Showing posts with label replacing a toilet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label replacing a toilet. Show all posts

           Applying Small Turbine Technology To                                                         Everyday Systems.                                                         By Dennis Pulley   www.The1HomeGuru.blogspot.com

Turbines 1HomeGuru
Precision Built Micro-Turbines 
                                 

      A friend told me, today, about a shower head he saw with LED lights and explained that the owner told him a generator was contained within and powered the lights. I was hoping he was wrong, that it hadn’t really been invented yet but, after 20 minutes on Google, Kohler does actually sell showerheads that do generate direct electricity. Well, before he’d even finished the sentence, my jaw had already dropped and we spent the next hour applying this idea to a handful of other appliances. This is a million dollar idea. This will get someone incredibly rich and I sure hope my friend and I can do something with this before it’s taken up by another. These are my first thoughts, as it’s only been a few hours since our conversation happened.

     
    Our indoor plumbing can be used to produce electric power. Yes, small quantities but power nonetheless. The water supply into the house can be tapped with in-line turbines or impellers to either charge batteries or direct connected to lighting or other appliance. Perhaps this would best be achieved with low-voltage appliances containing a rechargeable battery. These impellers can be utilized in many ways but we must remember that you can’t get something from nothing. Every impeller would siphon off pressure and unfortunately, most municipalities use electricity to pressurize the water through pumps and even in the localities with water towers, the water must still be pumped to the top of the tower. This is something an individual may be able to get away with for a bit but eventually, electricity prices for the pumps would make its way to your bill. Best-case scenario would be a home fed by an uphill aquifer. This would be free.


DIY home water turbine.
Small Hi-Performance Turbines.

  
      There may be a way make this work for supply, you’d conceivably build a tank at the highest elevation that city water pressure could push and plumb your house from the top down, utilizing long stretches of drop with strategically placed turbines throughout. This would work but again, if everyone does it, we would be using a much more noticeable amount of power for the pumps and it would be carried into our water bill.


     Our drains, however, are another story. The turbines could either be placed directly at the drain beneath our sinks and tubs, but we would drain much slower, or we could have a sort of holding tank dug into the ground, ideally keeping the water level just a foot or so below our lowest fixture and draining it through a small, turbine-carrying orifice from the bottom into the sewer lateral.
  
     
     This is very real and can become part of a multi-faceted plan to contain our energy costs. This should also be implemented into our roof gutters, rain barrels even municipal storm water drains. In order to become more responsible for our own power needs, we need to employ a variety of methods: Sun, Wind and Water are all very scale able means of producing electricity and require little technical know how to build. The efficiency of these means will increase exponentially as more and more of us see the benefit in not only implementing one of these devices but actually building our own and open sourcing our ideas and designs.
Pumps to generate electricity
Small dishwasher pumps are easily used as water turbines.


   
  



  Above is a washing machine or dishwasher pump, this is essentially an impeller built within a housing designed to allow water to flow in one end, spin the impeller and out through the other end. These are perfect all-purpose pumps, easily connected to a water source, with an AC motor that can easily be changed to a DC Stepper motor from an old printer and can easily charge small battery banks. Individual solar cells are becoming very cheap in China and with a little know how, can be wired together to create one’s own solar panels. Wind turbines can be made, with a bit of instruction, using non-working appliance parts such as washing machine motors, and YouTube is full of videos detailing how to build water turbines from the same appliance. The way is easy if you have the will and even easier if you’re poor. We can’t all afford to run our air conditioners but what if you spent just two weeks learning how and building your own means of generating just enough to power that A.C. through the summer? Would you do it?


   Read this to build your own electrical generator. 
Generate electricity at home
A copper core moving around a magnet





    

    

diy elec generation with a water wheel
   



This Instructable teaches you how to make this water wheel using your lunch trash.







                                                               
                                                                                        
   This article on DIY water turbines will give you the principles involved in nearly all turbines and, perhaps even the confidence to build one.











   Do what you can and send me some pics and plans. What other uses would small wind and water turbines have? How can these be wired? What is the simplest way to generate power?

 Post your comments because I love this stuff.
                                                          

           
             


Me @_almostanexpert



 Or read me here:   www.almostanexpert.com

                            Or www.1HomeGuru.Blogspot.com
November 27th, 2014  Thansgiving Day

TO CAULK or NOT TO CAULK the BASE OF A TOILET, THAT IS THE QUESTION.

  Let's start with something easy;
 I was just debating on the RIGID website about the cost/benefit analysis of caulking a toilet to the floor.


   To caulk or not to caulk,
                                         the base of a toilet,
                                                                       That is the question

     This more fiercely debated than I would have thought but some people have never caulked a toilet and they feel that they have to defend their past installs, I understand that , I do, but when new information comes to light, you have to re-evaluate. No big deal. It only hurts if you fight it.

   I have always been firmly against it, on the basis that caulk hides a leak. I have thought that for 20 years or so. I was wrong and I'd like to reverse my opinion.

 The State of California states that a toilet will be caulked to the floor at the base.
 http://home.howstuffworks.com/toilet1.html     In the big scheme of things;  this is a stupid argument.   BUT, 
   

                    It's important, especially if you build with a fine toothed comb. To understand a simple appliance like your household water closet, you have to know how it works.
A toilet always has a stable amount of water in it. This is controlled by gravity. An S-shaped chamber that keeps water levels at a constant until siphoned at the flush. Is water going to sneak thru , defying gravity and spilling out onto your floor? Hope not, but if it does, the caulk has no place in the equation. If the water and waste doesn't freely fall through the siphon line,  then the issue comes down to a clogged sewer line. Which, if your toilet is clogged, your issues go waaayyy beyond a well placed bead of caulk.
   

I had always thought that beading caulk around a toilet base was a last ditch effort to stop a leak. A failed wax ring. BUT, The State of California has deemed caulk a necessity. I've always considered California Building Codes to be at the top of the practice so I researched and kept an open mind. Here is my dissertation of all of the B.S. surrounding this.

     Caulking around the toilet base is neccessary for cleanliness. You CANNOT clean around the crack that is presented where the toilet hits the floor, BUT you CAN clean a caulk joint. 

     Does this matter in your home? Not really. Do what you want. I'm not planning to eat ANY fajitas you've cooked near your toilet. This not what the State of Cali is getting at. The aim is to keep  restaurants clean and to put a law into writing with no room for translation. 
1HomeGuru.
  If you have any issues or arguments with my math, email me at 1manappliancerepair@gmail.com.
  I'll publish your comments IF I can make you look stupid.  That's the Google way.
         If you make me look stupid, Well, I'll just pretend I never got your questions.
Thank you. Drive thru.
  Just kidding. bnr.