatinchaudhari2988
@jatinchaudhari2988 Жыл бұрын
I wanna take my time out to appreciate the intro of Matt's videos. I have watched so many and have always felt this excitement for his content. The intro is so well written, always creates a hype which is followed by the perfect beat drop and music!! Appreciation and kudos to Matt and his team
@dereksollows9783
@dereksollows9783 Жыл бұрын
WTF?
@BenVanAmburg
@BenVanAmburg Жыл бұрын
Slurp
@RasmusSchultz
@RasmusSchultz Жыл бұрын
so else was worried when, in that one episode, the music had been changed to a more upbeat version? Glad they reverted that decision - it's just the most perfect opening music of any KZbin channel 😄👏
@trevorseals6588
@trevorseals6588 Жыл бұрын
Would love to experience the boat propeller. that sound difference is crazy. Boats tend to be very inefficient due to all the drag. this propeller may pave the way to electric boats, where energy density has been a major concern
@ASDeckard
@ASDeckard Жыл бұрын
It's a six bladed propeller (three blades are swept forward, three are swept back, and they are joined where each set meet) that is being compared to a three bladed propeller that is horrifically overworked. The engine nearly needs to over-rev just to get the boat planing. If your boat isn't planing at 3000 rpm, something is horrifically wrong. Ask yourself, why did they need to compare their prop to a terribly overworked and so will appear hyper inefficient standard prop of half the displacement? Because they're trying to disguise the fact that they've designed a six bladed prop, which will itself be fairly inefficient for most modern small boats. Hell, even nuclear submarines that don't need to care about efficiency at all, just noise, only go up to seven, and usually five. More props means less efficiency, but they also mean lower loading per blade, which makes them feel and act like they're spinning than they really are. The lower loading means they cavitate at high RPM's, in this case high enough that the boat doesn't reach that limit. You can achieve the same with a conventional 6 bladed prop if you really want. You can also get a properly sized larger diameter three blade prop, or four if you really need it, to achieve the same lower loading without having to increase the blade count and cut efficiency. Again, very serious question, why is the company that is trying to justify you buying their 5K propeller only showing comparisons to what is blatantly an undersized prop? Why are they not comparing a cheap, inefficient, and badly designed three blade prop most engines come with? Why did they go out of their way to undersize the test prop so badly? Oh, because their prop doesn't create any savings or benefits when compared to a similar loaded and bladed prop, aside from being heavier and having higher form drag, which actually makes it slightly worse than a same sized six blade prop. Do the math if you don't believe me, or buy it and run it yourself.
@piccalillipit9211
@piccalillipit9211 Жыл бұрын
*HAVING OWNED A YACHT* $5,000 is peanuts in boat money - I bought a box of 200 bronze screws [in 2002] - $600 New prop, prop shaft, cutlass bearing and coupling + costs of taking out of water, removal and refitting $6,000 [in 2002]
@ThatSlowTypingGuy
@ThatSlowTypingGuy Жыл бұрын
8:17 "Surely someone must have been out there experimenting with non standard propeller shapes." Militaries with modern submarines: *Nervous sweating*
@M.Mae.M
@M.Mae.M Жыл бұрын
What is fascinating is cavitation is actually from boiling water, yes the water boils due to the low pressure created from the boat prop. Love your videos!!
@erichpizer1
@erichpizer1 Жыл бұрын
yes , by definition cavitation / boiling is when the pressure of the gas inside a liquid = atmospheric pressure above or around that liquid.... therefore if the propeller spins, it lowers the pressure inside the liquid to become more and more equal to the atmospheric pressure , then the bubbles pop. same physics in your kettle with heat doing the work, gas pressure in boiling water lowers to atmospheric pressure
@Hypercube9
@Hypercube9 Жыл бұрын
I think the most fascinating part is that the water freezes after it boils! Maybe not behind a boat propeller, but just in laboratory conditions. (Vacuum chamber, etc.)
