Free magazine!

The Skeptic is the official publication of the Australian Skeptics. It's edited by Barry Williams, who has kindly made the digital version of this year's Autumn edition (The Skeptic is published four times a year, and it is of course now autumn here in Australia) available for free. That's an eleven Australian dollar value, at the standard one-year subscription rate!

In this edition: A Psychic Course On How To Contact Missing Persons And The Deceased, The Placebo Effect Explained, Vitalism and Mystical Energies and, as they say, more.

The PDF file is only 5.75Mb, and I've made a torrent of it to save Barry from his previous distribution method, which was manually e-mailing the file to people who asked for it. And yes, he specifically asked me to do this, just as Tim Hunkin asked everyone to distribute The Secret Life Of Machines.

Y'all can download the torrent right here.

(If you, like Barry, are still a bit hazy about what this BitTorrent thing actually is, this beginners' guide should help you out.)

72 years and counting

Modern Mechanix has been so good as to reprint the Popular Mechanics article BEWARE The Gasoline DOPE Racket, describing a bunch of worthless fuel additives which are, in promises and even in composition, the same darn thing that umpteen companies are still selling to suckers today. (Regular readers of this blog may be able to name at least one of these companies.)

The date of the article?

November, 1936.

(See also "Impossibility of Perpetual Motion Shown at Chicago Fair", from September 1934.)

Perhaps the face paint will get people to listen

More videos that you've probably already seen, but which are new to clueless me (via):

The punch was what really sold it for me.

Mr Flare also had a large role in Babylon 5.

An excellent guide to the practical skeptical outlook.

Including something Amazing in the sky.

A great summing-up of this recent story, albeit with some disturbing attention paid to YouTube comments.

He really needs to stop reading those comments. Set the comment threshold to "excellent (+10 or better)" and all of that troublesome text will just... go away.

More at Captain Disillusion's YouTube channel.

I'm just not sure

Should I participate in a link exchange program with http://kundaliniforyou.com/, the Web site for Robert Morgens' Kundalini Awakening Program?

Robert's e-mailed me twice asking, now [and he's now sent me a third "reminder", on the 15th of March]. Clearly, he not only noticed my never-ending stream of approval for linking schemes, but also saw how keen I am about New-Age alternative medicine of all sorts (this page is ten years old now...), and is confident that I therefore do not consider every damn thing Robert's done since he left school to be pure poison to anything that's decent in the world.

Kundalini yoga is apparently supposed to enrich you emotionally, intellectually, physically and spiritually, so I'm sure Robert's enlightened mind gave him some sort of gestalt awareness of the raving quack that lives within me, despite my pathetic attempts to deny it in every single page where I said anything at all about anything remotely related to everything Robert says is true.

Robert is, I and he hasten to add, a Reiki Master who holds a Black Belt in Hoshinjutsu. He's also the founder of Work From Home Magazine (perhaps this one, perhaps not), Harmony Magazine (your guess is, again, as good as mine), Combat Hapkido Journal (which appears to be the world's only "Ezine" that does not have a Web site...) and not one but two Kundalini Awakening Podcasts! (How awakened does the serpent coiled at the base of your spine need to be?)

Oh, and he's also apparently a professional network marketer! I'm sure you all know how much I love marketing people!

And, as if that weren't enough, he is - or at least was - eager to help you Apply the Law of Attraction!

So I'm in a quandary. Should I send him lots of traffic, or not?

I'll take "things that burn asbestos" for $100

The sadly neglected "Things I Won't Work With" category of Derek Lowe's organic chemistry blog (previously) now has another entry, as a result of an innocent inquiry regarding what chemicals will, if you dump sand on them to try to stop them burning, start cheerfully burning the sand.

It turns out that chlorine trifluoride (merely discovering that one Cl and three Fs can in fact be squished together should send shivers up the spine of anyone who was paying any attention at all in high school chemistry) is a party looking for a place to happen.

Not yet tested: Barbed wire, train tracks

A few people have e-mailed me to mention this Consumerist post, which links to an Audioholics forum post which I could have sworn I myself linked to a while ago, though I may be mistaken. All of the "audiophile" bulldust kind of merges together in my mind after a while.

Anyway, the gist of the post is that fancy Monster-brand speaker cables "sound" the same as wire coat hangers, as any electrophysicist would tell you they would, but as the entire fancy-audio-cable industry insists they would not.

