![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_n...rity_sphere%29
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ldjjj/109033997/ Two kilometer diameter geodesic spheres floating due to warm air inside was first proposed by Buckminster Fuller in 1967. Entire communities could float overhead, taking in resources and providing finished goods in payment. They could also trade goods. Travelling at an average speed of 80 kph - they would circumnavigate the Earth every ,20 days. Carrying 50,000 tons of surplus cargo for trade, 10,000 such cities, with 5,000 people on board each - would exchange enough goods to support every man woman and child on Earth at the US per capita rate. In 1967 these cities were thought to be nuclear powered. Compact nuclear reactors from GE - of the type that powered Antarctica from 1962 to 1972 http://www.eoearth.org/article/Small...power_reactors would provide the city its lifting capacity and power supply. I envision such cities might be powered by laser beams from space - and would be the first step toward space colonies. They would also be the natural warehousing and control centers for terrestrial processing and distribution of early stage raw materials and finished goods from orbit. Smaller hydrogen filled balloons - with compact industrial processors - also powered from space - could provide a variety of functions supporting the larger city. 5 to 10 smaller cargo balloons each with 200 to 1,500 ton lift capacity - would be associated with each city of 2,000 to 5,000 people. 2,000 asteroids or astreroid fragments would be gathered from the asteroid beltand returned to sun synchronous polar orbit above the terminator line of Earth. The asteroids would be processed into raw materials and finished goods - as the first step in off-world development. Power satellites would be built on Earth and orbited. the power satellites would then be used to increase the efficiency of the rockets used to deploy them. A total of 2,000 satellites, each generating 22 GW of laser energy - would provide sufficient energy for all of Earth as well as substantial space resources. The ground based systems that supported the deployment of 2,000 power sats, and 660 comsats previously, would build and dispatch 1,000 probes to the asteroid belt to survey 6,700 asteroids selected from 45,000 chosen from an optical analysis of 300,000 small solar system bodies. From this process, 1,000 asteroids, ideally suited for use as industrial feedstock are returned ot Earth orbit. 1,000 telerobotically operated factories are deployed one to each asteroid- in orbit 1,000 km above the Earth. Eeach separated 46.3 km from the other. The first major construction are 10,000 cloud nine cities that re- enter the Earth's atmosphere and deploy after reaching subsonic speeds - spread throughout the Earth. Crews are selected from the millions of workers that operate the telerobotic factories on orbit, along with their families. Up to 50 million people may be recruited in this way, with 10 million workers spread among 100 different operating companies. The next expansion is to build assembly plants and other industrial components on orbit, to support processing and eventual distribution to Earth through the cloud nine cities. Support 4 HL-RLVs 30 LHL-RLV 660 communications satellites 2,000 power satellites Primary 1,000 feedstock points to reduce ores to materials 10,000 processing centers to convert materials to finished goods 100,000 assembly centers to convert finished goods to consumer products 1,000,000 farm centers to grow and process food on orbit 10,000,000 forest centers to grow fiber and wood on orbit 100,000,000 residential centers - to house people on orbit Once established each population of primary assets continues growing until their total numbers are 20x the figures shown above. The number of floating cities never exceeds 25,000 since the population of Earth is reduced at the point this number of cities is reached. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 31, 2:14*pm, wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_n...jjj/109033997/ Two kilometer diameter geodesic spheres floating due to warm air inside was first proposed by Buckminster Fuller in 1967. *Entire communities could float overhead, taking in resources and providing finished goods in payment. *They could also trade goods. Travelling at an average speed of 80 kph - they would circumnavigate the Earth every ,20 days. Carrying 50,000 tons of surplus cargo for trade, 10,000 such cities, with 5,000 people on board each - would exchange enough goods to support every man woman and child on Earth at the US per capita rate. In 1967 these cities were thought to be nuclear powered. *Compact nuclear reactors from GE - of the type that powered Antarctica from 1962 to 1972 http://www.eoearth.org/article/Small...power_reactors would provide the city its lifting capacity and power supply. I envision such cities might be powered by laser beams from space - and would be the first step toward space colonies. *They would also be the natural warehousing and control centers for terrestrial processing and distribution of early stage raw materials and finished goods from orbit. Smaller hydrogen filled balloons - with compact industrial processors - also powered from space - could provide a variety of functions supporting the larger city. *5 to 10 smaller cargo balloons each with 200 to 1,500 ton lift capacity - would be associated with each city of 2,000 to 5,000 people. 