@Biggspeed
@Biggspeed Жыл бұрын
Be interesting to see if the prop would make any difference in large cargo ships considering they only turn at a few hundred rpm. Based on the graph the smaller prop was good around cruising at 4000 rpm. But lower in the rpm it was barely more efficient.
@countrychristmasloft8836
@countrychristmasloft8836 Жыл бұрын
Cargo ships run their props at slow speeds because that is where they are most efficient. If they could use this type of prop and be just as efficient at 10 times the RPM, they could cruise the seas at a much faster pace at the same MPH they get now.
@Shepshop1620
@Shepshop1620 Жыл бұрын
Ships do have a much lower rpm, but they also have a much larger prop diameter, resulting in a similar tip speed when compared to stationary water. This tauroidal prop seems to gain efficiency based on tip speed, not rpm.
@MyName-tb9oz
@MyName-tb9oz Жыл бұрын
@@Shepshop1620, why not a smaller prop turning faster and generating the same thrust? Maybe a smaller power plant could be used? Nothing is going to push one of those monsters beyond its hull speed, of course. I would bet these would be fantastic for tug boats. How about those high speed hydrofoil ferry boats? Then there are the military applications... This is pretty big news, I think.
@Wayoutthere
@Wayoutthere Жыл бұрын
@@MyName-tb9oz Faster rpm means much more wear and tear , needing to design entirely new engines and more emissions.
@MyName-tb9oz
@MyName-tb9oz Жыл бұрын
Not really, @@Wayoutthere. None of those, and particularly not more emissions. A new engine design seems fairly unlikely. Unless someone just wants to spend a lot of money rather than using something that is already available.
@tomchelle1
@tomchelle1 Жыл бұрын
I’d like to see some more independent real world testing on these. Seems like everybody is buying the efficiency gains without much skepticism
@christopherjensen794
@christopherjensen794 Жыл бұрын
This is fascinating! It might be interesting to see how this might work in combination with a Kort Nozzle in lower speed applications, as in towing vessels, how well it works in reverse, and the effects on vessel or aircraft maneuverability. I'd love to try one out! Propellers have come such a long way just in my lifetime, and I imagine there is a great deal more to learn. Many thanks!
@limbodog
@limbodog Жыл бұрын
I want one! But the up front cost is so high... My boat is a sailboat, so it's already pretty efficient, but it'd be great to cut the fuel cost for when I have to motor. (also those massive ships don't burn diesel, they run on "heavy fuel oil" which is closer to tar)
@whitedragon153
@whitedragon153 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see this design in computer fans and graphics card fans and even PSU fans to help reduce their noise. Just imagine how much quieter your computers would be...
@someguy9520
@someguy9520 Жыл бұрын
5 years ago, there were those new torrodial formed carbon high profile wheels for cycling. For the lowest aero drag possible. At that time, they were more stable, efficient and stiffer. But they didn't get a lot of media traction
@binaryguru
@binaryguru Жыл бұрын
I like how they improved the propeller by splitting it in half making two propellers in one. They have done a similar thing with propeller engines for aircraft as well.
@piccalillipit9211
@piccalillipit9211 Жыл бұрын
*I HAD A MASSIVE ARGUMENT* on a car tuning channel that a whistling turbo was a BAD thing not a GOOD thing The whistling is vortex shedding at the tip of the blades - usually caused by a mismatch in the size of the turbo and the inlet X section - at best its literally ripping away the tips of the blades, at worst it is over boosting the system and can cause it to explode
@yoloz1324
@yoloz1324 Жыл бұрын
Amazing innovation that will go a long way across many sectors and Matt put it across with gusto. Nice
@AdmiralStoicRum
@AdmiralStoicRum Жыл бұрын
I am guessing that this is a prop suited for certain size vessels and is ideal to work in its specific field and application. If you work a prop that operates at an inefficent ratio for the majority of it's use, but that use is in the optimal performance for the toroidal prop, then it is likely best practice to use the toroidal prop in that application. Its not a one hat fits all situation, its a sun hat for a sunny day that you'd never wear in the rain
@Kram1032
@Kram1032 Жыл бұрын
Question: Can this work for Computer fans too, or do those need different properties? These are so much quieter, it would be quite amazing for that setting, where you sit next to fans for potentially long times.
