Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

WilERK Motor

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • WilERK Motor

    Those cleaver Germans are at it again.

    I found this open-source engine on the net and thought I would share it with the community.

    WilERK - Wassermotor Montage - YouTube

    WilErk Motor Demonstration 12/18 auf dem 2. HHO Treffen der overunity.de Forums Mitglieder - YouTube


    Originally posted by Heini

    Sorry my English is so lala, because I'm German.

    I'm working on a multifuel Motor called WilERK Motor. It's a Open Souce Motor without Patents and Licensing.
    Inventor was Wilhelm Erk, born in Wuerzburg Germany, he died in 2011 with age 83 years.

    I designed the Motor in Pro-Engineer and build a prototype.
    Here you can see my baby:
    WilERK - Wassermotor Montage - YouTube

    This motor can run on ethanol or veg-oil or diesel or benzine.

    The mechanical efficiency should be about 70 to 80%, because the motor uses a very clever waste heat recovery technology and double piston and only three moving parts, two pistons and the drive shaft.

    Wilhelm Erk also claimed, that this Motor can run on Rainwater as Fuel, using a thermolysis process to split the watermolecules into hydrogen and oxygen. It sounds like a perpetual motion, but I'm really very interested to do a test if the motor will reach a stable state.

    Here you can download the latest file:
    http://ubuntuone.com/1q72vVxdbZ3tsXj412UBDp


    Source: FreeCAD forum • View topic - Wanted - Helper for Open-Source WilERK-Motor
    Regards,

    VIDBID
    Regards,

    VIDBID

  • #2
    I looked at the videos, I don't understand German but it seems they connected this device to a motor to turn it.... it made a few rotations and broke.

    They machined some of the components out of graphite and surprise, graphite is brittle and it breaks easily.

    Nice looking machine though - but not sure what they were trying to prove in the demonstration - but maybe that's because I don't speak German.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by SilverToGold View Post
      I looked at the videos, I don't understand German but it seems they connected this device to a motor to turn it.... it made a few rotations and broke.

      They machined some of the components out of graphite and surprise, graphite is brittle and it breaks easily.

      Nice looking machine though - but not sure what they were trying to prove in the demonstration - but maybe that's because I don't speak German.
      Deutsche Sprache, so schwere, makes you swear.

      It seems like there is an overunity claim.

      Yep. I wonder if Herr Stefan Hoffmann has reported on this one yet?

      Regards,

      VIDBID
      Regards,

      VIDBID

      Comment

      Working...
      X