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Show HN: PedalPC – Generate electricity and get exercise while you work

51 pointsby watchdogtimerabout 2 years ago

8 comments

gabrielsrokaabout 2 years ago
This is fantastic! The first thing I thought of was this old Woody Allen film:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;Zhl-AHUS-f4" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;Zhl-AHUS-f4</a><p>The second thing was this graph by Doug Malewicki:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oocities.org&#x2F;mdetting&#x2F;sports&#x2F;hupgraph.gif" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.oocities.org&#x2F;mdetting&#x2F;sports&#x2F;hupgraph.gif</a>
O1111OOOabout 2 years ago
Hi an issue with your RSS (xml):<p>If I&#x27;m on your site&#x27;s main blog page : <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pedalpc.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pedalpc.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;</a> : and I click on an article, it will correctly display with the following URL : <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pedalpc.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;how-much-electricity-can-human-generate-per-day&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pedalpc.com&#x2F;blog&#x2F;how-much-electricity-can-human-...</a><p>If I click the same article via the generated RSS I get a 404 because the URL is : <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pedalpc.com&#x2F;PedalPC" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.pedalpc.com&#x2F;PedalPC</a> News&#x2F;how-much-electricity-can-human-generate-per-day&#x2F;<p>Note: &#x2F;blog&#x2F; ..VS.. &#x2F;PedalPC News&#x2F;
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jononorabout 2 years ago
Good job, hats off to you! I had the same idea some years back, and again during covid when I would o longer bike to work. As an old time bike mechanic and electronics engineer, I did some concept sketches but never ended up building it. You did and it looks good. Both the sturdy frame, the adjustments ability for seat and &quot;handlebars&quot;, and the motor drive and electronics also look practical.<p>For me personally I would miss the desk space - I really like to have ample space to put keyboard, paper notes, electronics etc on. How would one use this with a regular desk? Have you tried it?
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watchdogtimerabout 2 years ago
Hi HN,<p>The PedalPC is a computer desk with a built-in, pedal-powered generator. It helps keep you fit by making useful, moderate physical activity an integral part of your workday. It also provides you with a clean, reliable, and dependable off-grid source of electricity that you can set up anywhere.<p>I built it because I wanted some way to get exercise while I worked, but didn&#x27;t want the energy I expended go to waste. I didn&#x27;t see anything on the market, so I built my own. I&#x27;ve redesigned and rebuilt it several times over the years to arrive at what&#x27;s shown here.<p>I&#x27;ve been working on this as a side project since 2010. I&#x27;d appreciate some feedback on it before developing it further.<p>The amount of electricity you can generate depends on your age, physical health, and how much you pedal each day. I&#x27;m 58 and produce around 220-240 Whr a day pedaling 3-4 hours per day. The PedalPC&#x27;s maximum designed power output is 100 W. I typically generate about 60 W.<p>That may not sound like much, but it&#x27;s enough to power my computer, monitor, printer, desk lamp, and a cooling fan. It also recharges our phones and battery-powered LED lights we use around our home for nighttime illumination. It also powers our router and fiber network terminator to give us 24&#x2F;7 broadband internet and wifi.<p>The desk uses an e-bike direct-drive mini hub motor as the generator. It&#x27;s driven by a toothed belt to minimize noise. The generator charges a 12 V LiFePO4 battery to smooth out the generator&#x27;s variable output and store any excess energy generated for use when you&#x27;re not pedaling.<p>The desk has four 12 V DC power sockets and four pairs of USB power sockets. You can view the power consumption of each power socket and turn each one on or off from a dashboard in your web browser. Each 12 V socket also has PWM control, for varying things like cooling fan speed or beverage cup heater wattage.<p>The dashboard is served from a small web server built into the desk. You can use it to host any other content you want, like a blog, wiki, small Fediverse instance, etc. (I use mine to host this project&#x27;s web site.) You can also use it for a DNS server (e.g. pihole instance), file backup server, etc. Of course, you&#x27;ll need to pedal enough each day to keep the server running! My dream would be to develop a network of desks like this, with each user hosting and powering their own content.<p>I have built similar machines for two software developers in our town. One was mostly identical to the one shown here, with a built-in desktop. He uses it with his laptop. The other was built without a desktop, so he could use it with his existing standing desk. He uses his to charge batteries, power banks, and phones while he works. Both seem quite happy with them.<p>Future plans are for a version made specifically for standing desks, better documentation, and an API to make it easier to integrate with things like Home Assistant, NextCloud, fitness loggers, or your own personal dashboard.<p>Would you like a desk like this? (If so, please sign up for the newsletter in the footer on my site :) ). If not, what would you like to see instead? Any advice you may have is welcome. Thanks.
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hombre_fatalabout 2 years ago
Badass.<p>I never thought a human could generate useful energy after a science museum exhibit from my childhood made you try to power a 60W filament light bulb with a bike and it was hard to keep it lit.<p>Or a Youtube video where an olympic bicyclist can barely power a toaster enough to gently singe some toast.<p>Makes more sense if the human isn’t solely responsible for providing all the energy on demand.
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mmsnberbar66about 2 years ago
This is really interesting and I would like to follow development.<p>Unless I decide to live truly off grid, I guess I would not use this 8h&#x2F;day, maybe 2h on average and otherwise continue to use a regular on-grid setup (which itself is already a variation of sitting, standing, and treadmill).<p>Do you imagine the &quot;switching&quot; between setups to be made simpler?
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hombre_fatalabout 2 years ago
Also your username reminds of my 73yo electrical engineer dad. It feels like all my life he was muttering something about watchdog timers long before I figured out what those were. It always sounded exotic or maybe cartoony.
nitish1998about 2 years ago
Amazing idea