@mryellow6918
@mryellow6918 Жыл бұрын
they have different properties. one of the main one is they arn't in an open air system, they need to push air hard through obstructions and such. also alot of the noise comes from the air inside and not just the fan but the turbulence of the air flow.
@mryellow6918
@mryellow6918 Жыл бұрын
ps, you can get quiet fans.
@Kram1032
@Kram1032 Жыл бұрын
@@mryellow6918 part of what these toroidal fans seem to do is to reduce turbulence, at least the turbulence created right at the fan itself. I'd imagine that'd still be possible to do in the cooling fan setting?
@mryellow6918
@mryellow6918 Жыл бұрын
@@Kram1032 what I mean is you can't do anything about the turbulence inside the case. And you can't control what's obstructing stuff. For example your gpu fan blowing in all directions even against case fans
@Kram1032
@Kram1032 Жыл бұрын
@@mryellow6918 certainly, but I guess I'm not sure that that's enough to dismiss the sound of turbulence happening at the fan blades.
@dietcheeseplease
@dietcheeseplease Жыл бұрын
Would these types of designs have any impact on fans and fan blades? It would be cool to see this possibly impact standard home box fans or even computer fans!
@NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustache
@NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustache Жыл бұрын
I didn't even think about electric fans and other cooling fans. It's probably gonna take a while for the design to be that commercially available though. (Also hopefully it still allows one to make funny noises in front of the fan xD)
@Олексій-г1в
@Олексій-г1в Жыл бұрын
There was a lot of questions to MIT experiments so i had tested 3d printed toroidal propellers on a drone - they was in fact louder and kind of shaky and unstable. It may work underwater with a rotating speed that required underwater, and without much turbulence. But as propeller for a drones - it it debatable, i believe they need more development to be productive.
@shayan-gg
@shayan-gg Жыл бұрын
7:46 'How to lie with statistics' Graph starts at 5 instead of zero which skews perception for those who didn't notice this
@XPLAlN
@XPLAlN Жыл бұрын
Yes but it’s even worse than that. That graph is smoke and mirrors for sure but according to this data the boat managed 64 kts (!) at 6000 rpm with the conventional prop. Yeah well, that didn’t happen because according to Worldcat specifications their boat does 45 knots flat out. In other words, the graph is a fiction, easily debunked. Another piece of BS here is that the so-called 3 blade Sharrow prop is actually a 6 blade. This alone significantly increases the advance ratio so comparing it with a 3 blade conventional prop is bogus.
@glennwoodbury7384
@glennwoodbury7384 Жыл бұрын
This design hasn't been used in vessels before in part because of the expense of making them, and the savings in fuel haven't been as urgent in the past. In the case of aircraft, it may be materials technology; composites and materials such as carbon fiber and aramids allow us to make shapes requiring higher strength to weight ratios than before. I'm looking forward to these being used on electric aircraft capable of carrying passengers and cargo.
@Bigfoothawk
@Bigfoothawk Жыл бұрын
Electric plane? We aren't even close. 😂
@alexc7857
@alexc7857 Жыл бұрын
The future of aviation are ornithopters not propellers
@Klefth
@Klefth Жыл бұрын
KZbin absolutely blew up with videos of these toroidal propellers on drones a couple of months ago when the news broke out, and in reality, the results seemed to be quite underwhelming. You get a less annoying noise frequency range, sure, but most people experimenting with them found out they had significantly less thrust in some cases, negating efficiency or noise benefits, and while the noise did have a lower pitch, they're still very loud. The MIT videos were also quite disingenuous in the way they played with the volume: standard propellers were turned up significantly while the toroidal ones... weren't even playing any sound at all because Sebastian is talking over it, lol.
