Tesla Turbine | The interesting physics behind it

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  • Опубліковано 26 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8 тис.

  • @ruchz2010
    @ruchz2010 3 роки тому +2405

    I was part of team that built one of these for an Airforce design competition in college. We could reliably get ~94% efficiency with a closed loop superheated steam system harvesting exhaust heat from a small jet engine and got just below 96% efficiency in some ideal test cases. The main limiting factors were that the discs had to be designed to stretch uniformly without distorting at ~40k RPM and that the gaps between the disks had to be designed for an incredibly specific set of operating parameters (steam temp, pressure, velocity, etc.). The smallest variations, or while waiting for it to spin up, and we wouldn't even get close to those efficiencies. A lot of the initial designs weren't efficient enough to reach the right parameters at all.

    • @Cheebzsta
      @Cheebzsta 3 роки тому +197

      Oh boy this warrants so many follow-up questions:
      - Dual outlet or single?
      - How many discs were used per outlet?
      - What geometries were used in the outlet?
      - What diameter went with that RPM?
      - What was the measured torque output?
      - Was (or how was) the design compounded?
      - What materials were used for the discs that had those properties?
      - Stated efficiency is presumed mechanical, how'd you calculate that efficiency? Was it measured output vs measured losses after the outlet?
      - What was the name of the competition? Who did you represent or were associated with? I want to find it online or know what I'd need to file a Freedom of Information request with the government because having access to those results would be a game changer for anyone seeking investment in the technology.
      I'm not looking to call you a liar but you did just say you'd achieved well over twice anyone else's stated efficiency numbers. While I can imagine what you're saying could be true it's still well beyond what anyone has actually demonstrated. So "extraordinary claims = extraordinary evidence" still applies here. Nothing personal! :)

    • @consumemilk8005
      @consumemilk8005 3 роки тому +57

      @@Cheebzsta Nah dude I was there. It's true

    • @xlgapelsin6173
      @xlgapelsin6173 3 роки тому +54

      @@consumemilk8005 Not a valid answer

    • @sandertu8366
      @sandertu8366 3 роки тому +8

      @@Cheebzsta
      Want in on this info

    • @ruchz2010
      @ruchz2010 3 роки тому +279

      @@Cheebzsta Honestly, it was years ago and I don't remember most of the details but I'll give you what I got.
      -It used an exhaust manifold with a single exhaust port going into the turbine. The port was also optimized for laminar flow over the disks. The turbine had dual axial exhausts which recombined in a baffle at the manifold's intake.
      -Around ~15 disks, can't remember exactly.
      -Turbine exhaust was a circular cut around the axle, broken up by three supports with rounded chamfers. The disks mimicked that but were individually keyed to give the ports a slight offset. The offset actually eked out a bit more (read as "miniscule") efficiency in testing, likely due to artificial radial extension of the fluids path toward the axle.
      -Around ~10in diameter disks.
      -Not sure exactly how this design came about except our professor was interested in a practical execution of the turbine and it fit the competition requirements.
      -The disks were made of a pre-stressed stainless steel alloy. They were individually laser cut then tested at expected RPMs for any unexpected deformations. The vast majority of all disks didn't meet our specs and got tossed out. I think we could only use about 1 in 20 disks by the end of it.
      -It was primarily a mechanical efficiency and as soon as you throw an alternator on there it's a completely different story. It was measured relative to the steady-state properties of the steam at turbine intake vs turbine exhaust and the kinetic energy of the disks and axle. We measured efficiencies throughout the entire system but that one was the main focus. The most inefficient part of the system was just heating the steam with the jet exhaust without impacting its thrust too much. Surprisingly difficult to do. There was a fair amount of doctoral research on tesla turbines that we used as the basis of our design and which achieved similar efficiencies but it was all at similar or smaller scales. For the amount of effort there aren't really any practical applications for a turbine like this.
      -I can't remember the name but it's an annual competition (different goals each year) based out of Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio. This one was in 2014 and we were representing the University of Michigan Aerospace Engineering department. It was a shockingly informal process so I'm not sure how much info you could find but if you do look into it and find anything let me know. I'd love to revisit it all.

  • @someotherdude
    @someotherdude 2 роки тому +343

    This animation and explanation really deserves a lot of credit.... this is really good stuff, well done!

    • @duyvuitton6019
      @duyvuitton6019 2 роки тому

      No it does not, they should have performed actual experiments to back up what they're saying instead of cartoons. Cartoon videos, like NASA, does not prove anything. Shill UA-camr exposed.

    • @millanferende6723
      @millanferende6723 6 місяців тому

      I want to add it here so it is visible. But there is actually a way to make the Turbine 10x smaller, but using the "Super Critical Carbon Dioxide."
      It is a real thing that they can make regular turbine 10x smaller.
      Another thing that people don't mention. There are 3 inventions on the same shaft:
      1. Tesla turbine (takes steam and spins it)
      2. Tesla pump (Propels moleculs from the center outwards, creating a vacuum)
      Both amplify one-another.
      3. Air-bearing on both sides. The vacuum-pumps on both ends give more power to the Tesla turbine in between them, and also create a suction for the air-bearings.
      There are videos of people literally FREEZING steam using the Turbine and Pump in combination. By having the math on all of these right, you can achieve perhaps 99% efficiency. By using the Super Critical Carbon Dioxide, you can down-size it 10x.

    • @millanferende6723
      @millanferende6723 6 місяців тому

      You can have a look at the video by a man way more knowledgeable than most men or women out there, on this issue:
      "A Better way to Make Electricity WITH CO2"

  • @SabinCivil
    @SabinCivil  3 роки тому +133

    This is a re-release of our 2 days old Tesla turbine video. The reason why this turbine is not used in large power application was not right in that video. This video has the right reason. Thank you user @Leroytirebiter for pointing it out. Here are the few uselful links which came in the last video's comment section
    1) @meleardil RPM test video: ua-cam.com/video/8S7NSQExIKU/v-deo.html
    Pictures about the building phases: photos.app.goo.gl/kPLbffMi9MGtf7AaA
    2) ua-cam.com/channels/4uJgCHU3s4AOA-uT5SDA4w.html
    3) ua-cam.com/users/Notime500

    • @meleardil
      @meleardil 3 роки тому +11

      Thank you Lesics for featuring my "garage project"
      Here are some info about the "why did you do it, dude?" topic:
      It was just a proof of concept prototype, which was built to show some people that it works efficiently and safely with compressed air.
      It was completely home made, that is why it is so robust and crude. I had to be sure that it does not fail, despite being built from cheap brass. Also it had to be self adjusting because I had no way of machining and assembling it with micron precision. I did not have the tools and means to balance the rotor, so it had to be as close to perfect "out of the box" as it was possible. The ceramic ball bearing has a high tolerance which I had to take into account too.
      I used a 3D printed replaceable nozzle insert, which is easy to adjust to the actual application and parameters. Not to mention how much easier it made the manufacturing.
      36000 rpm means about 95 m/s blade edge speed at 1 bar pressure with no load... the theoretical maximum is about 80% of sound speed (without some special nozzle and disk geometry), which is 270 m/s, so I achieved 35% of the possible RPM. With better design and this turbine size the theoretical speed is 100 000 RPM and about 600 watt output with 2.5 bar dry air pressure.
      This crude prototype run with roughly 45% efficiency at 2 bar pressure (280 watt measured electric power on the brushless motor contacts)
      I made a 2.0 advanced design for the real application, but that requires expensive machining equipment and special materials (I pushed it to the limit)
      This one is simple and uses some very basic geometry for easy build.
      Technical stuff:
      Disc diameter 50 mm
      Disc thickness: 0.1 mm
      Gap: 0.2 mm
      3D printed PLA intake nozzle with multipoint output
      5 stabilizer pins at the edges, riveted with gap spacers.
      4 mm diameter steel axes
      Ceramic ball bearing
      Exhaust on both axes directions
      Brushless motor used as generator with 3 phased output
      (Maxon ECX-19 high speed motor with ceramic ball bearing)
      Power output 280 watt at full load. Loaded RPM 18000 RPM

    • @nks1120
      @nks1120 3 роки тому +1

      ຄັກຫລາຍສ່ຽວ

    • @bunchofaviation648
      @bunchofaviation648 3 роки тому +1

      You are Indian . But how your voice is just like American or European people ?

    • @asankhyadeep007
      @asankhyadeep007 3 роки тому +1

      @@bunchofaviation648 He pays a voice-actor for the voice over of videos.

    • @meleardil
      @meleardil 3 роки тому +2

      @@S47-h5q It was full of physics. If you think physics is fancy math equations peppered with arrogance than you had a very bad teacher. :P
      Physics is understanding nature. It does not matter, how you do that. The animations visualized very well the boundary layer concept. Anyway, I have never ever seen a really decent model made for tesla turbines. There are unsolvable theoretical equations and semi empirical approximations.

  • @paulgregg3226
    @paulgregg3226 2 роки тому +27

    I was a new graduate electrical engineer at Allis-Chalmers Corp. at the research division in West Allis, WI in 1961. At that time, A-C owned the Tesla turbine patent, and I worked beside a fellow mechanical engineer who had been assigned the task of running tests on a compressed air driven Tesla turbine. To load the turbine, a war surplus B-29 engine turbocharger [A-C had made these during WWII, and a few were still lying around] was shaft driven by the test Tesla turbine. A-C was one of the USA manufacturers of steam turbines at that time, and therefore the performance of the Tesla turbine was of interest. After the tests, a full report was written, but is probably lost today, as A-C went out of business in 1986. I am happy to see that others have pursued testing of the Tesla turbine, and have added to the knowledge base. As an interesting side note, Nicola Tesla himself was hired by A-C as an engineering consultant in the early 20th century as revealed in a report on file that my fellow engineer found in the A-C archive. As is well known, Tesla was rather eccentric in his habits. He could not stand to stay overnight in West Allis for some reason, spending his nights out in suburban Waukesha, and commuting by electric rail each workday to the West Allis works. That report too is probably lost.

    • @ricardobautista-garcia8492
      @ricardobautista-garcia8492 Рік тому +2

      Interesting history remark. What applications do you think the turbine is best suited for in the power industry?

    • @estebancorral5151
      @estebancorral5151 Рік тому +1

      ⁠@@ricardobautista-garcia8492 he stated that himself in his autobiography. He was a boy in Lika (Croatia) and read a travel brochure about Niagara Falls which stated the flow rate and surmised that it was an untapped power potential.

  • @jackwilliams9169
    @jackwilliams9169 3 роки тому +3596

    Man really said
    "I'm limited by the technology of my time"

    • @mattbanks3517
      @mattbanks3517 3 роки тому +86

      Technology is just knowledge.

    • @rohanexplore
      @rohanexplore 3 роки тому +123

      That's Howard Stark!

    • @harshvardhan4766
      @harshvardhan4766 3 роки тому +158

      I want to make a time machine but ""I'm limited by the technology of my time"

    • @coolcat1530
      @coolcat1530 3 роки тому +111

      Except he would still be limited today. It's impossible with materials on this planet to make a disc 3m and have it spin at 50,000 RPM without mechanical failure. His design works, it just isn't as efficient as other designs. That's all. Still a cool piece of machinery and still shows his genius.

    • @colin7225
      @colin7225 3 роки тому +30

      @@coolcat1530 what if we did have material that could handle that rpm tho, would it be outputting a lot of power?

  • @metaspherz
    @metaspherz 3 роки тому +1597

    Tesla's genius was finding solutions to problems. By doing so, he also created a few problems which, therefore, made him even more inventive.

