THE
PEDAL POWERED BATTERY CHARGER Designed and Built By Bart Orlando With theAssistance of HSU Students At CCAT | ||
The
pedal powered battery charger was designed and built by Bart Orlando at CCAT in
1996. It can be used to charge a 12v battery. The system consists of an exercise
bike placed upon a pedistle as shown in the photo below. A fanbelt raps around
the outer circumference of a 40lb - 16" flywheel and passes through a slot
in the top of the pedistle. It then raps around a 2.5" pulley on a 1800rpm
permanent magnet 24dc generator, mounted on the underside of the pedisle. When
the exercise bike is pedaled at ~ 80 rpm, the generator spins at about half its
rated rpm (~900 rpm), producing about half its rated voltage output (~15 volts).
The faster you pedal, the higher the generators voltage output and the faster
the battery charges. A diode is placed between the generator and the battery to
prevent electricity from flowing back from the battery to the generator. If the
diode was not used, the generator would draw electricity from the battery and
function as a motor. A volt meter and amp meter are substituted for the mph gauge
and effort gauge that come with the original exercise bike. The system was used
to match the load of a 200 audio watt alpine car stereo amplifier driving
a 200 audio-watt JBL speaker cabinet. The pedal powered PA system was used
during open mike sessions on the HSU Quad for crowds of up to 400 people. It requires
very little effort to pedal when used to power that PA setup. This charger is
best suited for charging batteries under 100 amp hours. However, in 1998 class
credit was offerred to HSU students enrolled in a physical education exercise
class for helping to charge CCAT's 2,000ah battery bank by pedaling one of the
five pedal powered generators at CCAT instead of the life cycles in the university's
wieght room. | ||
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