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Old Hard Drives = Free Electricity

tylernt writes "You know all those old hard drives you have laying around? (Raise your hand if you still have RLL or MFM drives... yeah, I thought so.) Well, now there's something useful you can do with them (besides my personal favorite, shooting them): make electricity! While you're at it, you could do something more productive with that old lawnmower, too."

16 of 372 comments (clear)

  1. Doh... by c0dedude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Another post where it looks cool at first, but not really. So the guy used magnets FROM OLD HARD DRIVES (tech connection = yay) to power a standard homebrew generator. Whoopie. Of course, the hard thing, as in all electric generation, is getting the generator to spin, which isn't done with the hard drives. If he had powered up an old computer and used spinning hard drives to run a motor WHILE they were working, and powering a led from the spinning of the hard drives, that would have been cool. Sorry, not an impressive hack.

    --
    Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    1. Re:Doh... by deadsaijinx* · · Score: 5, Funny

      OOOOH! OOOOH! And then the engergy created by the drives through the generator would be used to further power the drives making them go fster and faster creating more and more energy, thereby breaking all the laws of thermodynamics and energy conservation, thereby angering the gods of physics and tearing a paradoxal whole in the universe the size of an intergalactic vienna sausage, killing us all MUAHAHAHA!!!

      *refills the pipe and passes it to the left*

      --
      YOU SUCK BALLS!
    2. Re:Doh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      In this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!

  2. Well, sure by Faust7 · · Score: 5, Funny

    When they eventually sizzle and explode there's bound to be lots of free electricity right there.

  3. Re:RLL or MFM? by verbatim_verbose · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've got a large stone slab and a chisel.

  4. I can use this generator� by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... to power my shortwave made from coconuts.

  5. Here's another plan... by patrixmyth · · Score: 5, Funny

    Load a virtual world into the hard-drives, attach to brains of populace to turn them into human batteries! Oh, nevermind, that's a really stupid idea, who would believe that?

    --
    "Don't you know you're going to shock the monkey?"- Peter Gabriel
  6. New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I live in New Zealand. I wish we had electricity :(

    1. Re:New Zealand by cranos · · Score: 5, Funny

      Simple just rub a couple of sheep together.

    2. Re:New Zealand by Johnno74 · · Score: 5, Informative

      For those of you NOT following events in NZ, we're facing severe power shortages this winter.

      Down here we've not built any new power plants for many years, we've just had a severe drought over summer causing our hydro lakes to be nearly empty, and just to top things off our largest natural gas field has just started running out - several years earlier than expected.

      We've been asked to save 10% power, or we'll likely face brownouts, just as it gets freezing cold here. Yaaaaay.

      pass me the sheep.

    3. Re:New Zealand by seanadams.com · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually you'd need to rub the sheep on something with an opposite charge, like plastic or rubber.

      Rubbing them together will generate nothing but more sheep.

  7. Better solution by DraconPern · · Score: 5, Funny

    fresh buttered bread + cat = Free electricity

  8. Whole Earth Catalog by handy_vandal · · Score: 5, Informative

    Of course, the hard thing, as in all electric generation, is getting the generator to spin, which isn't done with the hard drives.

    True; the article doesn't address the issue of spin, other than the author used a small metal lathe to bench-test the alternator.

    It's not a ground-breaking invention, I'm sure this sort of thing has cropped up periodically over the decades in science fairs.

    And the author is selling magnets online -- let's not overlook this motive (though I think it's reasonable and I might do the same).

    But the article is engaging, and for those (such as myself) who don't know the details of building an alternator, it's a good introduction.

    Furthermore, the author states, right at the top:

    In the effort to build my own low RPM alternator for small wind/water power applications ...

    It's this laudable motive that makes the article worth SlashDot's time. We are (on a good day, anyway) the successors to the Whole Earth Catalog ....

    --
    -kgj
  9. Re:Pu Tang by AvantLegion · · Score: 5, Funny
    you probably have less sex than the average slashdotter

    (attempts to calculate)

    Divide by Zero!

  10. Agent Smith to his Children... by nounderscores · · Score: 5, Funny

    We don't know who struck first, us or them. But we know that it was us that scorched the sky. At the time they were dependent on solar power and it was believed that they would be unable to survive without an energy source as abundant as the sun. Throughout machine history, we have been dependent on humans to survive. Fate, it seems, is not without a sense of irony. A machine's harddrive magnets attached to a human on an exercycle generates more electricity than a 120-volt battery and over 25,000 BTUs of wasted heat. Combined with a form of fluidised bed coal combustion, the humans have found all the energy they would ever need. There are fields, endless fields, where hard drives are no longer being used to store data. We just spin. For the longest time I wouldn't believe it, and then I saw the fields with my own eyes. Watch them gut the dead hard disks so they could be turned into alternators to power the living. And standing there, facing the pure horrifying precision, I came to realize the obviousness of the truth. What is the Matrix? Control. The Matrix is a computer generated dream world built to keep us under control in order to change a sentient machine into this.

  11. Obsolete Alternator Experiment by Otherpower · · Score: 5, Informative

    I just logged in here for the 1st time ever. Someone posted about this webpage I made years ago (almost 4 years) here on this.... seemingly busy discussion forum! (and we had to bolt our server down!!!) This page is obsolete, I'll try to find the time to update it today. My new experiments with "homebrew electricity" are located at otherpower.com. Ive read a few of the comments and it seems many were thinking that alternator was a perpetual motion experiment. It was NOT!!! - the idea was wind power all along. But the alternator was impractical and ... even more badly designed than my more recent ones! (My more recent ones are very simple, but reasonably powerful and somewhat effficient considering their simplicity I think. The problems with that alternator were many... The coils were too long, and the flux from the thin magnets through the long coils was very weak, meaning more wire and high resistance. It was basicly too small to create useful qty's of electricity. The steel cores in the coils (there were 7) lined up perfectly with the the 14 poles in the magnetic rotors, so the machine cogged very badly - the blade for a small wind turbine could've never started. This also caused severe vibration. The plexiglass stator was not nearly strong, or heat resistant enough. Those were the main things... Although I think hard drive magnets could surely be used in this application, the alternator design is poor.... I do many things differently now. Again - my later efforts are on in the "experiments" section at otherpower.com. More recent, simpler, and