(Wire hangers are not, of course, actually very practical for most speaker-cabling tasks. Numerous less dramatic tests have demonstrated that so-called audiophiles can't tell the difference between fancy cables and lamp cord.)

But wait, there's more.

Here is a test of wire hangers versus fancy cables for home theatre digital interconnect applications, which turned up similar results. Again, this is entirely unsurprising from a physics point of view, but is completely contrary to the heated claims from many magic-cable vendors.

I invite you to link to any other, similar tests in the comments.

(Actually, despite this post's headline, I'm pretty sure that someone actually has tested rusty old barbed wire against "audiophile" cables of one kind or another. I do know for a fact that sending hundred-megabit Ethernet over barbed wire was a pretty well-known demo back in the days when 100BaseT was super-technology.)

STOP PRESS: Pixie dust unsuitable for household lighting

A reader pointed this page out to me, about the recent Greener Gadgets Design Competition $1000-second-prize-winning Gravia "floor lamp powered by gravity".

Gravia lamp

It's a funky looking thing, which was widely reported around the gadget blogs, and was alleged by its designer, Clay Moulton, to give the equivalent light output of a 40-watt incandescent bulb for four hours from the energy of a weight dropping about four feet, or 122cm. When the weight gets to the bottom, you just lift it back to the top and away you go again.

Now, it stands to reason that a mere 1.2-metre drop isn't going to give you forty actual watts for four hours unless the weight is incredibly heavy. Ignoring losses, it would by definition take forty watts of power over another four hours to lift the weight back up again, which is 160 watt-hours, which is quite a lot. A normal adult human in reasonable shape can manage about 75 watts of output when pedalling away on a bike connected to a generator; it'd take more than two hours of such pedalling to raise that weight back to the top of the Gravia light's tube, if the weight were heavy enough to make a constant 40 watts on the way back down.

So I just assumed the lamp's brightness was greatly overstated, and wasn't even four-watts-of-LEDs-that-are-sort-of-equivalent-to-forty-watts-of-incandescent. But since they'd clearly actually made the thing and it'd won an award, I presumed it did work, if only as a night-light. Fair enough.

But neither Clay Moulton nor anybody else has, actually, built a Gravia.

The damn thing doesn't exist.

And Mr Moulton, who apparently designed the thing as part of his Virginia Tech master's thesis, didn't even bother to check whether his design could possibly bloody work at all, even if you built it with LEDs from ten years in the future.

Looking at the schematic for the Gravia shows that the falling weight is defined as fifty pounds, which is 22.7 kilos, which is indeed about as much as a variety of humans could reasonably be expected to be able to lift back to the top of the tube every few hours.

22.7 kilograms falling 1.22m in gravity of 9.8 metres per second squared gives you a grand total of 271.4 joules.

That, once again ignoring losses (which are likely to be considerable, seeing as there's a ball-screw and an electrical generator in the Gravia), will by definition run a one-watt lamp for 271.4 seconds, or four and a half minutes.

If you downgrade the lamp to one tiny 0.1-watt LED night-light, you get three-quarters of an hour.

The maximum possible luminous efficacy for any kind of lamp that will ever exist - if every quantum of energy going into the thing is used to make visible photons that come out - is 683 lumens per watt. And that's for a lamp that emits monochromatic 555-nanometre green light, not white (the world record for white LEDs in the lab so far is less than 150lm/W), but never mind that for now.

So if your tenth-watt lamp is just such a perfect device that can never actually exist, it will emit 68.3 lumens of light.

There's no standard lumen rating for an incandescent 40-watt bulb - generally speaking, the ones that last longer have lower output - but something like 400 lumens is in the ballpark. Actually, the Gravia has been alleged to output 600 to 800 lumens, but even if you only shoot for 400, 68.3 lumens is 17% of the target.

So instead of the output of a 40-watt incandescent bulb for four hours, we've got the output of a 6.8-watt incandescent bulb for 45 minutes. And that's with a perfect lamp and no other losses in the system. With the best white-light lamp that humans will actually ever be able to make and million-dollar hardware for the rest of the thing giving the lowest possible losses, I think you'd actually be talking the output of a two-watt incandescent flashlight bulb for about 30 minutes. At best.

Looking at it from another angle, 271.4 joules is 271.4 watt-seconds, 683 lumens per watt is the physical limit, so by definition 271.4 joules of energy can only produce 185,366.2 lumen-seconds of light. Four hours is 14,400 seconds; 400 lumens for four hours is 5,760,000 lumen-seconds. So 271.4 joules into a perfect lamp can only possibly ever give you 3.2% of the required light. Or 1.6%, if you take the 800-lumen ceiling figure for the Gravia's output.