2,000 asteroids or astreroid fragments would be gathered from the asteroid beltand returned to sun synchronous polar orbit above the terminator line of Earth. *The asteroids would be processed into raw materials and finished goods - as the first step in off-world development. Power satellites would be built on Earth and orbited. *the power satellites would then be used to increase the efficiency of the rockets used to deploy them. *A total of 2,000 satellites, each generating 22 GW of laser energy - would provide sufficient energy for all of Earth as well as substantial space resources. The ground based systems that supported the deployment of 2,000 power sats, and 660 comsats previously, would build and dispatch 1,000 probes to the asteroid belt to survey 6,700 asteroids selected from 45,000 chosen from an optical analysis of 300,000 small solar system bodies. *From this process, 1,000 asteroids, ideally suited for use as industrial feedstock are returned ot Earth orbit. 1,000 telerobotically operated factories are deployed one to each asteroid- in orbit 1,000 km above the Earth. * Eeach separated 46.3 km from the other. The first major construction are 10,000 *cloud nine cities that re- enter the Earth's atmosphere and deploy after reaching subsonic speeds - spread throughout the Earth. *Crews are selected from the millions of workers that operate the telerobotic factories on orbit, along with their families. *Up to 50 million people may be recruited in this way, with 10 million workers spread among 100 different operating companies. The next expansion is to build assembly plants and other industrial components on orbit, to support processing and eventual distribution to Earth through the cloud nine cities. Support 4 HL-RLVs 30 LHL-RLV 660 communications satellites 2,000 power satellites Primary 1,000 feedstock points to reduce ores to materials 10,000 processing centers to convert materials to finished goods 100,000 assembly centers to convert finished goods to consumer products 1,000,000 farm centers to grow and process food on orbit 10,000,000 forest centers to grow fiber and wood on orbit 100,000,000 residential centers - to house people on orbit Once established each population of primary assets continues growing until their total numbers are 20x the figures shown above. The number of floating cities never exceeds 25,000 since the population of Earth is reduced at the point this number of cities is reached. This cities would be an ideal place for a new sort of gypsies to inhabit. At 5,000 people per city 1,200,000 cities would hold 6 billion people. Supplied from orbit they could float over the landscape at will. Sort of an aerial version of cruise liners. With 1.2 million cities, each city itself 3 km in diameter would cover an area 424 square kilometers - separated from one another by 23 km - on average. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
And the Mook World FactBook is once again telling us what we already
know, or of what none of us need to know. How about all of those robo H2 blimps doing their global internet fast access thing? .. - Brad Guth wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_n...rity_sphere%29 http://www.flickr.com/photos/ldjjj/109033997/ Two kilometer diameter geodesic spheres floating due to warm air inside was first proposed by Buckminster Fuller in 1967. Entire communities could float overhead, taking in resources and providing finished goods in payment. They could also trade goods. Travelling at an average speed of 80 kph - they would circumnavigate the Earth every ,20 days. Carrying 50,000 tons of surplus cargo for trade, 10,000 such cities, with 5,000 people on board each - would exchange enough goods to support every man woman and child on Earth at the US per capita rate. In 1967 these cities were thought to be nuclear powered. Compact nuclear reactors from GE - of the type that powered Antarctica from 1962 to 1972 http://www.eoearth.org/article/Small...power_reactors would provide the city its lifting capacity and power supply. I envision such cities might be powered by laser beams from space - and would be the first step toward space colonies. They would also be the natural warehousing and control centers for terrestrial processing and distribution of early stage raw materials and finished goods from orbit. Smaller hydrogen filled balloons - with compact industrial processors - also powered from space - could provide a variety of functions supporting the larger city. 5 to 10 smaller cargo balloons each with 200 to 1,500 ton lift capacity - would be associated with each city of 2,000 to 5,000 people. 