

Dean Kamen is working on a Stirling engine car and it’s on the road…
The same day that Ford and General Motors announced catastrophic third-quarter losses, Dean Kamen was showing off his new electric car.
The prototype vehicle, a zippy two-seat hatchback designed with more than a passing resemblance to the Volkswagen Beetle, can go about 60 miles on a single charge of its lithium battery and with practically zero emissions.
The secret?
“It’s the world’s first Stirling hybrid electric car,” its inventor said with a flourish.
Installed in the car’s trunk compartment is a Stirling engine invented at DEKA, Kamen’s technology company in the Manchester Millyard. It powers the features that would normally drain huge power from the battery, notably the defroster and heater.
That leaves the battery primarily for propulsion. “You’re running a pure electric, which is enormously cheaper to operate and enormously more environmentally friendly,” Kamen explained.
And if the battery does run low, the Stirling can recharge it, so you’ll never get stranded, he said. That’s why Kamen calls his Stirling engine “an insurance policy” for the electric car.
Kamen showed off his state registration for his new car, listed as a 2008 DEKA Revolt. “I’m a car manufacturer!” he grinned. “It’s so exciting!”
More:

The Two-Can Stirling Engine- The Stirling engine has long captivated inventors and dreamers. Here are complete plans for building and operating a two-cylinder model that runs on almost any high-temperature heat source. MAKE 07 – page 90.

Dean Kamen: The Dean of Engineering. Wasting time is an unspeakable crime, says Segway inventor Dean Kamen. MAKE 04 – page 28.


So, what is the Heat Source and Cold Sink that this Stirling Engine gets it’s power from?
From the article: “It can use any fuel, from biodiesel to natural gas”
I don’t expect that a particular car would be able to use both biodiesel and natural gas, given that one is a liquid and the other a gas, but in principle the Stirling engine should be able to use any fuel that can be burned on its hot side.
I would expect the cold side to be the air, perhaps with a radiator like in a ICE car.
The linked story explains that it can use any fuel but doesn’t go into the details. Presumably there’s some sort of fossil-fuel burning heater attached to one end of the Stirling engine (with a duct tied into the climate control system). And the cold sink must just be the ambient nippy New Hampshire air. If he wants it to sell it outside of New England and Norway, I hope he’s already working on how to squeeze an absorption chiller into that same tiny little trunk.
Well, actually he is a car modifier IMO.
the base car is a Th!nk (or Stink as I like to call it, and I’m norwegian..) http://www.think.no for more info on the car
I’ve seen the car at the FIRST Championships. Very cool.
http://www.tssoftware.net/?p=49
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