“Energy Tourism” appears to be in the future for Lake Worth
with it becoming an “Economic Powerhouse.”
Mayor Pam Triola has been instrumental in both “Solar power” and “Gulfstream power.” She began with a solar farm she brought to Lake Worth and is already delivering significant power to the electric grid through the Lake Worth power station… Ed Liberty, Electric Utility Director Lake Worth, brought her good ideas into the Power Utility and the two of them are now reshaping the energy future of Lake Worth.Both Ed and Mayor Pam are also involved in the groundbreaking work to harness the electric power producing potential of Gulfstream Current. This is a project where FAU received a Federal grant to develop the turbine technology, and in the near future the goal will be running the power from the turbines to the Lake Worth Power grid.
Even more impressive, because of the electricity and the money it can make for Lake Worth, and for the Energy Tourism that could result from it, is the development of a “Cavitation Energy” prototype at the Lake Worth Power Utility, funded by the owners of CAVITATION ENERGY SYSTEMS and to be built by Florida Atlantic University.
I believe this will be the Alternative Energy project that Lake Worth could actually get “rich” with, if a town could “get rich.” Cavitation Energy is CLEAN ENERGY . Even it’s waste - Steam byproduct, can be used to clean polluted water if we wish ( water polluted by someone else). In other words, this is beyond clean!
FAU tests already showed the first Cavitation Energy System prototype could
take a small generation of power and use this
to create Cavitation implosions in a “cavitation engine” that multiplies the source power to far beyond what science used to believe
possible.
Think of the “cavitation engine” as a modular “engine” using
something similar to diesel injectors that create the bubbles and shoot them
into impact chambers, where the cavitation bubbles ignite at 18,000 degrees
kelvin, and generate plasma/steam for a turbine to make electricity.
FAU has proven that with fresh water being shot into the
impact chambers, the bubble implosions create enough steam to run a turbine for
electrical production putting out 5
times the power put into it by solar, natural gas or Gulfstream Energy. With saltwater used instead, the implosion
reactions are far more violent, releasing closer to 18 times the power put
in…but the long term operation with salt needs a few more tweaks before it can
be utilized for a town….future grants are necessary, of course.
For now, the 5 times
increase is very dramatic all by itself and Cavitation Energy Systems is presently in talks with the town to get the
new prototype built at the Lake Worth power plant where it could run a
large building in phase one, a city block in phase 2, and the whole downtown in
a phase 3. The system is perfectly modular, allowing very easing scaling of
additional power. 10 megawatts of Solar produced Electricity would become 50
megawatts of Electricity in our grid.
The future could mean a huge net EXPORT of electrical energy
for Lake Worth, generating untold millions of dollars per year to
Lake Worth and then “ENERGY TOURISM” - where companies and countries come
from all over the world to learn how they could use Cavitation Energy.
By: Dan Volker
Lake Worth
Lake Worth
Pam Triolo, the best mayor that Lake Worth Beach has had.
ReplyDeleteIf this ever comes to fruition, I envision little Lake Worth ending up giving dividends to Lake Worth residents like Alaska. LOL. If, down the road and well into the future, it can be refined, developed and everything solved, it's an exciting thing to think about.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dan, for your blog and the interesting concept.
If Dan reprinted the "Communist Manifesto" Lynn would get all excited about it.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to know what they're going to do next week!
@11:01. Every now and then we get some unintelligent people on this blog. Your comment is the top dumb one for the day.
ReplyDeleteIf you want to know what's going on in our city, attend city commission meetings and learn something. But that would be too difficult for someone who just wants to slam me. LOL
lynn thought you said meeting were so short nothing to be learnt
ReplyDelete@12:03--happy to know you "thought" about something.
ReplyDeletethank you at least I can think for myself
ReplyDeleteGo Mayor
ReplyDeleteIt's very considerate of you to extol the virtues of a project so far down the road, that few if any of us will be alive to benefit. Is there nothing in the nearer-term that we can get excited about.
ReplyDeleteI like the Mayor; I think she has a lot of spirit, and shows a lot of enthusiasm for the job. I can't think of anyone who could do a better job.
ReplyDelete@12:16--I have a feeling that you would NOT get excited about anything in life other than to criticize.
ReplyDeleteThe Cavitation Energy system prototype can be running in months...it could run the town in a couple of years...or less
ReplyDeleteYeah, thanks Dan. Wake me up when it's up and running.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the effect on our sea life?
ReplyDeleteImportant Question 5:10.
ReplyDeleteNo negative environmental issues...no carbon...no effect on sea life.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the water and Sea Life.....The Cavitation system would take fresh water, hold it in a tank, and then the effect on the water would be much like distillation...it gets turned to steam..only much hotter to over 1100 degrees in the boiler, and then after turning a turbine for electrical power generation, it cools and get's re-used. When the Salt Water concept get's developed, for it's greater power generation, it would not be ocean water used, but fresh with table salt added to it. Fish are no more affected by what we will be doing than they are from each of us in Lake Worth drinking water from the faucet. There is no carbon footprint, and there is no power generation we have heard of that is cleaner. The prototype gets built in a month or two, because the parts are easy to build right at FAU...there is nothing exotic in the materials, just in the way they are used together. If someone really wants to know a deeper level about the science of this, please email me and I will take care of this.
ReplyDelete7;00 anyone can say that where is the proof have you asked the sharks and dolphins.whats going to happen when all this plastic get caught up in it
ReplyDelete7:59...There will be all the proof that any environmentalist could ask for. The prototype will be studied by universities from all over, and the results will be duplicated and shown to be a better way. The first prototype was already tested by FAU over a year ago, and many papers have been written in it since. Please explain to me how our making FPL or Lake Worth power cleaner is a bad thing, and how this could hurt sharks or dolphins ( by the way,I have been a diver since the 70's and have a lot of time in the water with sharks and dolphins, and have been very active in protecting ocean life...this is one of my areas. Jeff Nelson and I led the fight to get the BHB Marine Park protected, and we succeeded. This project will be something that marine biology and environmental science majors will love.) Rather than find fault with a project you have read nothing about, how about learning the science behind it, and why it is so clean? I am very happy to share this...just email dan@sfdj.com and ask for more on the science of this. If you have a science background and would like to discuss it further, all the better.
ReplyDeleteDan Volker has brought us information that can be environmentally ameliorative, reducing atmospheric emissions and save/make Lake Worth Beach an exempllary city using new methods to energize our city and other municipalities .
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOU DAN FOR YOUR EXPERTISE AND COMMITMENT TO OUR CITY AND THE ENVIRONMENT.
Lynn you are being attacked by know nothings who deserve to be deleted rather than published.
THEY USE ANY EXCUSE TO ATTACK YOU AND ANY THING YOU STAND FOR.
Thanks to you and Dan for all you do to improve Lake Worth Beach!
Don't be so quick to praise the Mayor, see what actually happens and who gets their pockets lined!
ReplyDelete