2,000 asteroids or astreroid fragments would be gathered from the asteroid beltand returned to sun synchronous polar orbit above the terminator line of Earth. The asteroids would be processed into raw materials and finished goods - as the first step in off-world development. Power satellites would be built on Earth and orbited. the power satellites would then be used to increase the efficiency of the rockets used to deploy them. A total of 2,000 satellites, each generating 22 GW of laser energy - would provide sufficient energy for all of Earth as well as substantial space resources. The ground based systems that supported the deployment of 2,000 power sats, and 660 comsats previously, would build and dispatch 1,000 probes to the asteroid belt to survey 6,700 asteroids selected from 45,000 chosen from an optical analysis of 300,000 small solar system bodies. From this process, 1,000 asteroids, ideally suited for use as industrial feedstock are returned ot Earth orbit. 1,000 telerobotically operated factories are deployed one to each asteroid- in orbit 1,000 km above the Earth. Eeach separated 46.3 km from the other. The first major construction are 10,000 cloud nine cities that re- enter the Earth's atmosphere and deploy after reaching subsonic speeds - spread throughout the Earth. Crews are selected from the millions of workers that operate the telerobotic factories on orbit, along with their families. Up to 50 million people may be recruited in this way, with 10 million workers spread among 100 different operating companies. The next expansion is to build assembly plants and other industrial components on orbit, to support processing and eventual distribution to Earth through the cloud nine cities. Support 4 HL-RLVs 30 LHL-RLV 660 communications satellites 2,000 power satellites Primary 1,000 feedstock points to reduce ores to materials 10,000 processing centers to convert materials to finished goods 100,000 assembly centers to convert finished goods to consumer products 1,000,000 farm centers to grow and process food on orbit 10,000,000 forest centers to grow fiber and wood on orbit 100,000,000 residential centers - to house people on orbit Once established each population of primary assets continues growing until their total numbers are 20x the figures shown above. The number of floating cities never exceeds 25,000 since the population of Earth is reduced at the point this number of cities is reached. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 2, 2:03*am, BradGuth wrote:
And the Mook World FactBook is once again telling us what we already know, or of what none of us need to know. How about all of those robo H2 blimps doing their global internet fast access thing? . - Brad Guth wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_n...rity_sphere%29 http://www.flickr.com/photos/ldjjj/109033997/ Two kilometer diameter geodesic spheres floating due to warm air inside was first proposed by Buckminster Fuller in 1967. *Entire communities could float overhead, taking in resources and providing finished goods in payment. *They could also trade goods. Travelling at an average speed of 80 kph - they would circumnavigate the Earth every ,20 days. Carrying 50,000 tons of surplus cargo for trade, 10,000 such cities, with 5,000 people on board each - would exchange enough goods to support every man woman and child on Earth at the US per capita rate. In 1967 these cities were thought to be nuclear powered. *Compact nuclear reactors from GE - of the type that powered Antarctica from 1962 to 1972 http://www.eoearth.org/article/Small...power_reactors would provide the city its lifting capacity and power supply. I envision such cities might be powered by laser beams from space - and would be the first step toward space colonies. *They would also be the natural warehousing and control centers for terrestrial processing and distribution of early stage raw materials and finished goods from orbit. Smaller hydrogen filled balloons - with compact industrial processors - also powered from space - could provide a variety of functions supporting the larger city. *5 to 10 smaller cargo balloons each with 200 to 1,500 ton lift capacity - would be associated with each city of 2,000 to 5,000 people. 2,000 asteroids or astreroid fragments would be gathered from the asteroid beltand returned to sun synchronous polar orbit above the terminator line of Earth. *The asteroids would be processed into raw materials and finished goods - as the first step in off-world development. Power satellites would be built on Earth and orbited. *the power satellites would then be used to increase the efficiency of the rockets used to deploy them. *A total of 2,000 satellites, each generating 22 GW of laser energy - would provide sufficient energy for all of Earth as well as substantial space resources. The ground based systems that supported the deployment of 2,000 power sats, and 660 comsats previously, would build and dispatch 1,000 probes to the asteroid belt to survey 6,700 asteroids selected from 45,000 chosen from an optical analysis of 300,000 small solar system bodies. *From this process, 1,000 asteroids, ideally suited for use as industrial feedstock are returned ot Earth orbit. 