I'm interested in developing hydrodynamic designs (partially influenced by thread on this subforum), which are built in bricks.
Hard to explain, here is a quick diagram attached. I was thinking that if you dropped a solid bar of steel in an ocean, I would think that it would sink to the bottom with no problem right? I mean it's a solid bar of steel. So if you put a motor inside a hollowed block, can this resist deep water temperature? The buoyancy part comes from spheres of air, held by metal strips.
I was interested in that shell competition and would be looking at very deep operation.
I've got to read a lot but I would appreciate any input on design.
What about stuffing boxes for the rotating parts of motors?
Regarding heat dissipation, if there was a radiating fin, is that enough to dissipate heat or does there need to be ventilation of some sort?
Building in blocks, and heat dissipation concerns?
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- Joined: Dec 17th, 2015, 6:16 am
Building in blocks, and heat dissipation concerns?
- Attachments
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- These would be used for buoyancy
- sphere-of-air.png (5.85 KiB) Viewed 4895 times
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- A cut out for a metal radiation fin would be used to attach the motor.
- hollowed-out-solid-brick.png (6.27 KiB) Viewed 4895 times