Could a Tesla turbine recharge electric car battery?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the feasibility of using a Tesla turbine to recharge an electric car's battery while in motion. It is established that even with a 100% efficient turbine, the range would not exceed the original 100 miles due to energy conservation principles, as the turbine would create drag that outweighs the energy gained. The turbine harnesses wind energy, but the energy required to overcome drag is greater than the energy produced. Comparisons to turbo intakes highlight that while they can improve efficiency, they are powered by exhaust gases rather than external wind. Overall, the idea of extending range through a Tesla turbine is deemed impractical, leading to inquiries about alternative methods like solar power.
Cyclonus
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Assuming you have an electric car that can go 100miles at 70mph on a single charge, what kind of range could you get with the following configuration? An electric car that runs off the main battery bank. Vents on the outside of the car funnel air to a Tesla turbine while the car is in motion. The Tesla turbine recharges the cars main battery bank. I'm not asking if the car will run forever, I'm wondering what kind of range extension, if any, would the car get from the Tesla turbine?
 
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Assuming the turbine was 100% efficient, the range would still be 100 miles. A real turbine with a lower efficiency would result in a lower range. Conservation of energy applies: the turbine adds drag and produces less energy than it absorbs from the battery.
 
I don't understand. The turbine doesn't absorb energy from the batteries. The outside wind goes through the vents to turn the Tesla turbine which turns an altenator which recharges the batteries. This is not an idea for a tesla turbine powered car. Its an idea to capture some of the energy from the outside wind and convert it to electricity to recharge the main batteries. I know the vent will produce some kind of drag so are you saying the extra energy required to overcome that drag is greater than the energy the wind speed could produce from the Tesla turbine?
 
On a similar note. Turbo intakes produce drag on a car but the turbo is still able to produce higher fuel efficiency. Don't they produce more energy than the drag removes?? Oh and thank for the welcome. Very nice forum board.
 
Cyclonus said:
I don't understand. The turbine doesn't absorb energy from the batteries. The outside wind goes through the vents to turn the Tesla turbine which turns an altenator which recharges the batteries.
The batteries drive the motor, which drives the car, which creates the wind, which drives the turbine, which drives the generator, which charges the batteries. It's one big circle.
I know the vent will produce some kind of drag so are you saying the extra energy required to overcome that drag is greater than the energy the wind speed could produce from the Tesla turbine?
Yes. That's the basic scientific principle of conservation of energy.
Turbo intakes produce drag on a car but the turbo is still able to produce higher fuel efficiency. Don't they produce more energy than the drag removes??
A turbocharger is powered by the exhaust gases of the car.
Oh and thank for the welcome. Very nice forum board.
You're welcome.
 
Sigh...thats what I was afraid of. Any chance of significantly increasing range with solar? Just curious, not interested in persuing that scenario. Tesla is more interesting. What about a tesla coil attached to the drive train, That would be capturing free electron from the environment wouldn't it? Ugh. I'd love to go electric but the range limitation just makes it implausible.
 
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