1,000 telerobotically operated factories are deployed one to each asteroid- in orbit 1,000 km above the Earth. * Eeach separated 46.3 km from the other. The first major construction are 10,000 *cloud nine cities that re- enter the Earth's atmosphere and deploy after reaching subsonic speeds - spread throughout the Earth. *Crews are selected from the millions of workers that operate the telerobotic factories on orbit, along with their families. *Up to 50 million people may be recruited in this way, with 10 million workers spread among 100 different operating companies. The next expansion is to build assembly plants and other industrial components on orbit, to support processing and eventual distribution to Earth through the cloud nine cities. Support 4 HL-RLVs 30 LHL-RLV 660 communications satellites 2,000 power satellites Primary 1,000 feedstock points to reduce ores to materials 10,000 processing centers to convert materials to finished goods 100,000 assembly centers to convert finished goods to consumer products 1,000,000 farm centers to grow and process food on orbit 10,000,000 forest centers to grow fiber and wood on orbit 100,000,000 residential centers - to house people on orbit Once established each population of primary assets continues growing until their total numbers are 20x the figures shown above. The number of floating cities never exceeds 25,000 since the population of Earth is reduced at the point this number of cities is reached.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, 10,000 cities flying freely over the Earth's surface COULD take up stationary positions relative to one another. Clearly 10,000 cities are more expensive than 660 satellites. And with a reusable heavy lift launcher, 660 satellites are still cheaper and more reliable than 10,000 comsat balloons. Average separation is 255 km - and they'd have to hover there. If a storm passed by, or if they wanted or needed to move - there'd be problems. Not so with a satellite. 20 tons at $2 million per ton is $40 million per satellite - and with 22 satellite per launch, and $70 million per launch - that's 22 satellites launched for $950 million. 30 orbital planes - 30 launches - $28,500 million - with a longevity of 30 years. At the end of the day with satellites I have a productive capacity to build and fly heavy lift launchers and build large quantities of space payloads at reasonable costs - which well prepares me for doing power satellites - while providing substantial income to support it (without detracting from energy revenues). A 15 ton balloon at $2 million per ton is $3 million per balloon - 10,000 ballons is $30,000 - with a likely replacement rate of 1% - 100 units per year - at $300 million - plus I'm in the airspace of every nation on Earth - and to save money I'd likely not populate certain regions since there's no traffic there to speak of - and so forth. A major train wreck in terms of management. At the end of the day, with balloons, I have a fragile high cost system that has low margins that every nation on Earth can interfere with - and no skill s whatever for the powersat business which remains to be developed. You see, I'm in the energy business - not the communications business. Once you can see that the dollar per watt for a powersat based solar collector is less than a terrestrial one - that's when I'm interested in heavy lift launch. Now, the question and the focus is; how do you get heavy lift launch? The answer, build it. Just like Rockerfellar built railroads and barrels and grew wood - these served his primary business - they weren't businesses in themselves. Now is there low hanging fruit along the way to pick? Yes. Comsat networks. Later, once the power supplies of Earth have been turbocharged with abundant solar harvested from space and delivered where its needed at very reasonable prices - Earth's economy will grow dramatically. This will create OTHER shortages in OTHER materials. Those shortages will constrain growth in energy demand. At that point, I have an asset that is underused and a rationale to use it. I only need 70 launches per year - to keepy my system busy - but I have the capacity to do 200. Shortages in other materials reduce growth rates and cause my assets to be underused. Can I use that spare capacity to increase the demand for energy? Yep - by supplying those strategic shortages from space based assets at market, or below market prices. In fact, I will supply these other materials at costs that let me to maximize my overall profit in the energy business. So, I may accept loss leaders in the metals business, the food business, or even temporarily in certain regions and channels, in the energy business to maximize growth in profits in my primary most profitable channels. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Why not just park our energy sucking butts within our salty old moon?