    • @criii4950
      @criii4950 3 роки тому +9

      Me likey

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 2 роки тому +14

      08:30 Yet theres a nutter who wants to launch satellites by this method! And other idiots who invested 100M in this impossible stupid idea! 🤦‍♂️🤣
      If only any of them knew basics physics or could search on YT for this video etc!

    • @vanjamenadzer
      @vanjamenadzer 2 роки тому +12

      @@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 You mean he wants to YEEET them?

    • @fliprodriguez5250
      @fliprodriguez5250 2 роки тому +10

      This turbine created more problems. Even at his worst, Teala created bigger things.

    • @ostlandr
      @ostlandr 2 роки тому +14

      As the saying goes, "We've taken the first step in creative problem solving; we've created an interesting problem."

  • @Froggo_kek
    @Froggo_kek 3 роки тому +777

    the simplicity of the design just makes it cooler

    • @alanwatts8239
      @alanwatts8239 3 роки тому +49

      "Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication."
      -Leonardo Davinci.

    • @ionbusman2086
      @ionbusman2086 3 роки тому +14

      More simple something is. The more design time spent

    • @blainevans9237
      @blainevans9237 3 роки тому +11

      The design concept is simple but the forces and Physics utilized are way past modern steam turbines

    • @jebdulles5809
      @jebdulles5809 3 роки тому +2

      KISS principle

    • @fryncyaryorvjink2140
      @fryncyaryorvjink2140 3 роки тому +3

      I want to build one with a hollow axle for the exhaust, hopefully it'd be strong enough. There'd have to be small holes in the axle between disks, which may complicate the fabrication process

  • @poindextertunes
    @poindextertunes Рік тому +81

    Its wild knowing he sometimes had trouble distinguishing reality from the thoughts in his own head. He was basically a genius who was hallucinating in his everyday life

    • @SirFerret2010
      @SirFerret2010 Рік тому +2

      Sleep deprivation will do that to you.

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx Рік тому +1

      Not wild at all, he was just a bit weird.
      He had a tendency to mix religious zealotry with engineering on occasion in ways that just made him sound like a lunatic.
      The truth is that he was a decent engineer, perhaps even gifted.
      But not a genius.
      If Galileo Ferraris had Westinghouse's ear before Tesla then he would be a nobody today.
      Westinghouse made Tesla, in return Tesla turned around after his death and promptly erased Westinhouse's entire contribution to the electrification effort all while heaping the glory on himself - it's actually pretty tragic.
      Basically everything positive that popular media says about Tesla is down to other people, mainly Westinghouse and Ferraris.

    • @YourPalHDee
      @YourPalHDee Рік тому +2

      I think he was untethered from what we call "reality". But if we're being honest, our "reality" is very much just a limiting view of the universe in which we try to contextualise EVERYTHING, so that it makes sense from our very limited perspective. I think Tesla was ego-less and therefore able to see limitless realities that he was comfortable knowing he couldn't comprehend.

    • @frederickmfarias3109
      @frederickmfarias3109 11 місяців тому +1

      He needed a lab. For his ideas. He should have kept working with Westinghouse.

    • @afrinchowdhury204
      @afrinchowdhury204 9 місяців тому +1

      well he had OCD

  • @yashgulave8366
    @yashgulave8366 3 роки тому +787

    Tesla was a genius! Not because his inventions were something that no one could make, but exactly because they were very easy to make if you knew which scientific principal i can be applied to which part of an invention.
    I think that's what makes him a genius.

    • @sta1RR
      @sta1RR 3 роки тому +35

      Exactly its so simple but so wisely put together that its just genius.

    • @altergreenhorn
      @altergreenhorn 3 роки тому +19

      Tesla the only known man who had basically the 3D CAD in his head, namely when he was asked why his machinery in almost all of the cases worked out first time.
      He replied because I assembled them in my head and try multiple variations until it work in my head only then I build tem in a RL .
      That statement was on the trail when his lab suddenly burned without any reason (or maybe Edison ...?) with all the documentation in it.
      Tesla was shocked but he rebuild all of his machines out of his head in 2 months, it was miracles for his co workers.

    • @larrystenger1247
      @larrystenger1247 3 роки тому +10

      Way ahead of his day, died a pauper but left riches for all humanity. God Bless.

    • @Bififress0r
      @Bififress0r 3 роки тому +1

      @@GameTesterBootCamp Life.TogglePlugin(true);
      _.... You muffelpuffel!_
      _.... you _*_BAD_*_ muffelpuffel!_ *(ಠ ∩ಠ)*
      _..... and a wonderful sunday, too!_ *ᕕ( ᐛ )ᕗ*

    • @Johny40Se7en
      @Johny40Se7en 3 роки тому +2

      That's actually the definition of a genius, simplifying something for everyone to understand. "In Layman's terms" 👍😅

  • @bread9276
    @bread9276 3 роки тому +551

    idk why this was recommended to me, but this is quite interesting.

    • @theofficialdiamondlou2418
      @theofficialdiamondlou2418 3 роки тому +10

      Same here. Subbed anyhow. Lol

    • @beACodeWala
      @beACodeWala 3 роки тому +5

      Same here! Thats a really good invention but humans cant handle it 😂😂

    • @richardpeterson3753
      @richardpeterson3753 3 роки тому +5

      it was Tesla himself,blessing you with a glimpse into his world lol.jokes aside,this guy needs way more respect paid to him than he has had.

    • @sMoKeN904
      @sMoKeN904 3 роки тому +2

      Same and subbed, yee yee

    • @judicatorhurayth1927
      @judicatorhurayth1927 3 роки тому +2

      Indeed. Now i can make my turbine.

  • @davidbarr707
    @davidbarr707 3 роки тому +412

    Finally someone fully explained why we don't use Tesla turbines in powerhouses. I work on steam turbines in the powerhouses during shutdowns. Most of the engineers I have talked with didn't even know what a Tesla turbine was, let alone why we didn't use them.

    • @jerometruitt2731
      @jerometruitt2731 3 роки тому +23

      That might change once material science improves.

    • @vasiliansotirov6976
      @vasiliansotirov6976 3 роки тому +7

      Why not use gearing to lower the rpms

    • @altergreenhorn
      @altergreenhorn 3 роки тому +60

      Tesla the only known man who had basically the 3D CAD in his head, namely when he was asked why his machinery in almost all of the cases worked out first time. He replied because I assembled them in my head and try multiple variations until it work in my head only then I build tem in a RL .
      That statement was on the trail when his lab suddenly burned without any reason (Edison ..? ) with all the documentation in it.
      Tesla was shocked but he rebuild all of his machines out of his head in 2 months, it was a real miracle for his co workers, they wrote later that this was basicaly impossible task it should take 2 years not 2 months

    • @altergreenhorn
      @altergreenhorn 3 роки тому +3

      @justan idiot your nick suit you

    • @bobstratton6362
      @bobstratton6362 3 роки тому +11

      @@vasiliansotirov6976 Because it’s not the output that is the issue. It is the speed of the disc to achieve maximum efficiency.

  • @cloudedarctrooper
    @cloudedarctrooper 2 роки тому +374

    He created something so powerful and effective that it was too much for the materials he was using.
    Nikola Tesla may have had OCD, but he was the Chad of engineering.

    • @APBCTechnique
      @APBCTechnique 2 роки тому +3

      Who’s Chad ?

    • @djocharablaikan8601
      @djocharablaikan8601 2 роки тому +44

      @@APBCTechnique Chad Tesla vs Incel Edison

    • @__-ic7si
      @__-ic7si 2 роки тому +3

      @@djocharablaikan8601 yesyeysyyeyysysysyeyysyszysyy

    • @C.R.5
      @C.R.5 2 роки тому +4

      Chad inspected Chad approved

    • @claironaut
      @claironaut 2 роки тому +3

      CHAD TESLA

  • @IDCarlosC
    @IDCarlosC 3 роки тому +415

    If Tesla was alive today what wonders could he come up with?
    This guy was a true genius.

    • @patricialloyd866
      @patricialloyd866 3 роки тому +20

      Yes true comment, but they wait till he's dead before he becomes famous, after taking his ideas from becoming world known

    • @aqualtor9696
      @aqualtor9696 3 роки тому +7

      probably we can play game with quantum computer with no electrical bill XD

    • @El_Chompo
      @El_Chompo 3 роки тому +7

      He had vision flash into his mind of perfectly created machines. Amazing.

    • @njones420
      @njones420 3 роки тому +33

      He'd slap Elon Musk, and point out electric cars were common in the 1890s.

    • @ssbmemes2492
      @ssbmemes2492 3 роки тому

      Conquer whole universe finding 👽

  • @JaredLucas
    @JaredLucas 3 роки тому +352

    That was an excellent way to explain boundary layer theory in a simple manner! The rest of the video is also great.

    • @gadgalleto5906
      @gadgalleto5906 2 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/YPQFtNxsp-0/v-deo.html

    • @Praveen501
      @Praveen501 2 роки тому +1

      👍

    • @noob-kun7768
      @noob-kun7768 2 роки тому

      Can we dam a shallow sea and build water based power plant?

    • @someotherdude
      @someotherdude 2 роки тому +2

      'True dat. Very effective animation and narration.

    • @michaelpressman7203
      @michaelpressman7203 2 роки тому

      Nowadays the blades could be made out of titanium which is used in jet engines and turbines which can hold a great deal of heat without distortion and coming apart and allows you to push the boundaries and hold together have a good day

  • @ronaldroberts7221
    @ronaldroberts7221 3 роки тому +266

    Some concrete pumps use Tesla discs because they can flow chunky materials, as long as a certain size of grain is not exceeded.

    • @youtubeistyrannical1787
      @youtubeistyrannical1787 3 роки тому +5

      The grain thickness can't go past the thickness of the space between the disks

    • @Xayuap
      @Xayuap 3 роки тому +4

      wow, thats a solid pump

    • @the_flying_fox
      @the_flying_fox 3 роки тому

      Don't they use rotary pumps for that?

    • @youtubeistyrannical1787
      @youtubeistyrannical1787 3 роки тому +2

      @@the_flying_fox yeah I'm pretty sure.. you can't even find T pumps on the used market, I dont know where a concrete company would get them

    • @ronaldroberts7221
      @ronaldroberts7221 3 роки тому +2

      @@the_flying_fox Yes, many concrete pumps are rotary.

  • @maruti_rakshit9867
    @maruti_rakshit9867 2 роки тому +271

    Being a civil engineer who has studied fluid mechanics for 3 semester I am totally flabbergatsed by Tesla. This is mind blowing..

    • @4Everlast
      @4Everlast 2 роки тому +1

      Tesla was robbed by anyone and everyone he came in contact with, incredible man, out of this world.

    • @thorjohnson5237
      @thorjohnson5237 2 роки тому +15

      Heh... look at all his stuff regarding vibration. Electrical guy, sure... but he practically invented vibration analysis...

    • @noob-kun7768
      @noob-kun7768 2 роки тому

      Can we dam a shallow sea and build water based power plant?

    • @4Everlast
      @4Everlast 2 роки тому +5

      @@noob-kun7768 There are power plants that work on the sea tides, rising and lowering, if that's what you mean?

    • @juglansregia1433
      @juglansregia1433 2 роки тому +8

      That's cause you are studying a religion not science.

  • @AethernaLuxen
    @AethernaLuxen 3 роки тому +1155

    When your idea is so great, not even your era's best resources can't withstand its strength

    • @johnkrappweis7367
      @johnkrappweis7367 3 роки тому +79

      I am reminded of the movie “Iron Man 2” where Howard Stark designs the mega-molecule but he just doesn’t have the technology to make it himself so he leaves it up to Tony to complete.

