Texium
Administrator
Posts: 4579
Registered: 11-1-2014
Location: Salt Lake City
Member Is Online
Mood: PhD candidate!
|
|
Bike Centrifuge
Today I was preparing some copper carbonate from copper sulfate and sodium carbonate, and wanted to centrifuge the product to speed up the separation.
Since I don't have a centrifuge, I turned my mountain bike upside down and used it as a makeshift centrifuge, securing the vial with duct tape. It
worked surprisingly well! Here's some pictures, before and after.
|
|
jock88
National Hazard
Posts: 505
Registered: 13-12-2012
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Classic!!!
|
|
subsecret
Hazard to Others
Posts: 424
Registered: 8-6-2013
Location: NW SC, USA
Member Is Offline
Mood: Human Sadness - Julian Casablancas & the Voidz
|
|
THAT'S INGENIOUS
Good idea. You could also use a ceiling fan if you have one, if you're feeling too lazy to spin the bike pedals. Be sure to add a counterweight to the
opposing blade, if you've got an even number.
Fear is what you get when caution wasn't enough.
|
|
The_Davster
A pnictogen
Posts: 2861
Registered: 18-11-2003
Member Is Offline
Mood: .
|
|
You can also duct tape some rope to what you need to centrifuge and swing it wildly in circles over your head.
|
|
Gearhead_Shem_Tov
Hazard to Others
Posts: 167
Registered: 22-8-2008
Location: Adelaide, South Australia
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Somewhere I've seen a centrifuge improvised from a blender motor. It was a permanent hack, if I remember right. But the bike centrifuge is indeed a
classic.
I remember using one to g-test payloads meant for model rockets about forty years ago. To my shame and embarrassment, I must admit one of those
payloads was a mouse. Fortunately, the test wasn't fatal, though the mouse was visibly dizzy for many minutes afterwards.
I'd purchased the mouse specifically for rocket experiments, but after seeing how affected it was from just thirty seconds exposure to a fairly low
RPM, I ceased such "research".
I never did launch that (or any other) mouse in a rocket, and it went on to a reasonably long life after that. Somehow, though, I feel guiltier
thinking about it now than I did when I was twelve. I can't even imagine my two teenage sons even contemplating doing such a thing today, and they
would no doubt be horrified to hear the tale. Perhaps there really is progress.
-Bobby
|
|
TheChemiKid
Hazard to Others
Posts: 493
Registered: 5-8-2013
Location: ̿̿ ̿̿ ̿'̿'̵͇̿̿з=༼ ▀̿̿Ĺ̯̿̿▀̿ ̿ ༽
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
If you find the blender hack, please share it.
When the police come
\( * O * )/ ̿̿ ̿̿ ̿'̿'̵͇̿̿з=༼ ▀̿̿Ĺ̯̿̿▀̿ ̿ ༽
|
|
Gearhead_Shem_Tov
Hazard to Others
Posts: 167
Registered: 22-8-2008
Location: Adelaide, South Australia
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Here's one approach to hacking a blender:
http://citsci.blogspot.com.au/2009/11/centrifuge-revisited.h...
I don't believe this is the one I remember because I think it was a bit more refined than this one.
-Bobby
|
|
Gearhead_Shem_Tov
Hazard to Others
Posts: 167
Registered: 22-8-2008
Location: Adelaide, South Australia
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Here's the one I remember:
http://jesseenterprises.net/amsci/1998/01/1998-01-body.html
|
|
TheChemiKid
Hazard to Others
Posts: 493
Registered: 5-8-2013
Location: ̿̿ ̿̿ ̿'̿'̵͇̿̿з=༼ ▀̿̿Ĺ̯̿̿▀̿ ̿ ༽
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Thanks!
When the police come
\( * O * )/ ̿̿ ̿̿ ̿'̿'̵͇̿̿з=༼ ▀̿̿Ĺ̯̿̿▀̿ ̿ ༽
|
|
Zyklon-A
International Hazard
Posts: 1547
Registered: 26-11-2013
Member Is Offline
Mood: Fluorine radical
|
|
I will try the blender centerfuge, I have two or three extra cheap blenders.
|
|
phlogiston
International Hazard
Posts: 1379
Registered: 26-4-2008
Location: Neon Thorium Erbium Lanthanum Neodymium Sulphur
Member Is Offline
Mood: pyrophoric
|
|
Gearhead_Shem_Tov, your experiments match remarkably well with the those done by Wernher von Braun pre-WOII when he was a student.
The following quote is from the book "Wernher von Braun" by Ray Spangenburg and Diane Kit Moser:
Quote: | In July through august 1931, Generales and von Braun had built a primitive centrifuge - a bicycle wheel, bolted horizontally to a table and rigged
with a belt so it could be turned with a hand crank. To its perimeter, the two students attached containers to hold the white mice they used as test
subjects. With the spinning bicycle wheel they could simulate, approximately, the accelerative force that anyone aboard a spacebound rocket would
experience as it launched.
"We had no idea what the tolerance of the mice would be," Generales would later recount. "In the beginning, after a few turns of the wheel, the poort
mice, whose hearts you could feel pounding in the palm of your hand, were placed on the table. We observed how the little creatures would scramble
slowly at first and then faster in spiraling fashion..." |
Quote: |
Von Braun's Swiss land-lady, however, did not appreciate the spatters of mouse blood on her walls and threatened him with eviction if the experiments
did not stop. |
-----
"If a rocket goes up, who cares where it comes down, that's not my concern said Wernher von Braun" - Tom Lehrer
|
|