Don't you think there's any usable geode pockets or hallow rilles up there? Don't you think our trusty old moon is semi-hollow, or perhaps at most that offering a low density core? How about just using my 256e6 tonne LSE-CM/ISS? (there's lots of room inside, and it's extremely well shielded) On Feb 3, 7:30 am, wrote: On Feb 2, 2:03 am, BradGuth wrote: And the Mook World FactBook is once again telling us what we already know, or of what none of us need to know. How about all of those robo H2 blimps doing their global internet fast access thing? . - Brad Guth wrote: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_n...rity_sphere%29 http://www.flickr.com/photos/ldjjj/109033997/ Two kilometer diameter geodesic spheres floating due to warm air inside was first proposed by Buckminster Fuller in 1967. Entire communities could float overhead, taking in resources and providing finished goods in payment. They could also trade goods. Travelling at an average speed of 80 kph - they would circumnavigate the Earth every ,20 days. Carrying 50,000 tons of surplus cargo for trade, 10,000 such cities, with 5,000 people on board each - would exchange enough goods to support every man woman and child on Earth at the US per capita rate. In 1967 these cities were thought to be nuclear powered. Compact nuclear reactors from GE - of the type that powered Antarctica from 1962 to 1972 http://www.eoearth.org/article/Small...power_reactors would provide the city its lifting capacity and power supply. I envision such cities might be powered by laser beams from space - and would be the first step toward space colonies. They would also be the natural warehousing and control centers for terrestrial processing and distribution of early stage raw materials and finished goods from orbit. Smaller hydrogen filled balloons - with compact industrial processors - also powered from space - could provide a variety of functions supporting the larger city. 5 to 10 smaller cargo balloons each with 200 to 1,500 ton lift capacity - would be associated with each city of 2,000 to 5,000 people. 2,000 asteroids or astreroid fragments would be gathered from the asteroid beltand returned to sun synchronous polar orbit above the terminator line of Earth. The asteroids would be processed into raw materials and finished goods - as the first step in off-world development. Power satellites would be built on Earth and orbited. the power satellites would then be used to increase the efficiency of the rockets used to deploy them. A total of 2,000 satellites, each generating 22 GW of laser energy - would provide sufficient energy for all of Earth as well as substantial space resources. The ground based systems that supported the deployment of 2,000 power sats, and 660 comsats previously, would build and dispatch 1,000 probes to the asteroid belt to survey 6,700 asteroids selected from 45,000 chosen from an optical analysis of 300,000 small solar system bodies. From this process, 1,000 asteroids, ideally suited for use as industrial feedstock are returned ot Earth orbit. 1,000 telerobotically operated factories are deployed one to each asteroid- in orbit 1,000 km above the Earth. Eeach separated 46.3 km from the other. The first major construction are 10,000 cloud nine cities that re- enter the Earth's atmosphere and deploy after reaching subsonic speeds - spread throughout the Earth. Crews are selected from the millions of workers that operate the telerobotic factories on orbit, along with their families. Up to 50 million people may be recruited in this way, with 10 million workers spread among 100 different operating companies. The next expansion is to build assembly plants and other industrial components on orbit, to support processing and eventual distribution to Earth through the cloud nine cities. Support 4 HL-RLVs 30 LHL-RLV 660 communications satellites 2,000 power satellites Primary 1,000 feedstock points to reduce ores to materials 10,000 processing centers to convert materials to finished goods 100,000 assembly centers to convert finished goods to consumer products 1,000,000 farm centers to grow and process food on orbit 10,000,000 forest centers to grow fiber and wood on orbit 100,000,000 residential centers - to house people on orbit Once established each population of primary assets continues growing until their total numbers are 20x the figures shown above. The number of floating cities never exceeds 25,000 since the population of Earth is reduced at the point this number of cities is reached.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, 10,000 cities flying freely over the Earth's surface COULD take up stationary positions relative to one another. Clearly 10,000 cities are more expensive than 660 satellites. And with a reusable heavy lift launcher, 660 satellites are still cheaper and more reliable than 10,000 comsat balloons. Average separation is 255 km - and they'd have to hover there. If a storm passed by, or if they wanted or needed to move - there'd be problems. Not so with a satellite. 20 tons at $2 million per ton is $40 million per satellite - and with 22 satellite per launch, and $70 million per launch - that's 22 satellites launched for $950 million. 30 orbital planes - 30 launches - $28,500 million - with a longevity of 30 years. At the end of the day with satellites I have a productive capacity to build and fly heavy lift launchers and build large quantities of space payloads at reasonable costs - which well prepares me for doing power satellites - while providing substantial income to support it (without detracting from energy revenues). A 15 ton balloon at $2 million per ton is $3 million per balloon - 10,000 ballons is $30,000 - with a likely replacement rate of 1% - 100 units per year - at $300 million - plus I'm in the airspace of every nation on Earth - and to save money I'd likely not populate certain regions since there's no traffic there to speak of - and so forth. A major train wreck in terms of management. At the end of the day, with balloons, I have a fragile high cost system that has low margins that every nation on Earth can interfere with - and no skill s whatever for the powersat business which remains to be developed. You see, I'm in the energy business - not the communications business. Once you can see that the dollar per watt for a powersat based solar collector is less than a terrestrial one - that's when I'm interested in heavy lift launch. Now, the question and the focus is; how do you get heavy lift launch? The answer, build it. Just like Rockerfellar built railroads and barrels and grew wood - these served his primary business - they weren't businesses in themselves. Now is there low hanging fruit along the way to pick? Yes. Comsat networks. Later, once the power supplies of Earth have been turbocharged with abundant solar harvested from space and delivered where its needed at very reasonable prices - Earth's economy will grow dramatically. This will create OTHER shortages in OTHER materials. Those shortages will constrain growth in energy demand. At that point, I have an asset that is underused and a rationale to use it. I only need 70 launches per year - to keepy my system busy - but I have the capacity to do 200. Shortages in other materials reduce growth rates and cause my assets to be underused. Can I use that spare capacity to increase the demand for energy? Yep - by supplying those strategic shortages from space based assets at market, or below market prices. In fact, I will supply these other materials at costs that let me to maximize my overall profit in the energy business. So, I may accept loss leaders in the metals business, the food business, or even temporarily in certain regions and channels, in the energy business to maximize growth in profits in my primary most profitable channels. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
These could also be built on Earth.