    • @mikesteffensen6017
      @mikesteffensen6017 3 роки тому +83

      To be fair, that can be said about many things. "If only i could build a material stronger than any other known material, my invention would work". Right?

    • @kurokamireaper3761
      @kurokamireaper3761 3 роки тому +12

      @@mikesteffensen6017 "How many inventions that require you to say that exist currently as concepts brought up by humans?" would be a nice question.

    • @sycho-tech5104
      @sycho-tech5104 3 роки тому +43

      That’s the same problem as now. We can make the small scale ones work with modern materials, but we still can’t use them for their intended Purpose of powering homes and cities.
      Their ‘Impossible’ not because it can’t be done, but because we don’t have a strong material to withstand the rotational force at that scale.
      He literally invented something around 100 years ago, that wear still around 100 years from being able to properly use.

    • @daveyjones5702
      @daveyjones5702 3 роки тому +23

      @@mikesteffensen6017 with the right nonexistent materials one could actually make a perpetual motion machine.

  • @jamesfrancis303
    @jamesfrancis303 3 роки тому +713

    “Engineering impossibility” is another way to say “we haven’t figured it out yet”

    • @viktor1496
      @viktor1496 3 роки тому +26

      If your invention can't even be realized more than 100 years later and by the time it WOULD become feasible, it would be obsolete, then your invention is useless for practical application.

    • @gregheffly
      @gregheffly 3 роки тому +38

      No, it's a way of saying it's not worth the effort.
      We can suppose there's a material yet to be invented that would support the RPM needed to make these work. If we have to do 30 years of RnD to find it the project isn't worth doing.
      Items like parachutes were mathematical sounds in Leonardo da Vinci's time. Yet it took modern materials to make it. No one sat down and tried to make the idea work. The original project was forgotten in time.
      This too was a project forgotten to time.
      Many engineering projects are physically possible but not worth the effort. Engineering isn't physics, it's applied science and the human part application is important.

    • @viktor1496
      @viktor1496 3 роки тому +5

      @@gregheffly With the exception that in this case, If we would be able to create materials strong enough to withstand the RPM.....this kind of turbine would be obsolete. A parachute hasn't become obsolete because a fitting material was found and is hence a bad analogy.

    • @danielmorton9956
      @danielmorton9956 3 роки тому +3

      ​@@gregheffly Da Vinci's parachute was terrible and not used. Other inventors actually took his design and improved upon it, shortly after his time. Parachutes needed both better designs and motivation. They didn't understand the physics yet, and it wasn't until basic fluid mechanics was developed in the 18th century as well as hot air balloons that the modern design was attempted.
      I don't think this was forgotten to time, because its the limit of the angling, but you are completely right about the physically possible part.
      The other question is why do we want that level of RPM? It would induce efficiency on an industrial applications further down the line. To me it sounds like it would have more use in micro-form factors outside of steam where this would pick up efficiency again.

    • @gregheffly
      @gregheffly 3 роки тому

      the premise behind da Vinci's parachute was using logs to form a support structure foe the wind to catch and be buffered through a funnel hole.
      that kind of idea for a parachute is long dead. the funnel hole was neat and taken but the support structure was terrible, and as time marched on we found out that a good design will capture air as its own support structure.
      this is a friction turbine, like the old parachute, there's an idea taken from this, then the rest is discarded. low slip boundary layers sounds is a good idea. the rest is trash

  • @dynamiklp
    @dynamiklp 3 роки тому +870

    Imagine building something so efficient, that it breaks itself apart

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 3 роки тому +95

      Making out of control machines is easy... but you need to be Tesla to be hailed for it in the XXI century.
      It's frightening how ole Nikola (a gifted engineer and a lousy "scientist" with mental issues) has gone from unjustly unknown to a cringey and hilarious Pop semi-God in just a couple decades.

    • @dynamiklp
      @dynamiklp 3 роки тому +4

      @@TheChzoronzon yes

    • @jasongamer8649
      @jasongamer8649 3 роки тому +18

      @@TheChzoronzon Could you expand on what you mean by lousy "scientist" when it comes to him? I'm curious to hear more.

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 3 роки тому +31

      @@jasongamer8649 He didn't find a single equation in his entire life, nor wrote any scientific paper of note, nor had any rigurosity in his experiments, or in expending the money of his patrons in a sensible way.
      Later in his life, he became the laughing stock of the scientific comunity, refusing to accept basic concepts as... the damn electron!! Of course, forget about relativity or quantum mecanics, both of which he utterly refused to believe in too...hilarity ensued
      Nowadays, any second year electric engineer knows an order of magnitude more about electromagnetism than ole Nicola
      Even the Wikipedia calls him: "an inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, and futurist" but not a "scientist"
      When Dale Alfrey found his lost journals, they included gems like " that in 1899, while in Colorado Springs, Tesla intercepted communications from EXTRATERRESTIAL BEINGS (lol) who were secretly controlling mankind."
      etc, etc

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 3 роки тому +10

      @Uncle Nik awww what a pristine example of butthurt projection... must be the aliens, controlling your mind hahaha

  • @kamalladha6198
    @kamalladha6198 2 роки тому +34

    The video animation designs produced are just superb. Thanks to the Lesics team.

  • @MrAdzielinski
    @MrAdzielinski 3 роки тому +196

    If you go further down the rabbit hole of his patents you’ll find that he started chasing the efficiency, adding Venturi system that would drop pressure on the output and increase pressure on inputs.

    • @ceejayc6502
      @ceejayc6502 3 роки тому +46

      @@1islam1 What is a non-sequitur?

    • @danielwilkinson1024
      @danielwilkinson1024 3 роки тому +10

      @@1islam1 How is your salvation achieved through Islam? (chapter,verse, book of where its located/described)
      Do you believe Jesus was born of a virgin, died on the cross, and was raised again 3 days later?

    • @FireBeam
      @FireBeam 3 роки тому +26

      @@1islam1
      🤢🤢🤢🤮

    • @triptank7857
      @triptank7857 3 роки тому +17

      Never mind islam everyone
      Get back too the first comment haha ignore the trolley trolls

    • @madenlaur5073
      @madenlaur5073 3 роки тому +8

      @@1islam1 how is this even related to science 🤦...

  • @muhammmadzainriaz4572
    @muhammmadzainriaz4572 3 роки тому +3016

    Edison after seeing this: Edison's turbine

    • @MrPorsche91730
      @MrPorsche91730 3 роки тому +85

      Ill give you a gazillion dollars for it

    • @natteft6593
      @natteft6593 3 роки тому +42

      This turbine has much lower efficiency than any modern turbines. The problem was that at that time there were no technology to produce the blade turbines

    • @DozenDeuce
      @DozenDeuce 3 роки тому +16

      @@natteft6593 Oh really? The guys at iEnergySupply beg to differ. What this vid doesn’t say is Tesla said that pulling a vacuum on the exhaust increases efficiency by 50-100%! When used in a small form factor, in combination with a simple but specific generator geometry that uses non-ferrous magnets, this technology is absolutely perfect for every home to generate all the energy it would ever need using warm water.
      ua-cam.com/users/Notime500

    • @1SweetPete
      @1SweetPete 3 роки тому +26

      @@DozenDeuce pulling a vacuum costs energy, which reduces the performance. I'm not sure how the energy is meant to be enhanced more than the forces are offering.

    • @v1asec
      @v1asec 3 роки тому +7

      @@1SweetPete I guess in space, vacuum would be no problem to achieve. The problem would be that you are leaking steam in space :)

  • @Skullkid16945
    @Skullkid16945 3 роки тому +404

    If we had time machines, I would love to use one to bring Tesla to the future so he could continue his experiments with new tech. Man was a legend of his time and I bet if he lived today he would make something even greater.

    • @MrMeow-iq7kq
      @MrMeow-iq7kq 3 роки тому +26

      I suspect the technologies of the future would be too much for him actually. Guy had a history of taking credit for others work and doing things entirely freestyle without actually understanding what he was working with.
      Not to say he was entirely clueless,... the guy was brilliant. But in a mad scientist sort of way. Thats probably why people like him,.. he is far from the standard when it comes to brilliant minds.
      But he'd blow himself up without a doubt.
      Although I do have to admit, I am also curious what he would come up with before he met his certain doom.
      To amend what I said tho, out of fairness... most inventors and brilliant minds of the past, and even today, stole the ideas and/or work of others and claimed it as their own. So take it however you will :/

    • @greenwave819
      @greenwave819 3 роки тому +11

      I already went back in time and accomplished this feat. Ofc Tesla changed his name so as not to seem creepy being alive/dead at the same time. He now goes by Mike Lindell. I hope this helps you sleep better!

    • @jacquelinebrunder2384
      @jacquelinebrunder2384 3 роки тому +7

      No one has time machines as time doesn't exist except in people's heads. People use pattern machines to go back, electro-magnetic-spin pattern machines, as in what all matter is made of, the concepts of the electric, magnetic and spin fields knotted. Pons and Fleischman were unwittingly unwinding matter in their "jam jars" by closing off their rods from the rest of the multi-verse via these three fields, the electric and magnetic fields were partially locked out using the rod currents and the bubbling liquid shut down the spin part of the field and so the material partially unwound releasing its energy. The reason protons don't decay as the present particle theory says they should is because they are maintained by their connection to the rest of the multi-verse but shield them magnetically, electrically and spin-wise and they disappear across to the other side of the mirror to their anti-proton life going backwards in pattern and release a puff of energy in this reflection going forward. The same thing happens with people who "shuffle off this mortal coil" and go back in pattern in a never ending cycle of death in this reflection followed by rebirth on the other side and on and on and on. Tesla would understand it but Einstein was as thick as two short planks. Religion is about freeing us from this cycle and bringing us all to the here and now.

    • @ludost5178
      @ludost5178 3 роки тому +2

      i would introduce him to a magic substance called weed,he probably tried it anyways,his best friend was Twain,and he loved,as he called it "hasheesh" which was a very concentrated marijuana thingy....

    • @staroceans8677
      @staroceans8677 3 роки тому +1

      Agreed

  • @isthattrue1083
    @isthattrue1083 2 роки тому +89

    I think Tesla's idea was that given sufficient materials capable of taking such forces it could achieve 97% efficiency.

    • @reclusiarchgrimaldus1269
      @reclusiarchgrimaldus1269 2 роки тому +1

      John 3:16 NIV
      For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 🙏!!!!

    • @noob-kun7768
      @noob-kun7768 2 роки тому

      Can we dam a shallow sea and build water based power plant?

    • @SenorZorrozzz
      @SenorZorrozzz Рік тому

      My thoughts as well…..

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Рік тому +6

      Engineering mostly about doing the thing with the materials you have, not the materials you want.

    • @mattbarker1411
      @mattbarker1411 Рік тому

      He never produced anything that worked.......

  • @VJ_Nic
    @VJ_Nic 3 роки тому +262

    You had explained the boundary layer concept so easily my professors can’t even get near.

    • @v.n.sukumarviruputturnagar1365
      @v.n.sukumarviruputturnagar1365 3 роки тому +7

      This is the standard explanation for BL in any textbook.

    • @Ketchup_And_Rice
      @Ketchup_And_Rice 3 роки тому +5

      I've learned boundary layer from culinary while explaining viscosity

    • @VJ_Nic
      @VJ_Nic 3 роки тому +9

      @@v.n.sukumarviruputturnagar1365 yup sir but with all respect I want to say that we all have textbooks to learn and understand anything in this world even rocket 🚀 science but if everyone can do that we never need teachers.
      But if not everyone some still needs teachers and professors to understand the concepts.
      Neither Every student is self made brilliant nor every professor is a brilliant teacher.

