I made this video because I was very shocked to find that my model Stirling engine, ("running on ice" rather than heat) appeared to repeatedly re-freeze the ice it was running on.
After this happened a couple times, the engine getting stuck/frozen to the ice, I decided to wait and see if it happened again, but this time made a video.
Well the ice did re-freeze a third time (the above video) and about 10 minutes later, as I was uploading the video to YouTube and writing a description, it froze again a fourth time.
I was running the engine, not as an intentional experiment, but because I had made a new piston for the engine and I had applied grinding paste to the piston and cylinder to get a better fit. (The piston was a little too tight for the cylinder).
In other words, the engine was not running under normal unloaded conditions, rather, it was running very slowly doing the work of honing down its own cylinder coated with grinding paste.
According to the "Carnot Efficiency" formula, as it is generally applied, this model engine should have been at best, (being.very generous), running at about 20% efficiency.
As generally interpreted, this would mean that 80% or more of the ambient heat entering the engine, should have been going through the engine melting the ice.
Instead, for at least half an hour, the ice kept re-freezing on the top surface in direct contact with the bottom of the engine.
After that, I left the engine to run and went to bed.
By morning when I woke up the engine had stopped running. The ice was only half melted. The piston had been ground down so much it had become loose in the cylinder and had lost compression.
Normally the engine would have run longer, until the ice was completely melted.
I call this "anomalous" because, every time I lifted up the engine, exposing it to the air, the upper surface of the ice melted very rapidly becoming wet. But with the engine back on top running, the water on the surface of the ice froze to the bottom of the engine again.
If the engine is only, at best, 20% efficient, according to "Carnot efficiency" so that 80% of the "waste heat" from the ambient air above the engine is going through the engine to warm the ice, logically, the wet upper surface of the party melted ice should have continued to melt, not freeze solid to the bottom of the engine, over and over again.
Previously I had seen what appeared to be the same thing happening on someone's YouTube video, but without any insulation surounding the ice.
For a long time I had attributed this to adhesion or suction, because the surface of the ice was wet, but having seen it for myself, I can confirm that it is possible that the engine became "stuck" to the ice because the ice became frozen to the bottom of the engine
In this other YouTube video, it can be seen that at first the surface of the ice is wet and the engine slides around and has to be repeatedly repositioned to keep it from sliding off to the side.
After running for a while, when he picks up the engine, the ice is stuck to the bottom, apparently having frozen solidly to the ice, as I saw for myself.
As seen in the first video, I really had a hard time prying the engine loose from the ice. It was definitely frozen to the bottom of the engine, not just adhering to a wet surface.
There are some additional, very odd, or anomalous results I've seen in experimenting with model Stirling engines that to my mind, just don't make sense, if the commonly accepted interpretation and application of the so-called "Carnot Efficiency" formula is true.
To say the least, there does not seem to be a lot of heat actually passing through these engines.
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