The Air Multiplier Fan Principle, Applied To A Jet Engine

Many readers will be familiar with the Dyson Air Multiplier, an ingenious bladeless fan design in which a compressor pushes jets of air from the inside edge of a large ring. This fast-moving air draws the surrounding air through the ring, giving the effect of a large conventional fan without any visible moving parts and in a small package. Itā€™s left to [Integza] to take this idea and see it as the compressor for a jet engine, and though the prototype you see in the video below is fragile and prone to melting, it shows some promise.

His design copies the layout of a Dyson with the compressor underneath the ring, with a gas injector and igniter immediately above it. The burning gas-air mixture passes through the jets and draws the extra air through the ring, eventually forming a roaring jet engine flame exhaust behind it. Unfortunately the choice of 3D print for the prototype leads to very short run times before melting, but itā€™s possible to see it working during that brief window. Future work will involve a non-combustible construction, but his early efforts were unsatisfactory.

Itā€™s clear that he hasnā€™t created the equivalent of a conventional turbojet. Since it appears that its operation happens when the flame has passed into the center of the ring, it has more in common with a ramjet that gains its required air velocity with the help of extra energy from an external compressor. Whether heā€™s created an interesting toy or a useful idea remains to be answered, but itā€™s certainly an entertaining video to watch.

Meanwhile, this isnā€™t the first project weā€™ve seen inspired by the Air Multiplier.

Thanks [Baldpower] for the tip.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://bit.ly/3AIKYWz

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Hackaday Links: May 31, 2020

Modern Radio Receiver Architecture: From Regenerative to Direct Conversion

Homebrew 68K Micro-ATX Computer Runs Its Own OS