    • @timothyandrewnielsen
      @timothyandrewnielsen 3 роки тому +1

      Are you black?

    • @1GamersRewind
      @1GamersRewind 3 роки тому +5

      @@timothyandrewnielsen are you a white incel?

  • @burtonkent4549
    @burtonkent4549 3 роки тому +38

    This actually helped me figure out pressed fuse glass. You can make glass really thin by pressing it between two kiln shelves, but the thinner it gets, the more it pulls on the kiln shelves, and the more it picks up kiln wash/kiln paper (intended to keep glass from just gluing to the kiln shelves. 3/16" or 4.5 mm can be pressed without destroying the kiln wash coating. 2.5mm cannot.
    Glass does have a surface tension and "wants" to be about 6 or 7mm thick.

    • @RedSeedlesslive
      @RedSeedlesslive 3 роки тому +1

      Maybe float your glass on a molten metal? I work glass mostly on a propane/oxygen torch, have tried a little fusing here and there. At some point I saw some videos or toured an old factory (memory is faulty). I think they used lead or tin .

    • @burtonkent4549
      @burtonkent4549 3 роки тому

      ​@@RedSeedlesslive The surface tension determines glass thickness. Floating on metal will make it 6-7mm thick.

    • @greenwave819
      @greenwave819 3 роки тому +1

      Elon Musk might be able to help you. He knows a lot about glass thickness. He even demonstrated this on a truck named after our man Tesla. What a coincidence!

  • @AtariKafa
    @AtariKafa 3 роки тому +1788

    TESLA : "It seems that I have always been ahead of my time. I had to wait nineteen years before Niagara was harnessed by my system, fifteen years before the basic inventions for wireless which I gave to the world in 1893 were applied universally."
    we have to wait more for Tesla Turbine because we dont have strong enough material this monster :)

    • @Gol_D_Roger_The_Pirate_King
      @Gol_D_Roger_The_Pirate_King 3 роки тому +58

      Coat it with graphene problem solve.

    • @demonwing9431
      @demonwing9431 3 роки тому +68

      @@Gol_D_Roger_The_Pirate_King not strong enough

    • @cg56578
      @cg56578 3 роки тому +109

      @@emDce Unfortunately, this is all by design. As long as the population fights each other, they leave their slave masters alone.

    • @SapioiT
      @SapioiT 3 роки тому +37

      @@cg56578 The tax farmes have gotten quite efficient.

    • @splitframe
      @splitframe 3 роки тому +13

      There is a new material das experiences no heat expansion from 4 to over 1000k. This could aid smaller tesla engines to work, but not big ones.

  • @devijankowicz9491
    @devijankowicz9491 2 роки тому +1

    Quick comment from a Psychology professor entirely ignorant of engineering principles. The graphics of this video are stunning, and make the whole process crystal clear. Thank you!

  • @AmbroseBoaBowie
    @AmbroseBoaBowie 3 роки тому +446

    I love how Nikola Tesla’s Inventions can all be summed up as “ it works to good to work practically”

    • @sevencostanza3931
      @sevencostanza3931 3 роки тому +30

      If it was practical to apply that that would make it good, otherwise no good. That is the whole point. Many inventions are out there that are great theoretically, but without the materiel science to bring it to life, none of these inventions are practical. My friend with Phd in Physics tells me this.

    • @AmbroseBoaBowie
      @AmbroseBoaBowie 3 роки тому +8

      @@sevencostanza3931 Yeah but Tesla sort of an bodies that way of thinking

    • @blainevans9237
      @blainevans9237 3 роки тому +44

      @@sevencostanza3931 the hilarious thing is that all of teslas claims have been-or are in process of being-proven. The dude was tony starks dad, ahead of his time, been dead for years and we are still getting schooled by him. You’re on a tesla device just by sending a message.

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 3 роки тому +15

      @@sevencostanza3931 "My friend with Phd in Physics tells me this." yea and you forgot to mention that noone knows him contrary to the Tesla...
      Tesla work revolutionized the world, the guy was building RC models in XIX century and there was no material for this type of job.
      Similar story with Wright brothers if everyone would wait for proper parts and proper material we would not be able to do powered flight to this day.
      No to mention that from the video its clear that Tesla designs are used to this day and modern tech depends on his inventions more now that it was during his life...

    • @sevencostanza3931
      @sevencostanza3931 3 роки тому +9

      @@Bialy_1 As stated in the video, many of Tesla's inventions were never developed & cannot be even to day cause of material science. There NOT practical. The main Tesla invention-AC induction motor & A/C power use---was the best invention & of course practical.

  • @siren369xstar8
    @siren369xstar8 3 роки тому +21

    Damn! Serbian people must be really proud of Tesla🤘Greeting from Scandinavia ❤️

    • @Zomebody135
      @Zomebody135 3 роки тому +5

      Yes, after his death they were proud.

    • @clarencegreen3071
      @clarencegreen3071 2 місяці тому

      The international unit of magnetic flux density is the tesla, named in honor of N. Tesla.

  • @Xehemoth
    @Xehemoth 3 роки тому +306

    Its amazing that we are still trying to unlock the potential of someone who lived in the 1800's.

    • @Ureallydontknow
      @Ureallydontknow 3 роки тому +15

      That almost proves that after 200 years the designs were never viable even with all those people trying to make it work.

    • @edhuber3557
      @edhuber3557 3 роки тому +56

      @@Ureallydontknow
      1) Not 200 years. Tesla as 1856-1943.
      2) Many of Tesla's designs were viable. This one ... somewhat (as stated in video). However, Tesla had huge impact on workable designs still in use...for example with AC power and motors.
      3) One of the remarkable aspects of Tesla's career was that he did much of the creative work solo.....in his case it was remarkably less a case of 'all those people trying to make it work'.

    • @xsystem1
      @xsystem1 3 роки тому +10

      reading your comment, I remember the great pyramid of egypt. until now we can't actually point out how they exactly did it

    • @VerifyTheTruth
      @VerifyTheTruth 3 роки тому +3

      @@Ureallydontknow He Was Smart Enough To Compartmentalize.

    • @Xehemoth
      @Xehemoth 3 роки тому +17

      @@xsystem1 there is a big difference between not understanding how things were made and not understanding how to use his designs to improve modern technology. Imagine how far behind we would be if not for AC or the induction motor.

  • @Baneslayer
    @Baneslayer Рік тому +3

    Tesla is probably my favorite human of all time. This man is the ultimate legend.

  • @JakeSmith-ux1xk
    @JakeSmith-ux1xk 3 роки тому +165

    One of the smartest men in the world.

  • @themaligos_
    @themaligos_ 3 роки тому +375

    "...engineering impossibility!" something Tesla would not say.

    • @danigui8573
      @danigui8573 3 роки тому +24

      It is not impossible, they simple don't have the materials to support the high RPM.

    • @przemekkamieniarz
      @przemekkamieniarz 3 роки тому +5

      @@danigui8573 Turbo in cars can spin up to 200,000. turnover

    • @ArgyleBitstream
      @ArgyleBitstream 3 роки тому +21

      @@przemekkamieniarz Turbos aren't meters wide like power plant turbines.

    • @przemekkamieniarz
      @przemekkamieniarz 3 роки тому +5

      @@ArgyleBitstream But the power plant's tine does not have to reach 50,000 revolutions. Turbines in airplanes also make a lot of revolutions

    • @CrazyIvan865
      @CrazyIvan865 3 роки тому +1

      Um... Do an industrial application of power generating you wouldnt "NEED" a disk that is 3 meters in radius. You would aimply need more cells in an array of .3-1 meter turbines. Duh!. And we have the material tech now days to make such things. The reason why this is being rejected is because Nuclear would be almost obsolete if they started making hydro electric of coal burning steam electrical generation.imagine, if you will, having a car where you use a small pump the supple plain and simple water through one of these ultra high efficiency turbines. Thich then turned and generated a massive amount of electricity. Which, with modern, science, technology, electrical etc, would produce more than enough energy to turn the motor which turned the driveshaft... Which tas an integral part of the pump. So basically, the pump moves the water through the turbines, the turbines generate electricity which runs the motor which moves the drive shaft to the wheels, which moves twater through the pump.

  • @kentuckyblugrass
    @kentuckyblugrass 3 роки тому +102

    Something even more incredible that was illustrated in this video but not talked about is the "Tesla Valve". This man was an absolute genius.

    • @indarvishnoi2389
      @indarvishnoi2389 3 роки тому

      The channel already have a video on it

    • @suzesiviter6083
      @suzesiviter6083 2 роки тому +3

      Yes, simplicity like that blows my mind. Math has in some degree destroyed the Teslas of the world, its made science less accessible to the budding geniuses.

    • @aceman0000099
      @aceman0000099 2 роки тому +2

      The Tesla valve is less impressive than this. The valve does not fully work.

  • @Afro.G.
    @Afro.G. 2 роки тому +87

    If only Tesla could've lived the life he deserved instead of being destroyed by Edison's government connections. Our world would be AMAZING!

    • @luka9227
      @luka9227 2 роки тому +3

      Ikr, it would be so different from today and I believe this world would also be a lot better. He once stated too that in order to grow the overall human research, we ought to look into things spiritually and not just materially, so I believe a lot of things wouldn’t be that bad today

    • @Ken19700
      @Ken19700 2 роки тому

      Tesla was just a poor business man. No Edison conspiracy necessary.

    • @Afro.G.
      @Afro.G. 2 роки тому +1

      @@Ken19700 do some more research. You're right about that as well but Edison for sure had some government connections helping Jim out because he was an American and Nikola was a Croatian immigrant. The U.S. was a super nationalist country back in the day.

    • @chalkandcheese1868
      @chalkandcheese1868 2 роки тому

      @@Afro.G. Looking at UA-cam videos and reading conspiracy theories is not research. No one in the US cared that Einstein was an immigrant, or Elon Musk for that matter. Read a book.

    • @HypnosisBear
      @HypnosisBear 2 роки тому +1

      So so true buddy...!!!

  • @pashapasovski5860
    @pashapasovski5860 3 роки тому +226

    In a interview Tesla was asked, what was his greatest contribution to the World! Tesla said, my contribution is for future generations, a 100 years from now, people will understand my contribution!
    That interview was in 1920s

    • @ReneArtoisMr
      @ReneArtoisMr 3 роки тому +1

      Sad that Elon Musk and Tesla never have met each other …

    • @xiro6
      @xiro6 3 роки тому +10

      @@ReneArtoisMr I really hope you mean to see Elon marketing the Tesla inventions and solving his needs and not that Elon is an inventor.

    • @ZOCCOK
      @ZOCCOK 3 роки тому +36

      @Anno Elon Musk and Tesla are fundamentally different people.
      Tesla is an Brilliant Inventor while Elon is a Clever Salesman.
      Both are very good at what they do but quite different from each other

    • @ReneArtoisMr
      @ReneArtoisMr 3 роки тому

      @@xiro6 being an inventor is nice, but achieving something is great.

    • @snek9353
      @snek9353 3 роки тому +29

      @@ReneArtoisMr Yeah I think Telsa would hate Elon, he'd see Elon as another Edison. Now Nikola Tesla and Howard Hughes, those two would have gotten along fantastically.

  • @googlesai1
    @googlesai1 3 роки тому +46

    This channel is awesome to many engineers man...