These facts have not evaded other observers, and have now also been communicated to the Gravia's designer. That pesn.com page now features, in the comments, about a minute worth of these back-of-an-envelope calculations that anybody with a basic physics textbook could have done, and it also now features an apology from the designer of the Gravia, who now concedes that the thing could not actually be made and that he did not deserve, and will be returning, the prize.

Actually, I reckon he did deserve the prize, since the Greener Gadgets people are clearly a bunch of idiots (see also: The New Inventors) and their prize is therefore worthless.

I hereby propose magical light paint, which glows harmlessly at 200 lux for 500 years (power source: A D battery filled with the blood of saints) and costs a buck a gallon. Tah-daaah! I just won first prize in the next Greener Gadgets Design Competition! Drop me a line, guys, and I'll tell you where to send the money!

The original press release about the Gravia on the Virginia Tech site now also contains a disclaimer from Moulton, though without any mention of him giving back the prize. I think it's worth mentioning one line he uses on both pages, though: "I was told it was not possible given current LED's, but given the rapid pace of innovation in low powered lighting, it would be a conceptual challenge."

Yes, Mr Moulton, it certainly bloody would be a "conceptual challenge" to make a lamp that produces more than thirty times as much light as the laws of physics say is possible from the energy you put into it. That would be a pretty damn impressive achievement. I propose Virginia Tech not permit you to graduate until you do it. How's that grab you?

The Gravia is very far from alone, of course. There's a veritable plague of these entirely imaginary "concept" devices. The gadget blogs are rotten with 'em. But usually these things have the decency to obviously just be a 3D render of some stupid concept that couldn't possibly work (image-intensifying sunglasses, say...). Sometimes it looks as if at least a mock-up has been created. Only seldom does an impossible device actually win an award for "design innovations for greener electronics".

(I suppose a lamp that doesn't work is, in a manner of speaking, quite "green". It reminds me of that Goodies episode in which string is a "safer and cheaper" subsitute for electrical wiring, "because it doesn't work".)

One bit on the Gravia's design competition page is particularly priceless: "Gravia is also [a] metaphor for an understanding of social activism."

Yes, Clay, it is. If you just sit on your arse and make shit up without paying any attention to the actual nature of the world, you will not succeed in social activism or lamp design.

The chugga-chugga-chugga mobo

MSI Stirling engine motherboard fan

Yes, this MSI motherboard northbridge fan powered by a teeny little Stirling engine is very neat.

I hope it makes it into production, and I also hope it's well enough made that it'll last at least as long as the crappy electric fans you usually get on a northbridge heat sink.

Small Stirling engines like this have very little power, and they need to be manufactured to very fine tolerances if you want them to run on a small-ish temperature differential - like, on top of a CRT or even LCD monitor, or on the heat of your hand for fancier models.

I've got one that runs fine on a cup of tea, but it isn't smooth enough for anything better. You need something like the above engine, with glass cylinders and graphite pistons, to get really low-temperature-differential operation.

A modern motherboard main-chip, though, will easily give enough heat to run a small Stirling fan, and it shouldn't need much wind over a good-sized heat sink like this to keep it at an acceptable temperature (actually, the Stirling fan may pretty much be just tinsel - the normal air flow through the case may be plenty to keep the northbridge cool, with a heat sink that big).

So the goofy MSI rig actually ought to work quite well even with a relatively cheaply-made Stirling engine. And if the engine craps out after a few months, you can always bodge a normal fan in there to replace it.

(Or do so immediately, so you can take the engine out and display it on top of your coffee cup instead.)

The product this little fan most reminds me of is the Heat Wave wood stove fan, which takes advantage of the large temperature differential between the top of a combustion stove and the ambient air to run a robust, long-lived Stirling engine with enough power to circulate air quite effectively, which can considerably improve the room-inhabitant-heating effectiveness of the stove. There are similar, cheaper products based on Peltier elements and boring electric motors, but c'mon, stump up the extra for the piston motor. You know you want to.

Dammit. Now I want a glass-and-graphite low-temperature Stirling engine.

Or maybe one of the Böhm kits.

Or the Gakken version, to add to my collection.

Or their steam car (note, regrettably, that neither this kit nor the Vacuum Engine car actually come with a Wondermark-ish top-hatted figurine to ride them).

(Note that all this does not mean that PC-powered steam engines are just around the corner.)