Manson engine
{{Short description|Hot air engine}}
File:Animació motor Manson.gif
File:Manson engine IMG 8420.jpg
The Manson engine is a hot air engine that was first described by A. D. Manson in the March 1952 issue of Newnes Practical Mechanics-Magazines. Manson engines can be started in either direction (clockwise or anti-clockwise). It has a stepped piston. The front part acts as a displacer and the back part acts as a work piston (the displacer and the work piston move as a single component). The engine only requires three moving parts: piston, piston rod, and crank.
The engine is double acting, using both the expansion of the warmed air and atmospheric pressure overcoming the reducing pressure of the cooling air to do work.
The engine currently has no commercial or practical applications. The engines are built mainly as desk toys, physics demonstrations, and novelties.
Functioning mechanism
File:Manson Motor Phases - EN.svg
File:Manson-Engine-PV-Diagramm.svg
- Phase 1 (cooling down the work medium, suction stroke)
- when the Piston is moved toward the heat source, the hot gas inside the engine is moved to the cool side of the cylinder.
- the gas is cooled there, resulting in pressure dropping below atmospheric, further moving the piston toward the heat source.
- Phase 2 (top dead centre)
- When the piston reaches top dead centre, the inlet valve is open, releasing the vacuum.
- the flywheel keeps the piston moving
- Phase 3 (heating up the work medium, expansion stroke)
- when the piston is moving away from the heat source, the air is pushed toward the heat source.
- the air is then heating up, resulting in the air expanding and the piston being further pushed away from the heat source
- Phase 4 (bottom dead centre)
- when the piston reaches bottom dead centre, the exhaust valve is open, releasing the build up pressure and hot air.
- the flywheel keeps the piston moving
Differences from Stirling engines
Variations
Sources
{{reflist|refs=
{{cite web |title=The Manson experimental double acting engine |website=stirlingengines.org.uk |url=https://www.stirlingengines.org.uk/work/cyc2.html}}
{{cite patent
|country=DE
|number=19904269 C2
|status=
|title=Heißluftmotor - Heat engine has a simplified design with combined piston and valve and with alternate sides of the piston vented in either limits of the piston movement
|pubdate=2000-11-9
|gdate=2001-6-5
|fdate=1999-2-3
|pridate=1999-2-3
|inventor=
|invent1=Michael Ruppel
|invent2=
|assign1=
|assign2=
|class=
|url=
}}
{{cite web |title=Manson |website=geocities.ws |url=https://www.geocities.ws/kenboak/Manson.html}}
https://journeymans-workshop.uk/images/downloads/manson.pdf {{bare URL PDF|date=March 2022}}
{{cite web |title=Nano Disc Manson-Guise Engine |website=stirlingengine.co.uk |url=https://stirlingengine.co.uk/products/Nano-Disc-Manson-Guise-Engine-p593927033}}
{{cite patent
|country=GB
|number=2554458A
|status=application
|title=Improvement to Manson engine
|pubdate=2000-11-09
|gdate=
|fdate=
|pridate=1999-02-03
|inventor=
|invent1=Christopher Guise
|invent2=
|assign1=
|assign2=
|class=
|url=
}}
{{cite web |title=Manson-Motor |website=w-haag.de |url=https://www.w-haag.de/mansonmotor.htm}}
}}
{{Commons category}}
{{Thermodynamic cycles}}
{{Heat engines}}