    • @notsocrazyjohn5348
      @notsocrazyjohn5348 3 роки тому +1

      Hi, just a question. 0.4mm gap is mentioned, where did this dimension come from. The research I have seen indicates 0.5mm at low speeds up to 1mm over 40/45K RPM with anything under 0.5mm. .decreasing output. Cheers John

    • @MrTech93
      @MrTech93 3 роки тому

      hello

  • @admiralcapn
    @admiralcapn 3 роки тому +75

    This looks like a great starting point for some Sci-Fi where we have a material strong enough for Mach 13 spin rates and can get incredible efficiencies from this turbine.

    • @techmaster6587
      @techmaster6587 3 роки тому +2

      Right

    • @justingrey6008
      @justingrey6008 3 роки тому +4

      Look into the speeds jet engine operate at. Spinning a simple disk at a high rpm, by comparison, is easy.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 3 роки тому +2

      I refuse to believe this as long as Tesla gets even one penny of Government funding.

    • @isthattrue
      @isthattrue 3 роки тому +1

      What interesting plot can you make from that starting point?

    • @ChesterZirawin
      @ChesterZirawin 3 роки тому +2

      @@justingrey6008 Yes, but you forget to take in to account what he said in the video. In order to use these efficiently, the discs would need to be 3 meters, jet engine doesn't use a 3 meter disc to operate, they use fans and they usually spin at around 3k rpm, not 50k

  • @samakhfagy
    @samakhfagy 2 роки тому +3

    OMG !!! THE ANIMATION !! THE PHYSICS!! ITS JUST PERFECTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!!!!!!! RESPECT !! GREAT JOB !!😍👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 that's it I'm subscribing

  • @teslaromans1023
    @teslaromans1023 3 роки тому +8

    Can we take a moment to appreciate how GORGEOUS the animation is ???

    • @jamesconner3437
      @jamesconner3437 3 роки тому

      Agreed , just simple plus effective enough for everyone to follow, and for most - get the point.

  • @TheJuggtron
    @TheJuggtron 3 роки тому +636

    I hear the words "engineering impossibility" and my jimmies are rustled

    • @NeoTechni
      @NeoTechni 3 роки тому +52

      same. Time will always defeat that argument

    • @TheCrimsonBlade2
      @TheCrimsonBlade2 3 роки тому +16

      @@NeoTechni Okay: Mach 50k is an engineering impossibility incompatible with human existence in earth's atmosphere. Rustle.

    • @NeoTechni
      @NeoTechni 3 роки тому +51

      @@TheCrimsonBlade2 1) he said mach 18, not 50k iirc. 50k is the RPM he gave, you might be getting them mixed up. Massive difference
      2) human history is full of things people said were impossible. Hence the previous poster's comment.

    • @TheJuggtron
      @TheJuggtron 3 роки тому +5

      @@TheCrimsonBlade2 OK, Mr Pizza Cutter

    • @lightaces
      @lightaces 3 роки тому +14

      Can you imagine the damage caused by a Mach 13 disc failure, though!!!

  • @joshmiller1928
    @joshmiller1928 3 роки тому +118

    Too bad they didn't have this in school when I was a kid. I would have listened and learnt from this more than a gvt. Worker

    • @TibiSitibira
      @TibiSitibira 3 роки тому +2

      shhhhhhh... .. they didn't banned toys in the '50 s because they were dangerous..can you image if everyone had GPHS-RTG power at home by now....
      b̶͍̆̔̐̾u̷̧̗̫̹͚̳̩͚̥̍͠ ţ̶̳͙̳͔̻̩͕͈̻͇͂̂͆̋̕͝ ...ÿ̵͍̗̖͖̙͚̖͔͔̦̣́̐̿̄͛̐͝ͅaa̸̧̿. ...knowing & believing are also different things...if it was so simple.... they all can become doctors or shamans just over night....
      atiki taki tiki tu
      🌏 📡🌏 👣🕖 💎👽☠☼☾☄ゞど・ㇺㇾㇽ₪𝖎𝖙𝖎𝖇𝖎𝖗𝖆₪なめㇺㇾㇽ✶☥✨🌛🌄⊀✶⋊🐺🐾♓️☆🐜🐜🐫▲▴◭

    • @lrshafted1283
      @lrshafted1283 3 роки тому +3

      @@TibiSitibira all we get are books with text with 5-10% information. Its sucks to be a visual typ when you cant use it. Thats why i love this channel

    • @smartpmark
      @smartpmark 3 роки тому

      No you wouldnt. You were uninterested to begin with. You only find this interesting because you are watching youtube videos at your leisure. There are so many things being thought in school that are interesting and yet here you are wanting to add some more like the rest of the people saying "they should have thought this in school". No thank you! Albert einstein, and the rest of the famouse scientist are enough for us. I dont want to graduate highschool at the age of 50.

  • @RedfishCarolina
    @RedfishCarolina 2 роки тому +97

    I cannot imagine how terrifying it would be to be near 3 meter disks spinning at 50 grand.

    • @khymaaren
      @khymaaren 2 роки тому +8

      50 grand? Those are some expensive disks.

    • @RedfishCarolina
      @RedfishCarolina 2 роки тому +20

      @@khymaaren Disks that could go 50k rpm at 3m diameter would cost a hell of a lot more than $50k

    • @NibNa5ty
      @NibNa5ty 2 роки тому +1

      pretty sure the Gs on that shit would be way too high

    • @walkertongdee
      @walkertongdee 2 роки тому +2

      @@khymaaren fifty thousand rpm duh.

    • @khymaaren
      @khymaaren 2 роки тому +2

      @@walkertongdee "Grand" means a thousand unit of money. It's not used to mean simply "thousand". It's sarcasm. Duh...

  • @Tletna
    @Tletna 3 роки тому +413

    This is an engineering challenge, not an impossibility.

    • @Sgt_Glory
      @Sgt_Glory 3 роки тому +8

      Thank you for saying that, beat me to it 😉

    • @kenwittlief255
      @kenwittlief255 3 роки тому +24

      engineers live between the rock of the laws of physics, and the stone wall of what the customer wants - literally a rock and a hard place, and its easy to get crushed between them.
      Just because something is possible, that does not mean it can be practical, or cost effective compared to another approach.
      For example, in the 1950s we thought in the future we will have flying cars and personal robots.
      We dont have personal robots like Rosy on the Jetsons, but we do have all sorts of computer controlled devices that take messages, look up information for us, wash and dry our clothes, cook our food and make bread without intervention, control the speed and braking and to some extent the steering of our vehicles (cars, trains, jets, helicopters...)
      We dont have one robot that does all those things, like Robbie in Forbidden Planet. Instead we have many devices that do things for us, so we dont have to.

    • @CBielski87
      @CBielski87 3 роки тому +4

      more about da $$$ impossibility than physical metallurgy

    • @sycho-tech5104
      @sycho-tech5104 3 роки тому +2

      Their ‘Impossible’ not because it can’t be done, but because we don’t have a strong material to withstand the rotational force at that scale.

    • @mrlk665
      @mrlk665 3 роки тому +3

      @@sycho-tech5104 or because we have to find solutions to this problem in some way

  • @FilterYT
    @FilterYT 3 роки тому +11

    That was the best simple explanation of a tesla turbine that I have seen, I'm glad you also explored the engineering challenges. Thanks for the video!

  • @maddmatt55
    @maddmatt55 3 роки тому +28

    I am a degree plus qualified mechanical design engineer and this description of the effects is far and away the best I have ever heard! I have subscribed and I’m looking forward to seeing many more of your videos. The only thing I would say is that whilst most people understand the idea of centrifugal force it doesn’t exist! As I was taught at university it’s centripetal force acting towards the centre of the rotation but as the diameter decreases so the force therefore it is greatest at the maximum diameter!

    • @noob-kun7768
      @noob-kun7768 2 роки тому

      Can we dam a shallow sea and build water based power plant?

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman 2 роки тому

      Nobody gives a fuck about your credentials. Always remember this.

  • @americanboy5064
    @americanboy5064 2 роки тому +19

    I wish Tesla had not been beat out by Edison. We would be way ahead of where we are now in technology. We should test and investigate all of his notes, inventions and research. He was a genius - and competition destroyed him.

    • @oscarlee2889
      @oscarlee2889 2 роки тому

      believe me, not this one would have done it sooner or later

    • @QuesoCookies
      @QuesoCookies 2 роки тому

      No we wouldn't. Almost none of Tesla's inventions actually work in reality. If he'd "beat" Edison, we'd still be scratching our heads trying to make his seemingly genius but practically or literally impossible inventions work rather than having improved the airfoil turbine little by little over the years until we achieved something 95% as good and enjoyed ever-improving lifestyles all the time rather than being stuck waiting around for Tesla's problems to be solved. The vast majority of technological progress has been made in steps, not in breakthroughs.

    • @SixballQ45
      @SixballQ45 8 місяців тому

      @@QuesoCookies youre full of it.. MOST of modern power plants, generation and distribution are ALL Tesla designs..

  • @RoverIAC
    @RoverIAC 3 роки тому +66

    "The Man who Invented the 20th Century" is a great read if you want to know more.

    • @TAZmannTAZ
      @TAZmannTAZ 3 роки тому +1

      no edison invented 20 century, tesla invented 21 century

    • @RoverIAC
      @RoverIAC 3 роки тому +2

      @@TAZmannTAZ actually if you read your history properly Edison stole his DC stuff from Tesla and stole his Film stuff from LaPrince and stole his Electric light stuff from Joseph Swan.
      "Edison, the man who claimed the best inventions of the 19th Century as his own".

  • @donaldbest7621
    @donaldbest7621 3 роки тому +44

    The Tesla turbine was supposed to produce his electrostatic compressional waves, it is necessary to get 30k RPM minimum. I understand now, how this is so much superior to what he was using before.

    • @Amipotsophspond
      @Amipotsophspond 3 роки тому +2

      "electrostatic compressional waves" 4:31 how do those smiling balls hold hands? like what are their hands made of? what did they think those hands were made of in the 1900's? could be thought of as electrostatic forces? at 6:11 that is a pressure wave of steam could someone describe that as "compressional waves"? but your right produce is wrong if you think it means is the end result, it would have been extract or utilize, but if you use the word produce as a method such as the machine by producing a electrostatic compressional waves internally can harvest the energy from the steam, to do this in the best way it must spin at 50,000+ RPM. tesla's design is the "superior" one for efficiency we use we just lack the capability to build it. their is a story where Mozart/Beethoven I forgot which one made some fast music that could not be played on pianos of the time with out breaking them.

    • @donaldbest7621
      @donaldbest7621 3 роки тому +1

      @@Amipotsophspond Tesla’s apparatus for variable high speed frequency was a way of producing high frequency static electric waves. The wheel turned by the turbine would need to have a wider diameter(maybe around 3 feet diameter) , and I believe Tesla said 400 tungsten pins on the outer perimeter, and one(more are possible if the frequency is timed correctly) on the apparatus. The pins should be positioned so that the gap is as small as practicable.
      When the turbine gets the wheel up to 35-50k RPM’s, the frequency would be 400 times greater. The speed of the air controllers the speed of the wheel....the wheel is with a charges, so all tungsten points have potential, only the one closest the opposing pin will discharge.
      In that way speed of the wheel can be maintained indefinitely, and only the friction of the bearings a heat consideration in the making of that high frequency

    • @donaldbest7621
      @donaldbest7621 3 роки тому

      @@Amipotsophspond nothing I have said is commenting on the fluid dynamics explained in this video. Only how this apparatus was incorporated to his other high frequency/potential apparatus.