@blackraven8841
@blackraven8841 Жыл бұрын
That was due to the quality of their models vs the MIT variants. A true refined one is much more efficient.
@Officialnorio
@Officialnorio Жыл бұрын
Nice video, great implementation of this topic! Have you somehow come across approaches to use the toroidal concept for wind turbines? It would be exciting to develop a particularly quiet (small) wind turbine. Here, too, tip vorticies should be a cause of noise development! Due to the aerodynamics, however, the design would of course have to be different. An optimal fan is after all, as we all know, a catastrophic wind turbine system.
@LuMaxQFPV
@LuMaxQFPV Жыл бұрын
There are many solutions to tip noise, through designs that we already have, that wouldn't require a completely new prop design. Additionally, we look for a design that takes the least amount of material to produce. Weight and eol disposal are factors. The Toroidal design takes a lot more material. This rules it out for most real world applications.
@hotdognl70
@hotdognl70 Жыл бұрын
The first time I ever saw a torodial windturbine was a horizontal desing back in the late 70's on a green energy exposition. As i remember correctly it was mostly too complex to scale up. One of the most remarkable things was the flexible desing let it change height and diameter when (wind)speed variated.
@bicyclist2
@bicyclist2 Жыл бұрын
I saw some video about these propellers about a month ago. This is so cool. Industry has lots of money to invest in this kind of tech, which makes you wonder why this didn't happen sooner. I hope to see wide adoption of this propeller by many industries soon. Thank you.
@SaltGrains_Fready
@SaltGrains_Fready Жыл бұрын
The original units of this type from the beginning of engine power were 'screws' - that is air screws on heavy copter designs that never got off the ground and were laughed at, and screws that were on vessels in the water that produced excellent propulsion. This current Toroidal concept picks up where that left off, getting rid of the entire mass of the large screw and still using the efficiency of the physical design structure.
@FractalNinja
@FractalNinja Жыл бұрын
I think it would be cool to see some applications within jet turbines, like maybe toroidal compressor blades at the first stage to suck in higher volumes of air for higher fuel efficiencies?
@kf6eml
@kf6eml Жыл бұрын
Turbines don't have the same problems with tip turbulence. The blades run very close to the body of the compressor.
@Storyideas81
@Storyideas81 Жыл бұрын
I find the beep a vehicle makes when backing up the most annoying sound on earth.
@bytemark6508
@bytemark6508 Жыл бұрын
You had me at "donut shape". I knew I liked donuts for a good reason. D-OH.
@solarpixiejournals
@solarpixiejournals Жыл бұрын
Does it decrease prop noise in the water? That would be wonderful for marine life, marine mammals are bothered by shipping noise.
@XPLAlN
@XPLAlN Жыл бұрын
Typical propeller efficiency is 80%. Therefore when you see a caption claiming, quote, “105% efficiency boost” you should immediately realise it is bogus.
@justenoughtobedangerous8596
@justenoughtobedangerous8596 Жыл бұрын
Hi Matt, would these propellers work for wind farms? A similar improvement in efficiency / reduction in noise would be fantastic.
@rajathpai9573
@rajathpai9573 Жыл бұрын
there are vertical axis turbines that already use a similar shape and some dynamic kite based wind energy farms are also looking into such novel applications :)
@HonoredMule
@HonoredMule Жыл бұрын
I'd wager not, since: - bladed wind farms operate at _way_ lower RPMs where tip vortices are practically moot - the fluid dynamics work a little differently in reverse - likely invalidating any efficiencies that aren't just side effects of noise reduction - are _the propeller blades_ at wind farms even noisy, especially compared to the generators?
@madman6648
@madman6648 Жыл бұрын
I would say yes and no. Windmill blades can now be adjusted for the best performance in different kinds of weather and i do not see how you could do that wit theas blades. That sead, because of the bigger range of affenciantie it might not have to.
