Building a Prony Brake

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T70MkIII

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Tubal Cain has posted a 2 part facetube on building and using a Prony Brake dyno that may be of interest - well, it captured my interest, being new to all this stuff. I'm not sure whether accuracy changes significantly with lower torque engines. Useful for an indicative reading for a small multi cyl engine, perhaps?

Part 1:
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Wi51Kf8bzA&feature=uploademail[/ame]

Part 2:
[ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=weJhTdnlUAo&feature=uploademail[/ame]
 
Works fine for small engines! ;D
DYNO2.jpg


I wouldn't mount weights loosely though...you might eat one......

I used an electronic fish scale and a heavy fishing line, pulling through a pulley.

The scale reads in pounds, so I made the brake 1 foot long so I could read the scale in "pound feet".



Dave
 
Dave,
Very nice marine engine. Is there by chance a thread on the build? I made a failed search atempt to find it.
Dan
 
That's a neat thing. I've read about them, but it's a lot easier figuring out the thing seeing it work.

So, Tubal Cain was an American dude from Chicago, then... And all these years
I thought he was another one of those crafty British fellows. ::)
 
The British Tubal Cain wrote some 20 books (and many articles for the M.E. magazine) but he also wrote a couple of books with his real name, TD (Tom) Walshaw. BSc (Eng), DLC (Hons), AMIMechE, AMIPE, and one-time lecturer in mechanical engineering at the University of London. Sadly passed away in 1998.

The biblical Tubal Cain is the supposed inventor of the forge, and thereby all metalworking.
 
mklotz said:
Tubal Cain is a character in the Hebrew bible,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubal-cain

supposedly the inventor of metalworking.

I believe that, over the years, a number of amateur metalworkers have adopted his name as a nom de plume.

I know about the Tubal-cain in the the Bible, and that Tom Walshaw, the famous person (in model
engineers' terms) used that pen name. Considering who Walshaw was, and the huge contribution he
made to our hobby, it seems cheap and unseemly for another person to use the name. Like a third
rate soap opera actor using the name John Wayne.

About the historic guy, my Bible just says: "an instructor of every artificer in brass and iron".

Dean

EDIT: Sorry Cidrontmg, I missed your post while I was typing!
 
I assumed they were one and the same, having heard the name held in great regard but not yet having read any of the lauded authors' books :(
 
I know what you mean about the name thing Dean and I agree.

BC1
Jim
 
Dean,

I missed your point the first time around but, now that you've explained, I must say that I agree.
 
Dan,

My Launch engine is Pre HMEM. I can send you some photo's if you like...but not here... :)

What about eddy current for a Prony brake....no contact.
 
Dave;
Add me to the "interested" list - even if it's just a few more photo's of the dyno setup.
Thanks
Garry
 
Garry and Dan,

I've still got the brake portion somewhere in the shop...I'll see if I can dig it up.

The ball bearing pulley comes from a sliding glass door, mounted on an angle bracket.

I made one turn around the pulley before I tied off to the scale with the torque arm in the horizontal position.

I clamped the fish scale in a make shift wooden clamp. As it is the electronic type,and not the spring scale type, under load the torque arm doesn't move at all.
All of it was mounted to this piece of scrap particle board for the test. Make sure the engine is strapped down securely before you do this.

I got 3/4 HP on 80 psig WET steam @ 600 rpm or about 6.5 pound feet of torque.
with a very satisfying "Bark". That was all the pressure that particular boiler had at the time as my boat boiler wasn't completed yet.

HP = 2 Pi N T/33000....she was and is designed for 600 rpm @ 160 psig with a vacuum...somewhere in the 2 HP range or about 17 pound feet of torque...she runs much better there.... ;D

Dave
 
I dug up the brake....here's some photo's of it in position.

P7250038.jpg


P7250037.jpg


P7250036.jpg


P7250035.jpg


P7250041.jpg


P7250040.jpg


P7250039.jpg


Dave
 
Dave
Thanks for taking the time to post the photo's.
Cheers
Garry
 

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