    • @FireBeam
      @FireBeam 3 роки тому +1

      Like a Van der Graaf static generator?

    • @donaldbest7621
      @donaldbest7621 3 роки тому +2

      @@FireBeam I am not completely sure. You need a flat bifilar, and it should be made to the specs Tesla laid out. I spent two years figuring out how to make a very high quality flat bifilar.
      You need one spark(Tesla defined the spark as a crack- so even the spark from a static electric connection is sufficient), a spark. It can be in a vacuum, and it will take very little energy to initiate the spark. The spark must be interrupted around a million times per minute......well as a starting point. So a wheel that has an RPM of about 15,000-50,000 is of great value. If one affixes 400 tungsten rods of a perfectly even distance, between one another, and from the spark.....and then the air is variable, so the RPM can be varied.

  • @frankobarressi7919
    @frankobarressi7919 3 роки тому +38

    Tesla has got to have been from another planet. That’s the only solution to one person being so ahead of his time with absolutely everything he touched.

    • @barrypascoe960
      @barrypascoe960 3 роки тому +1

      Think along the lines of Quantum Science

    • @probablynotanagent5594
      @probablynotanagent5594 3 роки тому +6

      Also explains why the government seized everything the man invented and kept secret in his safe the day he died. They still haven't released the documents or even General descriptions of the inventions he had in there

    • @lucasljs1545
      @lucasljs1545 3 роки тому

      He was a real Inventor, probably the last one.

    • @probablynotanagent5594
      @probablynotanagent5594 3 роки тому

      @Paul Robert oh. Silly me. Thanks for your well informed and eloquent rebuttal.

  • @RGS1970
    @RGS1970 2 роки тому +7

    What it seems unrealistic now as engineer could be kids play in the future. Tesla still ahead of our current time and we still has long way to go to catch the application of some of his concepts. Best regards and be safe

  • @Lowfategg
    @Lowfategg 3 роки тому +171

    My fluid dynamics homework nightmares have come back...

  • @sonicdewd
    @sonicdewd 3 роки тому +6

    There's genius in Tesla - but there's some genius in such a good demonstration in this video. Hats off to the authors and illustrators.

  • @Calaban619
    @Calaban619 3 роки тому +99

    You know you are onto something interesting when you build something and it OVER performs... It gets TOO fast or TOO strong. When its the material strength of the hardened steel that is holding it back. At that point, whatever it is; can be counted as an engineering marvel.

    • @samueleproiettimicozzi8134
      @samueleproiettimicozzi8134 3 роки тому +7

      @I love you but For overperforming he meant that it was so powerful it didn't even work. It has not to do with expectations but with actual results: Tesla's expectations, as a scientist, was to build something that worked. He did, but worked too much haha

    • @kennethfharkin
      @kennethfharkin 3 роки тому +1

      Engineering is the process of using technology to create the possible. If you come up with something brilliant but it doesn't work it is an engineering failure.

    • @samueleproiettimicozzi8134
      @samueleproiettimicozzi8134 3 роки тому +1

      @@kennethfharkin It actually works though. Certainly it's not about practically using the turbine, but reaching that incredibly high speed. The turbine reaches it, and then starts to break, not allowing it to be used as a turbine.

    • @kennethfharkin
      @kennethfharkin 3 роки тому +3

      @@TheTechmaster1999 Lowering the RPM lowers the efficiency making the design less efficient than a traditional turbine so... not really a solution. If something has to destroy itself at the point where it becomes efficient it really isn't efficient.

    • @kennethfharkin
      @kennethfharkin 3 роки тому +3

      @@samueleproiettimicozzi8134 "It works" isn't exactly accurate. The theory is proven to be sound with efficiency increasing as predicted at higher speeds but the theory falls apart in execution. Tesla's turbine almost certainly never reached the optimal speed and would have destroyed itself well before nearing it. As an engineer myself I refuse to call anything an "engineering marvel" which flat out does not work and this thing doesn't if you are trying to use it as it was intended.
      Now it functions to some degree as a pump depending on the application but I doubt we will ever seen a Tesla turbine operate as people imagine at anywhere near projected efficiency given the material and manufacturing limitations likely to be present for at least another hundred years and if we ever overcome those limitations a more suitable solution will have already be developed.

  • @jasonvincent2367
    @jasonvincent2367 2 роки тому +1

    Best explanation I have seen on this! Thank you!

  • @hopydaddy
    @hopydaddy 3 роки тому +6

    This video is one of the best. The graphics are crisp, colorful and elegant, like the old-school instructional videos of the by-gone era. Produce more videos like this please. This video has Disney-class graphics.

  • @davidnelson5474
    @davidnelson5474 3 роки тому +123

    The Man was pure Genius. Edison ripped him off.

    • @soylentpie2903
      @soylentpie2903 3 роки тому +16

      Edison ripped off a lot of inventors.

    • @lumberluc
      @lumberluc 3 роки тому +5

      Patent Jacker at the finest.

    • @boblewis5558
      @boblewis5558 3 роки тому +7

      Edison was a charlatan, a tinkerer and a thief! None of those attributes endear him to most engineers, and certainly NOT to me!

    • @lumberluc
      @lumberluc 3 роки тому +3

      @@boblewis5558 The only thing Edison did inspire, the businessman.

    • @sergeyromanov5560
      @sergeyromanov5560 3 роки тому +1

      nonsense for which you will never be able to provide any evidence

  • @mattschm5486
    @mattschm5486 3 роки тому +64

    Tesla was a genius. Probably one of the most underrated/unknown scientist in the general public compared to the impact of his inventions

    • @ehomelessvillageidiot3051
      @ehomelessvillageidiot3051 3 роки тому +3

      @Imjust Observing Tesla wasn't the brilliant genius people make him out to be. If this was such an amazing invention, why is it NOT in use anywhere in the US? This WOULD be the best generator for use in hydroelectric plants if it was truly as revolutionary as people claim it is. Please name one thing Tesla invented that has been used in mainstream production anywhere at anytime in history. You can't. None of his parents have ever had any practical or real world value. Nothing he invented remains revolutionary or has any lasting or profound effect on anything.
      Tesla died broke and alone in a hotel room where he was a recluse who believed aliens beamed the ideas in to his head. He had embezzled money from his most wealthy benefactor, diverting funds to other projects which is why he wound up in this position.

    • @akashmuruganandam1462
      @akashmuruganandam1462 3 роки тому +5

      @@ehomelessvillageidiot3051 inventive > Innovative in terms of intellect. Innovative>inventive inn terms of value. And tesla is a genius period

    • @alagui7894
      @alagui7894 3 роки тому +8

      @@ehomelessvillageidiot3051 He invented the AC motor that gives us Alternating current to this day.

    • @nekakonjina6283
      @nekakonjina6283 3 роки тому

      @@ehomelessvillageidiot3051 you do understand that he needed to sell patents to have any money and do you know about alternating current probably not since he invented it and we ARE using it today and it was immposible to make a bigger version of this turbine and you do see that it Is used today but not for their original purpose but instead it Is a pump.

    • @viktor1496
      @viktor1496 3 роки тому +2

      @@alagui7894 One look at the wikipedia page for AC motor will tell you that Tesla wasn't the first by years. Don't get me wrong, he was a gifted inventor and decent engineer but BOY is he overrated in history.

  • @XiaoYueMao
    @XiaoYueMao 2 роки тому +29

    i would argue that teslas efficiency number is correct, just because it cant reach that in practice doesnt change that is its theoretical efficiency, you just need a lighter yet still strong material to make the parts out of, which may be possible in a future alloy

    • @HypnosisBear
      @HypnosisBear 2 роки тому +1

      Yes you're right! I hope we'll be able to achieve it in the future.

    • @leonardonetagamer
      @leonardonetagamer 2 роки тому

      Probably something to do with carbon

    • @joefordney3278
      @joefordney3278 2 роки тому

      We have some lighter and stronger alloys now

    • @ericmol2614
      @ericmol2614 2 роки тому +2

      Yes.
      The guy who made this video is a bit on the negative side.
      I'm an inventor and I don't like to say that it can't be done but how can it be done and try it, see if it works.
      And can't you make smaller ones and string the output together?
      Can't you make room for expansion?
      Can't you find ways to cool it? Use liquid nitrogen to cool it, or ammonia. Ammonia while heated up becomes cold.

  • @LemonsRage
    @LemonsRage 3 роки тому +10

    I love how you go more into the detail with showing graphs and explaing the boundairy layer etc

  • @antonifan51086
    @antonifan51086 3 роки тому +41

    I've been to the river several times, indeed on the edge of the water, the water moves slightly, while in the middle it moves quickly.

    • @bhataabid5630
      @bhataabid5630 3 роки тому +2

      That's why every time person drowns in middle not on boundary

    • @dave-yj9mc
      @dave-yj9mc 3 роки тому +2

      and sometimes it even moves backwards..

    • @plazmica0323
      @plazmica0323 3 роки тому +3

      That happens with blood inside circulation too.

    • @bhataabid5630
      @bhataabid5630 3 роки тому +2

      @@plazmica0323 indeed

  • @trouaconti7812
    @trouaconti7812 3 роки тому +345

    Poor Nikola, he was born a few centuries ahead of time. He’s one of the most misunderstood geniuses

    • @CastleKnight7
      @CastleKnight7 3 роки тому +4

      As a member of The Domain with the bulk of his spiritual being on Space Station 33 in the asteroid belt at the time of animating the body of Tesla, it’s perfectly natural what he did. Just imagine what you could do with your spiritual memories from previous lives intact.

    • @_j_t_p_
      @_j_t_p_ 3 роки тому +28

      @@CastleKnight7 go outside.

    • @Diviance
      @Diviance 3 роки тому +12

      A few centuries ahead of his time?
      Even in his time he was not a genius. If you put him into modern times, he would barely be qualified as "educated".

    • @cmanycrows8400
      @cmanycrows8400 3 роки тому +46

      @@Diviance The reason that the lights are on and the AC motors which drive the world you live in are all his inventions.

    • @teetman322
      @teetman322 3 роки тому +7

      People don't get smarter with time like you think they do, and advancement is both subjective and not linear.

  • @coffeeisgood102
    @coffeeisgood102 2 роки тому +1

    Fascinating. Tesla knew how to think out of the box.

  • @BrandonDoran00
    @BrandonDoran00 3 роки тому +22

    This animation style is like a fever dream.

  • @personalfunfest
    @personalfunfest 3 роки тому +184

    I'm going have nightmares about those smiley-balls with long hands and white gloves... thanks 😥

  • @nothingspecial4604
    @nothingspecial4604 3 роки тому +72

    Tesla after making his turbine : I am limited by the technology of my time.

    • @MrMeow-iq7kq
      @MrMeow-iq7kq 3 роки тому +1

      says the people who are supposed to be coming up with these technologies...
      Last I checked, proper business's develop the technologies they lack.

    • @MrMeow-iq7kq
      @MrMeow-iq7kq 3 роки тому +1

      @Zakarii Tsuki idk lol. Same point either way. Rather they make it themselves or find someone else that can.
      Didn't feel getting that far into the specifics really mattered.

    • @alexcrowder1673
      @alexcrowder1673 3 роки тому

      @Zakarii Tsuki ok, but if you need something and cant outsource it, you make it yourself.

  • @lovejoy2376
    @lovejoy2376 2 роки тому

    The illustration is quite impressive. Thanks so much for this beautiful video.

