It's a really a cool concept. The occupant monitoring to save every kilowatt is like the brake resistive recharge in electric vehicles. Scoop back what's not being used. It's just not where the Freemasons want us to go. They need us tied to a system of control. They think because their God runs this place... we are going to keep paying for what the earth gives us freely. Ions from the ionosphere is collected in Gold Spires and collected in Laden reservoirs. A ground is supplied to draw current. This ion collection would stabilize the seasons... we are not discharging the earth... so she discharges on her terms... which is not adventurous for things inhabiting the earth. The Tech was already here... they just lied and created worlds fairs as excavation sites to collect and cover up the rest. Tartaria. The Colombian civilization that was wiped out in a liquidation episode.
What if, get this, that's an industrial 3d printer and not a prusa you can buy at microcenter. Why would you even think they're using the same filament you are?
@@mateostenberg just wondering why they’d even need to print something so small. I mean I know nothing about printing, just saying that’s tiny. And how would they even be able to design that
"this house runs on dc power" 15 seconds later "this is the house main inverter" shows a gigantic inverter, where's the dc xD i didn't think university would make such bad videos
This is great congratulations to the team. I’m working on a project I need a small suspended coaster. 40 x70 x 12. Not anything close to this. Simple. If one of you can as a summer side job I’d pay obviously. Thank you.
fun fact, a lot of modern electronics have power supplies that will run on ac or dc, since the incoming ac is converted to dc anyway. you can literally just plug them into a 120v battery bank, no modifications necessary.
You cannot have a 120v AC battery bank as batteries are only DC. They can only be DC following the laws of physics. You are correct though that many things use direct current and have a full bridge rectifier inside to square up a 60 cycle sine wave (AC) to a lower or higher voltage DC single wave. It actually becomes a square wave, technically, because it is considered direct current but still has 60 cycles instead of 0 cycles. The only true DC comes from a battery or from a DC generator. The big problem with DC is that it's actually very dangerous at higher voltages and will easily kill. 120v AC will give you a shock but 48v DC can kill. 240v AC might knock you down but 300v DC will instantly stop your heart. AC is much safer at high voltages while DC is even safer if it is 24v or less. The physical problem with DC is that it must be a low voltage but the trade off is high amperage and so you have great transmission losses. AC can travel pretty far without losing too much voltage, but DC loses power in short distances, 10 feet is about the maximum you can go without significant losses at a low voltage
Do you make this competition over the Webots ? Webots support some competition , like wrestling or etc. if Webots over I think some student too comfort the this compotetion.
Really interesting, is there a specific program at the University to do sports Data Sciences, or are they from different programs but they are working on this specific project 🤔
Hi Victor, these students are researching as part of Mechanical Engineering, but we do have a sports engineering center that works on many projects from many disciplines: engineering.purdue.edu/Engr/Ewry
It looks great! When I was at Purdue the ME building was infamous for poor climate control; ironic of course since HVAC is an ME specialty. The radiator steam system in that building is almost 90 years old and it is finally being replaced. Just think what students can look forward to in the next 90 years! ;-)
Every time I got the opportunity to talk about steam while a student at Purdue, I took it. It's so unfortunate to me that the corliss engines and the Schenectady locomotive weren't preserved, and I never felt brave enough to propose that a club or student organization try and recreate them. (Mostly because it's expensive and would take way more than four years)