Sunteți pe pagina 1din 5

Turns out riding a bike can have more benefits than simply exercise or green-transportation these days your

pedal power can provide juice for your cell phone, the TV at your gym, and now even your washing machine. Pedal your way to cleaner clothes and save energy and get fit in the process! We mentioned Cyclean in our earlier Green Your Appliances post as an eco-friendly option to most energy and water-sapping commercial washers. The system is actually quite simple- designed and constructed by Alex Gadsden, your pedaling spins the internal washer chamber using no electricity whatsoever. While Cyclean is still just a prototype, its potential is huge- imagine what such a machine could do for off-the-grid locations and rural villages! The contraption itself is built out of parts Gadsden found in scrap yards and dumps. All he needed was an old washing machine to strip down to just the drum and shocks- then he made a frame for the machine to sit on, and integrated a universal joint which connected the back of the machine to the wheelbarrow wheel. The last step in the construction process was building a frame for the bike to sit on using the brazons on the bike. Put it all together and he had a lean green eco-friendly washing machine that gets your clothes clean and your waistline leaner all in one fell swoop.

Written by Joanna Hoang More Sharing ServicesShare | Share on facebook Share on twitter Share on email Share on print Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Manual Washing Machine


Washing machines can cost hundreds and even thousands of dollars a year to run depending on your washing machine type, whether or not you use hot, warm, or cold water, your energy companys prices, water companys prices, and the number of loads you run per week! Most significantly, roughly ninety percent of the energy used by washing machines just goes towards heating water!1 So, how about a bike pedal-powered washing machine? Currently, there are many different designs and ideas for pedal powered washing machines. The goals differ, but they include reducing energy and water consumption and costs, and increasing accessibility for people who cannot afford and/or do not have the energy capacity to own conventionally powered washing machines. By now you are probably wondering how you can manage to get your hands on a pedal powered washing machine... Unfortunately, at this time there are no pedal powered washing machines available for mass production and thus for purchase by consumers. However, if you are handy with tools you can build your own! BENEFITS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT: Medium to High. Using a pedal powered washing machine will help you use significantly less energy and save water. COSTS: Low - Medium TIME AND EFFORT: Extremely High

Here are guidelines and instructions for making a pedal powered washing machine based on Homeless Daves Project: homelessdave.com. Homeless Dave had been using a handwasher to do laundry for over a decade, and in early 2007 he decided to build a pedal powered machine and use that instead.2 1. First off you need to obtain a conventional washing machine, a bike, and a toolkit. Try to find either a broken washing machine and bike or ones that are no longer being used, following the reduce, reuse, recycle mantra! 2. Modify your washing machine: a. Remove the outer metal shell, usually white in color, from your washing machine by removing and unscrewing every bolt on the machine. b. Take out the electric motor from your washing machine frame. c. Remove the pulley from the motors shaft. d. Take off the drain hose that connects the tub to the pump. e. Save the belts from the pulley. 3. Modify the Trainer using your pulley a. Buy three tension pins from a hardware store and a drill bit. b. Drill three even spaced holes on the pulley. c. Have the pulley positioned on the fly wheel so that it is centered and drill through the flywheel. d. Hammer in the tension pins. 4. Piecing it all Together a. Position your bicycle stand and the washer in a position that you think will work for the design. b. Measure/Estimate how long of a belt you will need. c. Take the belt from step 1 to a hardware store and get one thats the same except closer to the estimated size that you need, which will most likely be longer than the one you have. d. Drill and attach a large piece of plywood under your washer. e. Attach the belt with the training stand resting on the piece of plywood. f. Test your configuration. g. Drill holes to attach the training stand feet. h. Modify your configuration as necessary. 5. Your final project should look similar to the one in the photo below:

6. Try washing your clothes in your new nifty laundry machine! Once you are done pedaling away at this powerful washing machine, hang your clothes up to dry out in the sun, as your clothes dryer could be accounting for ten percent of your total electricity use!.4 If it is raining outside, consider hanging them inside to air dry The completely environmentally friendly way to wash your clothes powered conveniently through human power! For more eco-friendly laundry tips: "Laundry Make it Eco Friendly" For more eco-friendly drying tips: "Dry Your Clothes on a Clothesline" Pedal Powered Washing Machines to watch for: A team of engineering students at MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, are designing a bicycle powered washing machine from bike parts and empty barrels in a project called Bicilavadora for residents of developing countries.5 Another cool laundry machine design by Shang Che Wu also uses pedal power, but not in the form of a bike. The form of this design is very much like a laundry basket. A prototype of the design has not been built yet, but the idea is amazing:

http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/laundry.html 2 http://homelessdave.com/hdwashingman.htm 3 Id. 4 http://www.greeniacs.com/GreeniacsGuides/Dry-Your-Clothes-on-a-Clothesline.html 5 http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/1641595/ mit_students_create_bicyclepowered_washing_machine/ 6 http://www.yankodesign.com/2010/02/22/fear-of-laundry/

S-ar putea să vă placă și