  • @andrewfayi9448
    @andrewfayi9448 3 роки тому +8

    *This is apparently the algorithm's current favorite video*

    • @mz2751
      @mz2751 3 роки тому +1

      😂😂😂

    • @arcionek
      @arcionek 3 роки тому

      Funny enough I found this video by searching for it instead

  • @andrew5576
    @andrew5576 3 роки тому +42

    At 7:50 he compares the diameter to a modern steam turbine. Wouldn’t a true comparison be comparing the torque output regardless of the size? Like what if a Tesla turbine only needed to be 1.5 meters to do the job a 3 meter modern turbine could do.

    • @prowhiskey2678
      @prowhiskey2678 3 роки тому +7

      Yes, with a rpm like 4 times higher, the disc can be a lot smaller

    • @Dawgsofwinter
      @Dawgsofwinter 3 роки тому +18

      @@prowhiskey2678 I work on jet engines and my best guess would be materials still. We have a small engine that does 40-60k rpm but the diameter of its rotor is around 6-8 In blades included. Last time I heard of one of those letting go it sawed the engine in half and left 2 inch dimples in the top of the enclosure. The walls of the enclosures for those engines are made of 1/2in steel with a sound deadening material held in place by a perforated metal sheet. One chunk went through a window and passed through a set of standup lockers (think high school hall lockers) 8-10 ft from the engine before imbedding itself in a file cabinet well beyond that.
      If we have that much trouble with something that small I don't want anywhere near a 5ft rotor doing 40-50K... Plus I kinda question how long it'd take to get it spinning that fast. Thats a lot of mass to get moving. Then if you need it stopped though if you start pushing liquid the other way... ok stopping may be easier but still lot of mass to slow.
      At this point I think we still need to be working on a material that can withstand that level of force first. Though strangely I've slowly been questioning if metal is the right direction for some things. Yeah the properties of it are great but is there something we've been missing elsewhere. I know composites aren't there yet but that's an example of looking elsewhere. Sadly my answers for that are probably either 60years or one solid alien invasion off

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 3 роки тому +1

      Ey! You two above, stop! This is a place exclusively for clueless Nicola fanboys, keep your physics and common sense outta here, please...

    • @andrew5576
      @andrew5576 3 роки тому

      @@Dawgsofwinter what kind of material were they using? I’m wondering if there is a material available but that it’s too costly to be viable. I also wonder if a type of carbon fiber disc might be better.

    • @Dawgsofwinter
      @Dawgsofwinter 3 роки тому

      @@andrew5576 Not sure off the top of my head and frankly too lazy to dig through manuals to be certain. But the I'm pretty sure the rotor isn't anything to exotic or such and I'm positive the casing isn't either. I know some of the engine is titanium but which parts yeah. The Hot sections have a few oddball metals but frankly you'd be amazed what you can do with properly directed air to keep things from getting hotter than they should.
      @TheChzoronzon you haven't been around some truly insane fanboys then have you... Life's not fun till you hit a Telsa coil show. And if you wanna try one at home ya gotta know enough about physics to pretzel em enough to be awesome without being fatal.

  • @TheAirplaneDriver
    @TheAirplaneDriver 3 роки тому +28

    Great video! There is another basic turbine configuration that wasn’t mentioned. That is the API 611 solid wheel steam turbine which is commonly used in the petroleum industry. The design uses buckets machined into the outside of the wheel which enhance the power transmission capability of the drive over a straight up Tesla design. The advantage of the solid wheel API 611 turbine over conventional axial flow bladed turbines (which are more efficient) is that the solid wheel design can handle liquid slugs which are often present due to poor quality steam that falls below superheated temperatures as it is pumped to the turbine. It is hard to keep pressurized steam in the superheated state when transported from the boiler to the turbine.

    • @wildfirekingdom9466
      @wildfirekingdom9466 3 роки тому +1

      His mistake was using metal. Marble wouldnt warp. It would only break if it was already cracked. Has anyone ever tried it?

    • @sarakajira
      @sarakajira 3 роки тому

      @@wildfirekingdom9466 you may be right, but I wonder if marble could handle the G forces of that high of RPM's? A marble disk might explode?

    • @wildfirekingdom9466
      @wildfirekingdom9466 3 роки тому

      @@sarakajira solid marble shouldnt have a problem. It’s very dense

    • @Skunkhunt_42
      @Skunkhunt_42 2 роки тому +1

      @@wildfirekingdom9466 there are a hand full of other more viable options than using marble. thank god we dont live in the stone age. Modern alloy, ceramics and composites provide us ample opportunity to fab discs for steam duty like this at scale.

  • @MottiShneor
    @MottiShneor 2 роки тому +3

    This is one of the best technical/scientifig/engineering videos I have ever seen. Concise, clear, REALLY explains the subject well, goes deep enough for even one with Msc. in physics like myself to enjoy and learn new things, yet accessible to quite every watcher. Animations are so good... and narration is great. Well... I think I would pay to see this video and by all means use it as standard educational material in schools. VERY WELL DONE.

  • @ethribin4188
    @ethribin4188 3 роки тому +50

    When your boundry to overcome is no longer knowledge or technologie.
    But the physical limits of matter.

  • @EskenRock
    @EskenRock 3 роки тому +18

    Tesla is the only badass to ever live. Never wrote anything down, never stole credit from anyone, and never sold out no matter how many billions they threw at him. He was 1 of a kind.

    • @tedunguent156
      @tedunguent156 3 роки тому +5

      You're right except for the "never wrote anything down." He made drawings, notes and schematics. The US government confiscated ALL of his papers within hours of his death. He didn't need to write things down as he was able to design, test and re-test in his mind but he did keep records.

    • @Rhythmattica
      @Rhythmattica 3 роки тому

      @@tedunguent156 ^^^ this...

  • @tobytoxd
    @tobytoxd 3 роки тому +8

    Brilliantly presented and explained! Really!! You guys deserve everything! :)

    • @tobytoxd
      @tobytoxd 3 роки тому

      @Peter Evans 66 = 100 but when 100 = 66 and 1.5 X = 100+1+5 then Y(u) = 666

    • @tobytoxd
      @tobytoxd 3 роки тому

      @Peter Evans No.

    • @tobytoxd
      @tobytoxd 3 роки тому

      @Peter Evans It's interesting, that you feel the desire to like your own comment.

    • @tobytoxd
      @tobytoxd 3 роки тому

      @Peter Evans I think it is very interesting, to go on a debate with someone, who likes his own comment. I rather prefer to meditate.

    • @tobytoxd
      @tobytoxd 3 роки тому

      @Peter Evans 66 = 100 but when 100 = 66 and 1.5 X = 100+1+5 then Y(u) = 666

  • @horaceschitte729
    @horaceschitte729 2 роки тому +3

    The genius of Nicola Tesla is indescribable!!! A man well ahead of his time. Just imagine if this man was here today and have available to him today's materials and technology. Imagine Tesla working together side by side with Musk. What a wonderful world it would be.

    • @bender9000
      @bender9000 2 роки тому +4

      Musk is nothing like Nicola Tesla.

    • @thcmorello3979
      @thcmorello3979 2 роки тому +1

      @@bender9000 yep, Musk is much more like Edison...

  • @charlyemui1366
    @charlyemui1366 3 роки тому +9

    your videos enlight this dark times on the internet, respect !

  • @JackBlack-qn7us
    @JackBlack-qn7us 3 роки тому +117

    Nicola Tesla:
    "I am limited by the materials of my time."
    Scientists in the future:
    "Keep going, we still haven't found materials strong enough for your machine."

    • @ngotranhoanhson5987
      @ngotranhoanhson5987 3 роки тому +9

      ummm, his turbine is so cool, but just admit that it is not as efficient as the modern version

    • @avocedo975
      @avocedo975 3 роки тому

      @Opecuted bruh 😂

    • @mackenziebeeney3764
      @mackenziebeeney3764 3 роки тому +4

      @@ngotranhoanhson5987 I mean if we can reach the same efficiency at a fraction of the weight and complexity and we just need stronger material, the Tesla turbine would be the preferred turbine for anything where weight is a concern. If only we can engineer one.

    • @Huelogy
      @Huelogy 3 роки тому

      Lol can't engineer one.. Like NASA and "we don't have the technology to go back to the moon"

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 2 роки тому

      Dont look up!

  • @SoulsGamerBierre
    @SoulsGamerBierre 3 роки тому +78

    Could we make those disks of graphene or that carbon design "nanolattice" thing to reach the desired rpm?

    • @ceejayc6502
      @ceejayc6502 3 роки тому +6

      I think these would be awesome, and you could play with the configuration of the surface area to increase viscosity.

    • @ghost2coast296
      @ghost2coast296 3 роки тому +18

      @I love you but Turbines are *expensive* and a machining nightmare, if we had a material that could withstand it a flat disk is so much easier to manufacture

    • @texasgonzo67
      @texasgonzo67 3 роки тому +27

      But, Mach 13! 😨 Same principals that limit top speed on prop aircraft and especially heli's... tip speed. When you have tips exceeding mach 'x' and other areas far below that, some really weird stuff starts to happen. Harmonics get beyond bizarre for one, which results in the mechanical failures they mention. Some hurdles... no matter how high you jump, they always reach up and slap ya in the ankles.

    • @bartomiej9807
      @bartomiej9807 3 роки тому +9

      ​@@texasgonzo67 Exactly. And what they forgot to mention in the video is that 3m discs should still be very close to each other to "use" all the water due to viscosity effect. With that speed and huge forces on those discs I do not see this possible right now.
      There may be some small, but genius, tweak, that could allow to use these turbines at slower rpm but we had to wait for it. In this form its IMO unusable.

    • @drawincode1800
      @drawincode1800 3 роки тому

      Wtf Are YouTalking About?
      God There Is Some Boffins In Here!
      Keep doing your research 😆

  • @blackturbine
    @blackturbine 11 місяців тому

    I'm so glad someone actually talks about tesla turbine drawbacks as well, so many videos out these talking about tesla turbine like it's some sort of perfection that engineers are blind to

    • @SixballQ45
      @SixballQ45 8 місяців тому

      his video is flawed.. why does it HAVE to be a 3m disc? did he try it at 1m? 2m? he shows 6" to 3m... scale it and try it first

    • @blackturbine
      @blackturbine 8 місяців тому

      @@SixballQ45 because there is a reason stean turbines are big, we have a giant generator to rotate, if anything he made it pretty compact

  • @kousueki7024
    @kousueki7024 3 роки тому +63

    person: how much rpm does your device need to work?
    nikola: heh heh heh it need over 9000!

    • @void-9
      @void-9 3 роки тому +1

      Others it's over 9000😲😲😲.....got it dragon ball

    • @josephinesimbajon4790
      @josephinesimbajon4790 3 роки тому +1

      I see what u did there

    • @hurricane31415
      @hurricane31415 3 роки тому

      @@void-9 That même always puzzled me since what he actually says in that episode is "hassen" / はっせん / 八千 which is 8000.

  • @RSGTomcat
    @RSGTomcat 3 роки тому +157

    I like how the RPM of the 3 meter disk was assumed and not the fluid flow velocity. Since the turbine works on skin friction, the average speed of the disk cannot exceed the average speed of the fluid. At the tips, if the disk is spinning faster than the fluid, then the fluid will actually be slowing it down rater than speeding it up. You could have just said that you would need the fluid to flow at Mach 18 to spin the disk fast enough, and that's assuming the material could handle the centripetal forces, which they can't. There's no way we are making a hypersonic fluid flow contained in a pipe in the first place, regardless of if the disk could handle the forces. It's a non starter on multiple fronts.

