Ok, I am going to give some local information about the Stirling engine and a unique company, so take it for what it is worth. I am reading this information from the headlines. I know the topic of this technology has been discussed and described as a museum relic in past posts but....
In my backyard, Athens Ohio, a small company called Sunpower, was recently (1/2013) acquired by Ameteck (NYSE, AME) for undisclosed amount. AME is a large engineering firm with 2011 revenue of 3 billion.
Sunpower, which makes cryocoolers and the externally heated, free-piston type, Stirling engines, was founded in 1964 by Ohio University professor William Beale.
On the Sunpower company website, there is a description of the use of their technology to convert solar energy to electricity more efficiently (38%) than commercial solar PV. There is a pic of a Sunpower Stirling engine mounted on a solar concentrator in Houston Tx.
Lastly, the company makes the comment that their Stirling engine, "scales down well" and has a sweet spot below 10kw for smaller, distributed locations.
So in summary, maybe this technology is not dead and possibly Ameteck has determined that they can finally commericalize the free-piston Stirling engine to operate using solar radiation during the day and an alternative fuel in the evening.
Regards,
Lance
In my backyard, Athens Ohio, a small company called Sunpower, was recently (1/2013) acquired by Ameteck (NYSE, AME) for undisclosed amount. AME is a large engineering firm with 2011 revenue of 3 billion.
Sunpower, which makes cryocoolers and the externally heated, free-piston type, Stirling engines, was founded in 1964 by Ohio University professor William Beale.
On the Sunpower company website, there is a description of the use of their technology to convert solar energy to electricity more efficiently (38%) than commercial solar PV. There is a pic of a Sunpower Stirling engine mounted on a solar concentrator in Houston Tx.
Lastly, the company makes the comment that their Stirling engine, "scales down well" and has a sweet spot below 10kw for smaller, distributed locations.
So in summary, maybe this technology is not dead and possibly Ameteck has determined that they can finally commericalize the free-piston Stirling engine to operate using solar radiation during the day and an alternative fuel in the evening.
Regards,
Lance
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