Still engine

The Still engine was a piston engine that simultaneously used both steam power from an external boiler, and internal combustion from gasoline or diesel, in the same unit. The waste heat from the cylinder and internal combustion exhaust was directed to the steam boiler, resulting in claimed fuel savings of up to 10%. The inventor, William Joseph Still was not the first in this field. A similar, but not identical, system was patented in 1903 by Paul Lucas-Girardville and Louis Mékarski.[1]

History

William Still

The inventor, William Joseph Still, patented his device in 1917 and on 26 May 1919 in London he announced it at a meeting, chaired by steam turbine inventor Charles Algernon Parsons, at the Royal Society of Arts.[2][3] Still described a continuous process by which a double-acting cylinder is powered on one side by internal combustion and on the other by steam from a boiler heated principally by the waste heat from the water jacket and exhaust gases.[2] He explained how the reserve of energy represented by the steam pressure in the boiler provided for any occasional overload which would defeat a standard internal combustion engine of the same power.[2] Independent heating of the boiler was occasionally used, to provide extra power for exceptional conditions, and in the first stage of operation to allow the engine to start itself from steam power alone, even against a load.[4]

Development

Marine

Still engine installation: "The explosion of the charge drives the piston down. Steam pressure on the other side then drives the piston up". [4]

In 1924 Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company of Greenock, Scotland, put a diesel-fuelled marine version, the Scott-Still regenerative engine, into production, with the first pair of engines installed in the twin-screw M. V. Dolius.[5] The requirement to carry marine engineering officers certified with both steam and motor qualifications, meaning extra crew members and wages, and the extra complexity with consequent higher maintenance costs, offset the fuel savings and conventional diesel engines were later installed in their place.[6]

Railway

In 1926 Kitson and Company, locomotive builders of Leeds, England, produced a steam–diesel hybrid locomotive, the Kitson Still locomotive. This was loaned for trials to the London and North Eastern Railway and used successfully to haul heavy coal trains, but the difference in the cost of coal used by a conventional locomotive, against the fuel oil used by the hybrid, was not great. When Kitson's failed in 1934, a failure to which the development costs of the hybrid locomotive had contributed, the receivers sold the machine for scrap.[7]

Decline

Developments of larger diesel engines in the 1930s, with improved methods of power transmission, meant that a principal advantage of the Still engine – the ability to provide additional power for starting and temporary high load – was lost, and further development ended.[7]

References

  1. http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/originalDocument?CC=GB&NR=190227370A&KC=A&FT=D&ND=3&date=19031211&DB=&locale=en_EP
  2. 1 2 3 "New British Engine Surpasses Diesel" (PDF). New York Times. 28 May 1919. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
  3. William Joseph Still (19 June 1917). "U. S. patent 1230617". United States Patent and Trademark Office. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  4. 1 2 "Getting more out of the Gas Engine". Popular Science Monthly. September 1919. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
  5. Robinson, William (1927). Applied Thermodynamics. London: Pitman. pp. 295–299. OCLC 3463816.
  6. Self, Douglas (16 November 2008). "The Still Steam-Diesel Engine". The Museum of Retro Technology. Retrieved 9 Feb 2011.
  7. 1 2 Marsden, Richard. "The Experimental Kitson-Still Steam/Diesel Hybrid Locomotive". The London & North Eastern Railway (LNER) Encyclopedia. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
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