@lmmortalZodd
@lmmortalZodd Жыл бұрын
Yes and no. The design should work the same for a wind turbine as it does for a propeller, but at those sizes increased material costs will make it unfeasible. It would likely also impact the efficiency of downwind turbines. The question is if the added material costs less than the profits you would gain with the added efficiency. You also need to figure out the engineering challenges that come with the added weight for the support structure and how that would affect possible height (which is corelated with higher wind speeds) and for the inertia of the system and how you would stop such wind turbine in dangerously high wind situation. My guess is that we could use this design with smaller home turbines
@DaellusKnights
@DaellusKnights Жыл бұрын
My first thought when I originally learned about these was if this sort of design would offer any benefits for something like the Mars drone... I'm curious how they would perform in a lower gravity, lower air pressure environment. And what kind of modifications would be necessary, if it is workable...
@jhfdhgvnbjm75
@jhfdhgvnbjm75 Жыл бұрын
They could make the boat propellers much easier with lost wax casting instead of machining them from a solid block. most large props are bronze based anyway which is perfect for the lost wax method.
@JimmySailor
@JimmySailor Жыл бұрын
The imperfections would make the propeller useless. Any surface imperfections add cavitation and cause degradation over time.
@OutOfNamesToChoose
@OutOfNamesToChoose Жыл бұрын
I've seen videos of large propellers being made; they still had to be machined at the end to get a good surface finish, then thoroughly examined. If the tips of a propeller can evaporate water, then imagine the forces that are experienced. Now imagine a hairline crack, or an imperfect casting where there is a 'cold shut', slag inclusions, or any other of the many possible defects from casting. At those speeds, the flying metal chunk would punch a hole through the boat or its occupants, and leave behind a dangerously unbalanced, fast-spinning prop shaft.
@ananthuskumar1286
@ananthuskumar1286 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Matt, i finally understood cavitation.
@allencar5212
@allencar5212 Жыл бұрын
The noise and damage from cavitation is not caused by the bubble bursting. The noise and damage ocurrs when the bubble collapses back to liquid. The pressure pulse can be so high that it actually dimples the metal of the pump impeller.
@priapulida
@priapulida Жыл бұрын
But did really no-one think of this before? or is it true that it only got developed because of modern tools? (simulations, 3d printing, what else?)
@Anfros.
@Anfros. Жыл бұрын
I would guess that some of these designs have probably been tried before, but due to their geometry they can be very expensive to manufacture, so it probably didn't make too much sense.
@priapulida
@priapulida Жыл бұрын
@@Anfros. yeah that's what I mean, because of modern tools, manufacture got cheaper, iteration got faster, planning&measurement more efficient..
@HeliophobicRiverman
@HeliophobicRiverman Жыл бұрын
At least 2, possibly 3 instances of similar developments have been brought to paper over the last century and a bit, at least one of them was patented. Unfortunately these designs never left the paper.
@neofotografie
@neofotografie Жыл бұрын
Love your videos but on this one, I think you overlooked that this shape of prop was not invented by MIT/Sharrow. Actually it s a really old patent from 1969 (patent no. US3504990A). It couldn't be efficently produced at time of invention, hence why its beeing revisited now now that cnc machining is cheap and 3D printing exists and the reason why it hasn't popped up sooner ;) Intresting non the less. Actually in the FPV drone world, some prop producers are already trying to make them, see kababfpv.
@grondhero
@grondhero Жыл бұрын
*_Props_* to Toroidal for trying to improve part of the world.
@sirsnek6562
@sirsnek6562 Жыл бұрын
sorry bro thats a dislike
@klaymoon1
@klaymoon1 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Can Toroidal fan be used for PC cooling too??
@flynnpowell5627
@flynnpowell5627 Жыл бұрын
I’m a surf lifeguard In new zealand and we use 30hp Mercury outboards with 3.8m boats in large surf of up to 4.5+ m it would be awesome if / when they make them for smaller engines could allow less cavitation especially when going over large amounts of white water and allow less fuel to be used will be great to see the future
@lastboyscout6437
@lastboyscout6437 Жыл бұрын
Funny that drone designers never took a que from fan designers for custom computers. For those of us who build our own, noise reduction is a key to a comfortable life behind a computer workstation. Thanks for doing a video on this topic.
