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Hand-Powered Hardware?

quiddity writes "Following the Goofy USB Devices post, one has to know what can be self-powered when the batteries all die. You can handcrank your Gameboy, recharge your cellphone or pda (even grandpa), wind up a webserver (with minions, a beowulf..), see in the dark, and project a movie. What else can we propel through the next blackout/apocalypse?" Some of these devices have have been on Slashdot before; what cool hand-powered tech hasn't been and should be?

6 of 298 comments (clear)

  1. Universal Battery Replacement? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 4, Insightful
    How about a universal battery replacement hand-crank generator? Then I'd just need to buy the one.

    Not an academic question -- we lost power for 5 days last December and again for 4 days last January.

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    1. Re:Universal Battery Replacement? by FattMattP · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Repeated outages that last for days? If I was in your situation I'd just invest in a good gas-powered generator.

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    2. Re:Universal Battery Replacement? by armb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > unless you wanna ride that bike the entire time the radio is on.

      One of the many things you could run is a battery charger.

      > a hand crank battery replacement... oops. I would think that a battery would be a better choice

      So your plan is to replace a battery with - a battery. Not exactly a "hand crank battery replacement" is it?

      > A typical cap isn't going to do much to keep something running if you step off the bike, right?

      No, it will help smooth the rectifier output while you are on the bike. Like the parent said.

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      rant
  2. Hand Power PC? by Graemee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Say a Mini-ITX low power, embedded OS on flash with a broswer & email. Modem and Ether net. TV output for my battery powered TV.

    1. Re:Hand Power PC? by Doubting+Thomas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You could use some sort of piezoelectric mechanism in a 'clicky' keyboard, and trade pulse duration for higher voltage. Still, I'd be surprised if you could do much more than create a self-powered keyboard from such an arrangement.

      Personally, I still want to get back to my childhood, and have an electronic device that was powered by a pull-string, like those little "The cow goes 'moo'" toys. Of course, I used to break the string in a month or so. Maybe if they used Spectra instead of nylon...

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      Just because it works, doesn't mean it isn't broken.
  3. Re:Battery-less, shakable flashlight by Cecil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wow, it uses Faraday's Principle of Induction to generate electricity? What a novel way of doing it!

    Sorry, I couldn't help but make fun of you for stating it like it's something interesting or uncommon. Virtually ALL of the world's energy comes from changing kinetic energy into electricity using a dynamo or generator -- which use, you guessed it, Faraday's principle of induction. There are a few exceptions, such as photovoltaic cells and thermocouples, but those are absolutely marginal at best. Grid-scale solar power doesn't use photovoltaic cells, but typically heats water into steam to turn turbines. Thermocouples have never been widely deployed.