    • @sumyunguy9930
      @sumyunguy9930 3 роки тому +16

      *ehem*
      Vibranium 🥴

    • @rossbrumby1957
      @rossbrumby1957 3 роки тому +51

      The problem started for me when he quotes rpm for the tesla then says mach speeds to compare the current turbine blade tips speeds. Fact 1: the 6" tesla needed to spin at 30000rpm to be efficient at 6" diameter, but a 6 foot diameter turbine doesn't need the same rpm to have the same speed at its outer edge which is the crucial factor. Big turbines don't need the same rpm as small ones, no matter what type.

    • @ContemplativeCat
      @ContemplativeCat 3 роки тому +7

      Never say there's no way, you spoil the fun of imagining what if there's a way it can be done!

    • @greenwave819
      @greenwave819 3 роки тому +1

      What if you used "melted snow" as the fluid? Antarctic snow is very cold and when it melts, it's super pure.

    • @Oscar-vs5yw
      @Oscar-vs5yw 3 роки тому +15

      @@greenwave819 snow is literally just water, i dont get your myths but theres nothing special about it

  • @royc9357
    @royc9357 3 роки тому +26

    I highly recommend anyone to look into Tesla’s life story- As well as many other things he was trying to create wi - fi way back in 1900s the man was a pure genius

    • @stangme6891
      @stangme6891 3 роки тому +6

      And the father of Radio Control. He was a huge believer in energy transmitted through the air. In other words the world all around us today.

    • @TimpBizkit
      @TimpBizkit 3 роки тому +1

      I remember something about wireless electricity. There are phones that wireless charge today, but it's not very efficient if you consider it for household appliances. When you consider 8 watts vs 5 watts to charge a phone it seems less consequential though.

    • @guesswho6038
      @guesswho6038 3 роки тому +2

      @@TimpBizkit It's sad he's mostly remembered for this one failed invention and obsession, not for his real and numerous contributions.

    • @petarpewtrovic7266
      @petarpewtrovic7266 3 роки тому

      @@guesswho6038 he was a tragic character for sure. such a waste of greatness

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 3 роки тому

      Honestly are you this fucking deluded by your lack of education ? There were MANY tecs of that era that KNEW that satellites were possible, in the 30 s they knew that mobile phones were possible. They knew computers were possible but the technology wasn't available

  • @mansajwan1465
    @mansajwan1465 2 роки тому

    Last year I had study (Drag force) but I couldn’t understand very well and put it real life example . But just by watching this animation , now I know what I have studied before . Thank yu

  • @glennd8232
    @glennd8232 3 роки тому +15

    Why did I never heard of this guy at school? I'm 60+. the only ones were Einstein, lot about him, and Edison. Even in today's media and schools nothing about him. His name only came famous by Elon Musk and his electric cars (Tesla). But from what I have read until now, he was the genius.

    • @Alvino6577
      @Alvino6577 3 роки тому

      The Problem is, his ideas did not fit the world's consumption based model. Anything that can not be sold is discarded or hidden from us until they find a way to sell it to us. We are lucky that Solar energy, Oxygen and Water (which we as a species can not live without) are still free and in our grasps (most countries at least). but future generations will pay for it because those organizations that are supposed to stop pollution will make sure of that (by not doing crap against pollution)

    • @SilverMaclarenSmith
      @SilverMaclarenSmith 3 роки тому

      Tesla's system is running, they just charge us for free energy. Tesla's towers are everywhere, weather towers, water towers and more.

    • @glennd8232
      @glennd8232 3 роки тому

      @@mb59621 yes Mike and Phytagoras...and others sure.

    • @The_Viking_Explorer
      @The_Viking_Explorer 3 роки тому

      Because the US government/military shut him down because of his haarp technology

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis 3 роки тому

      You've heard of Edison because he invented the corporate laboratory: success doesn't get the actual inventor as much, but failure doesn't cost them as much either, so it makes innovation-based businesses practical as an ongoing concern. Edison did actually invent some other stuff, but corporate labs are the really _important_ bit.
      As for Einstein, his theories effectively disproved some of how Tesla thought things worked- both of them thought quantum mechanics was bunk, but Einstein proved it by trying to disprove it, while Tesla just rejected it. Further, the stuff towards the end of his life didn't pan out, whether his death rays (mercury was involved in some, and unavoidable the usage would have been a disaster to the surrounding area), his wireless power distribution (there was no way to charge for it, and so no way to support it- further, he was aiming for _worldwide_ distribution, which effectively would require a worldwide empire to governmentally fund it), and likely various other things that I'm not thinking of. Finally, while he had a strong showman streak, he also tended to be secretive in some aspects, which resulted in some misconceptions about him even from his fans.

  • @robertoleary3004
    @robertoleary3004 3 роки тому +4

    Went to his house in Belgrade Serbia a couple years ago, it's a pretty awesome little museum with a bunch of his gadgets and working models you can interact with.

    • @siren369xstar8
      @siren369xstar8 3 роки тому +1

      Wow thats sounds very cool!

    • @brushhaidinger2506
      @brushhaidinger2506 3 роки тому

      Tesla never lived in Belgrade, Serbia. You visited the museum. If you want to visit his house of birth where he lived before going to faculty (house turned into museum), you need to go to Smiljane in Croatia.

  • @judemark
    @judemark 3 роки тому +4

    When you're making progress things break. Always a good sign, interesting though most people don't see it that way. Also evident with the repost of this video. Keep up the great work Lesics your on your way to becoming one of the top channels in your field.

  • @Tomis_C
    @Tomis_C 2 роки тому

    Amazing Sharing My friend! Have a Great Day ❤👍👍

  • @thebrownengine9222
    @thebrownengine9222 3 роки тому +227

    The 35000 rpm mechanical failure is just suffering from success for tesla

    • @natteft6593
      @natteft6593 3 роки тому +2

      The video is lying. The faster it goes, the LOWER the effeciency is. at 35000 rpm the efficiency of this turbine would be very small

  • @lcruz2783
    @lcruz2783 3 роки тому +131

    Tesla a man before his time, imagine the possibility if he was around now.

    • @CptUhudini
      @CptUhudini 3 роки тому +7

      We probably would have flying cars

    • @DStanford94
      @DStanford94 3 роки тому +9

      Now wouldnt be now if he wasn’t around before. We need a second Tesla

    • @CptUhudini
      @CptUhudini 3 роки тому +14

      @@DStanford94 Well we probably have more than that on the planet currently. The sad thing is that theres a high chance the most geniuses are living in some poor rural area where they can never reach their potential

    • @johosaffattjones9449
      @johosaffattjones9449 3 роки тому +1

      @@CptUhudini Nothing hard about building flying cars. The problem with all crackpot ideas is the basic laws of Physics. Who would want to fly in a car that gets ten miles to the gallon and operates in three dimensions when your eyes and senses can only operate in two dimensions at a given time. Even with the most powerful computer and positioning satellites nothing can predict the unpredictable and what other influences can occur. No insurance company would ever insure your flying car.

    • @invalidaccount6147
      @invalidaccount6147 3 роки тому +2

      Imagine he married and reproduced dozens of tesla. 😃😲

  • @TheN0odles
    @TheN0odles 3 роки тому +9

    Wonderful animation, guys.

  • @tanmoyghosh3247
    @tanmoyghosh3247 Рік тому +1

    He is a legend among genius... materials could not withstand his excellence....

  • @BrianSWG
    @BrianSWG 3 роки тому +17

    I keep saying it, Tesla was one of the greatest scientists of all time!! His work was and still is unbelievable!! 🤯 🐐

    • @sergeyromanov5560
      @sergeyromanov5560 3 роки тому +1

      and useless

    • @quantustremorestfuturus5434
      @quantustremorestfuturus5434 2 роки тому

      He had the default of thinking too highly of himself and his ideas, as he was incapable of imagining he could be wrong. Without this default, he would have been much better.
      Many scientists have had a much larger impact on science.

  • @erhanfindik2320
    @erhanfindik2320 3 роки тому +4

    I'm not a mechanical engineer but i took some physics related courses in college. So, I think this video is pretty interesting. Makes me wanna take some more classes from a mechanical engineering department.

  • @michaelhurley3171
    @michaelhurley3171 3 роки тому +19

    Tesla smartest man of all time. If you're half as smart as Tesla you're still a genius!

    • @marty1662
      @marty1662 3 роки тому

      Tesla fell in love with a pigeon. Look it up.

    • @michaelhurley3171
      @michaelhurley3171 3 роки тому +4

      @@marty1662 probably because no woman was smart enough for him

    • @Ro_Gaming
      @Ro_Gaming 3 роки тому

      @@marty1662 My goodness he must of fell in love with a spy camera (joke alert)

  • @petersgarage6125
    @petersgarage6125 2 роки тому +3

    Leonardo Da Vinci had the same problem with the inventions that he devised on paper. Many would have worked except he didn't have the right materials to make them. Tesla a man ahead of his time.

    • @noob-kun7768
      @noob-kun7768 2 роки тому

      Can we dam a shallow sea and build water based power plant?

  • @Tocomaco
    @Tocomaco 3 роки тому +13

    There's a very cool statue of him at Niagara Falls...a must see in person!

  • @christyjohnson9679
    @christyjohnson9679 3 роки тому +194

    All this balls down to having a good and paying investment, trying to solve human problems

    • @thomasnorris7285
      @thomasnorris7285 3 роки тому +1

      When you invest, you’re buying a day that you don’t have to work.. I pray everyone reading this becomes successful.

    • @eloisebacani5864
      @eloisebacani5864 3 роки тому

      @@thomasnorris7285 You’re right sir, it’s obvious a lot of people remain poor due to ignorance, it’s better to take risks and make sacrifices than to remain poor

    • @eloisebacani5864
      @eloisebacani5864 3 роки тому

      Investing in crypto is a plan for the future so it's high time people understand the importance of investment

    • @thomasnorris7285
      @thomasnorris7285 3 роки тому

      @Shannon Berry °investing in crypto as a newbie was very difficult due to lack of experience which resulted in losing my fund ....but Sarah Ann emergence restored hope

    • @zoeamber1703
      @zoeamber1703 3 роки тому

      @@thomasnorris7285 Nothing beats engaging an expert in any trade, selfishness and greed has deterred many from doing this and they ended up running a huge loss

  • @iEnergySupply
    @iEnergySupply 3 роки тому +6

    Great animations, and video. I just want to clear some stuff up, that model in the video was actually an 18" turbine. I have the cad drawings on my channel, modeled exactly after the turbine from the original blueprints in the museum. I am glad to be a part of bringing this technology to life. Hang in there to see this through, I'm nearly finished with the production models.

    • @SabinCivil
      @SabinCivil  3 роки тому +2

      Your channel is great. I am eager to learn more details of Tesal's inventions. Keep it up!

    • @iEnergySupply
      @iEnergySupply 3 роки тому +4

      @@SabinCivil Thank you :)

    • @drguywilson1685
      @drguywilson1685 3 роки тому +5

      @@iEnergySupply I agree, the video, animation and illustration of the turbine's fluid dynamics are outstanding. As with all animations, they do not compare to the real apparatus. I am glad to see so many Tesla Turbine enthusiasts here working together to bring this technology into reality. With everyone sharing their understanding and expertise, we can all experience the world re-debut of the Tesla turbine after being suppressed for over one hundred years.Yes, let's bring this technology to life. Everyone, thank you

  • @Giuseppe0rlando
    @Giuseppe0rlando 2 роки тому +8

    Very well done video. Thanks for sharing