@awesomeferret
@awesomeferret Жыл бұрын
Those fans are usually spinning much much slower.
@zxuiji
@zxuiji Жыл бұрын
Probably get applied to windmills too, particularly the more consumer versions meant for rooftops and yards
@32Deejavu
@32Deejavu Жыл бұрын
I can't help but think about Morbo.
@tomkoch4306
@tomkoch4306 Жыл бұрын
Great content. I have subscribed to your channel for a while now, and I always find your production value high, and the quality of your content to be fantastic. I would gather that the cost of those propellers would have something to do with the precision needed to build them, as well as if there are any patents associated with their construction. But the whole technology sounds promising for many applications. Even wind turbines and other fluid dynamic applications. Thanks again as always. This also shows the possibilities of innovation and imagination. Those that shut it down seem to suffer from a lack of those aforementioned qualities. I suggest that looking at this topic with vision towards the future, and the possibilities it can explore and uncover.
@sunilalexandercampianregis8874
@sunilalexandercampianregis8874 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for all that information which is so useful and I appreciate and admire this channel
@TheBigk1964
@TheBigk1964 Жыл бұрын
I watched a few videos on this subject, and it is amazing the savings that can be made!
@willfrankunsubscribed
@willfrankunsubscribed Жыл бұрын
I'm curious how this performs compared to water jet propulsion.
@NoahSpurrier
@NoahSpurrier Жыл бұрын
Pump-jets are efficient and don’t suffer as much from cavitation because they run at higher pressure. Would be interesting to see how they compare.
@douglee2438
@douglee2438 Жыл бұрын
Jet propulsion generally only offers increase in efficiency at higher speeds. You can see this clearly with aircraft. Planes design to cruise at speeds above 0.5 Mach almost always have jets, and below that have propellers. I’ve seen similar results with boats. I read an article about a boat that was offered with either a outdrive or a water jet. The water jet offered a small increase in top speed but the prop was more efficient at all other speeds. The conclusion of the article was that you’d only want the water jet if you had to operate in swallow water.
@dtoften
@dtoften Жыл бұрын
Large container ships have variable pitch propellers which increase efficiency at any given rpm vs. a fixed pitch. Same with constant speed propeller airplanes. The toroidal shape is only good for a fixed pitch since any change in blade angle would not be possible with the ends connecting.
@asahearts1
@asahearts1 Жыл бұрын
Knew there had to be a catch.
@asahearts1
@asahearts1 Жыл бұрын
Come to think of it, though, at least in terms of cargo ships, isn't it fine if they run at the same, low speed most of the time?
@zack9912000
@zack9912000 Жыл бұрын
@@asahearts1 Always a catch. Just like advertisements that are too good to be true and every KZbin is advertising it.
@marymccluer1630
@marymccluer1630 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Perhaps 3-D computer modeling can tweak the designs for the greatest efficiency. It seems like anything with a fan or propeller could potentially benefit from this improvement. Maybe it can help as we transition away from fossil fuels.
@markhuebner7580
@markhuebner7580 Жыл бұрын
Great show, thanks Matt!
@niteshsapkota335
@niteshsapkota335 Жыл бұрын
There’s still so much to discover in material science, geometric shapes and how they interact in given circumstances or in natural environment It’s amazing how such small word as physics can encompass Everything that exists or will exist even those that stopped exist but existed before,, how they act and react and influence and manipulate other materials changing it’s entire structure and properties
@RuLeZ1988
@RuLeZ1988 Жыл бұрын
00:37 "Why haven't we tried something like that sooner?" - Because the topic of sustainability never had been that relevant 30/40 years ago in comparison to now. We have never cared about our ressources in the past, because the majority had the mindset of "It will be enough in our lifetime" or "Planet Earth and its ressources are huge enough". The problem lies also in the very fast development in our technology and society by which we were not able to monitor such change in a healthy manner. For sure we already had concerns in the scientific area about our wasteful use of ressources 40 years ago, but those voices had been mostly ignored and were not strong enough, since we lived very good with what we had. Now in 2023 when it is almost already too late, we can feel the consequences of our actions and only now we are trying to optimize our behaviour. Unfortunately typical human behaviour if you ask me. Even though we are very late with those changes to support sustainability in different areas, I am somewhat hopeful that it will still be relevant for our future.
@ChrispyNut
@ChrispyNut Жыл бұрын
I came across this a couple/few months ago. A key advantage will be naval noise pollution as there's been a study or few on the affect of shipping noise on marine creatures and found it to be really quite harmful as, just like on land, creatures warn eachother with sound when predators are around, attract mates and other reasons, but prop noise interferers with this, contributing to the decline in marine life. I can imagine that this didn't become a thing previously because of the difficulty in production. As with [almost] all technological advancement, entire chains have to advance together to enable each other (or as misinformed ideologues would state ... "they didn't have Capitalism").
@WolfeSaber
@WolfeSaber Жыл бұрын
As an aerospace engineer to be, I do worry how this new design can affect jet engines.
@buzz-es
@buzz-es Жыл бұрын
Or ducted fan.
@brentfriedland
@brentfriedland Жыл бұрын
I am fascinated by toroidal propeller technology and I brought it up and a Boat Drag Race at the Wild Horse Pass South of Phoenix. I spoke with racers and most had no clue what I was talking about. But, I ran across two guys that did know and had some unique input. The first was a big cargo ship captain. He said that the props that you use for thrust and that the toroidal props will be the future but it is NOT the best for speed. He said that boat speed is at the tip of the propeller so Drag Race Boats have a surprisingly small and not very broad blade. I got to talk to a long time boat drag racers and he kind of confirmed this and said that he used the toroidal prop does not work and he claimed that he tested in on his top fuel boats. He claimed the toroidal prop will not get the boat going from a dead stop to instantly high speed but in both cases boats are topped off at the same speed at the end. He also said that the drag race boat props are unique in that they have a very small pitch of about 6%.
@victoryfirst2878
@victoryfirst2878 Жыл бұрын
I remember in 1970 I saw the same type of boat propeller used in Ocean City Maryland. This is not new but a cool idea Matt. Nive video.
@FatHeadDave
@FatHeadDave Жыл бұрын
To be fair, it is a very propelling argument...I mean compelling
@UndecidedMF
@UndecidedMF Жыл бұрын
😂
@nevilleedwardsrennalls8634
@nevilleedwardsrennalls8634 Жыл бұрын
If it can successfully be scaled up, I’d love to see if it can make the stealthiest helicopter rotor or even be retrofitted to the Osprey 🧐🧐
@ASDeckard
@ASDeckard Жыл бұрын
The Osprey has some of the most efficient props ever designed, over 90% at medium load.
@donalddouglas5988
@donalddouglas5988 Жыл бұрын
Nice video, but maybe you could explain how you can have 105 % efficiency and not violate the law of conservation . And who uses propellers that are 20% efficient when the Wright brothers made 85% efficient ones.
@CoconutsWithDrag
@CoconutsWithDrag Жыл бұрын
I’m certain the navy already come up with similarly designed propellers for submarines
@eurkedal
@eurkedal Жыл бұрын
I work for Kongsberg, and I hadn't heard of that scandal😲. Reading up on it now. Thanks for a great video 😀.
@tkc1129
@tkc1129 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see how, say, a P-38 Lightning could perform with props like these. Or a helicopter like the Comanche.
@Skinflaps_Meatslapper
@Skinflaps_Meatslapper Жыл бұрын
They wouldn't even get off the ground. This shape offers no way to change the pitch of the blade, which means the P-38 would need several miles of runway to get up to speed and a helicopter wouldn't be able to add collective to take off. Some things don't scale up.
@aigomorla
@aigomorla Жыл бұрын
i think the US Navy and Darpa, had tested these, and said something like while they work great on a small fishing boat, its not a scalable design for a destoryer or quiet enough for a submarine, which is what Matt says @10:40. You'd think if the Navy could afford to test two aluminum warships and scrap them after 11yrs , a propeller should be like buying Mc Donnalds.
@marka7831
@marka7831 Жыл бұрын
unloading the wing tips also is very beneficial in reducing the drag of wings and propellers
@Daegis88
@Daegis88 Жыл бұрын
What do you think about the possible impacts to HVAC efficiency? Or even power plants? Or since those turbines are surrounded by tubes there is less impact?
@iha10512
@iha10512 Жыл бұрын
theres foil surfing but also foil boats. They also reduce the surface drag to a minimum. Plus theres also different coatings for the boats with lotus effect and even better than lotus (cant remember the of that plant.. something like sativa, silvana... something like that)
@paulcummings55
@paulcummings55 Жыл бұрын
Nice video on its history and potential- have heard of them over the last year, but no real details. Thanks for filling the gap.
@industrialnerd5535
@industrialnerd5535 Жыл бұрын
Genral question I have not seen you do a video about Bio-Gas production AKA anirobic digesters. and using the refined methane for home power use plus the heat that this process generates.
@finlayfraser9952
@finlayfraser9952 Жыл бұрын
Matt, I can't see toroidal props as practical on a full sized plane. How would pitch be adjusted, of come to it, be feathered?
@EthanBradley1231
@EthanBradley1231 Жыл бұрын
At 1:42, that's a really big frequency range. Sure, it does include drones, flying pests, and crying babies, but it also includes almost every note on a piano. Being somewhere in that range means nothing for how annoying the sound will be.
@aloysius_music
@aloysius_music Жыл бұрын
Thank you! That sentence is bizarre - no one is complaining about the register of a bass guitar or a kick drum...
@frosty3693
@frosty3693 Жыл бұрын
For boat props in many places they hit things like sand bars. The old props can be rapaired, to some degree and may not loose performance as much as the new props. But, in the graphs, it seems the engines do not need to turn as fast so would higher torque engines at lower RPMs work as well? In the truck industry they found a big engine with high torque and low RPM worked better than a small engine because it does not have to run at full power to do the same work. The C02 emissions of ships needs to be related to how much tonnage they are moving vs. emissions they emit. This video talked about the positives what are the negatives? Aside from the cost mentioned. I have seen one video were someone put the props on a drone and did not get good results.
@SchnoekerOriginal
@SchnoekerOriginal Жыл бұрын
I wonder why it took so long. Since 2012 there was a PC Fan using that design. Probably no one thought about making anything more efficient just like in many other cases.
@thenjry
@thenjry Жыл бұрын
Yet another niche market these propellers would be great in: paramotoring. Paramotoring is where you use a long, wing-like parasail in conjunction with a simple propeller strapped to your back, run by a light 2 cycle motor to provide thrust, allowing you to use that parasail give you one of the most free forms of powered flight for a single person. One problem is that the prop directly on your back is incredibly loud, necessitating hearing protection and causing fatigue. You'd probably still need hearing protection, but it would be very welcome. Any higher efficiency is also great!
@LordHotcakes
@LordHotcakes Жыл бұрын
This video popped up in my feed, glad I watched it. This stuff is exciting
@gulllars4620
@gulllars4620 Жыл бұрын
One thing worth noting is that even if the sum of pollution by those huge container ships add up to 3% of global CO2 for 80% of transport by volume, if you break down the transport contribution % for any good purchased, the fraction contributed by those container ships is fairly low. Most of the pollution is in the last stretch by truck. A rule of thumb (not entirely accurate, but i'd love the hard numbers) is that container ships are one order of magnitude more efficient than trains, which is one order of magnitude more efficient than trucks per mile/kilometer traveled.
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