I got this idea of building things when we were looking at how to install solar panel strings efficiently. We have 4 ft by 8 ft panels 3/4 inch deep. When they are Z-folded together for storage, there's a 2 inch long flap between them - this means we can curve them a little bit. How far? 1.2 degrees. That means 300 panels can be turned around in a circle. That's the tightest curve we can make. So, we have a circle with an inner circumference of 1,200 feet. That's a diameter of 382 feet. (116.5 m) So we can run our tractor in circles, and cut the strings so we come out even - so as to have all the electrolyzers, water feed lines, service access, and hydrogen gathering - to be along one radius of the disk of panels we're forming. GPS guided tractors make this easy. Well, if you mold in an aluminum or steel frame - and have joists of the same material, you can build a dome the same way, except at you build it, you'll have to lift it. Here since they're trianglar, and joined by a joist, these window panes of PET can start with 0 diameter (1 tile) and be built up. If the dome is to be mounted on the ground, footers are dug and poured to hold the dome. If not, the dome is released when done anchored on footers with tensioning lines. Tensioning lines to stabilize it from the beginning are also a good idea. The way we figured it, a 'seed' array - is hand built,and mounted on a lift- crane located in the center. The lift crane pokes through the very top - and tensioning lines are attached to keep it upright in a wind. The lines are coiled up on big drums and unrolled as the build progresses. The welding tractor then takes truckloads of panels and welds them along the ends, while the crane lifts the growing mass. This being one gee and not zero gee, and the surface of the Earth not the vacuum of space, the weld tractor is far smaller and lighter than the big rotary device I contemplated on orbit. For that reason it can only travel at 1.5 mph. So, it takes 60 days to complete the build of a 1.41 km diameter -half- sphere. 30 days for the footer pours. 90 days altogether. Still that's an amazingly short time for such a small structure. Building the tiles in semi-automated fashion and moving them around by truck - rather than speed building them in huge dedicated rotary molds and shoothing them around the vacuum of space at high speed - adds another 90 days to the build out. That is, the factory is set up to produce a half dome every 180 days - and you take 90 days to build it - and 90 days to move your equipment from one site to another. Still two domes a year that cover 1.57 sq km is quite a sizeable achievement. Of course smaller systems are possible. Replacing the aluminum frame with expanded polystyrene, makes for a very lightweight yet strong structure. Using plastic joists, and a heated tool that melts the PET structures together - provides adequate structural support for home sized structures. A circle 21.75 m in diameter provides 4,000 sq ft of floor space. A dome 25.11 m in diameter can be built 18.83 m high - cut off below the equator and provide 4,000 sq ft of floor space with plenty of head room. To lay out a sphere pick a center. Then get a cord 10.875 m long. Stake one end to the center, and walk around it with a can of spray paint and mark the ground. This is your outer wall. Using this cord and the wall line and simple geometry, you can mark equally spaced footers around the arc you've made. For this type of construction, a post hole digger and post is a suitable base for this construction. The post has mounted to it a modified joist to connect to the finished shell when completed. At the center, put a skidder with a 20 m reach - appropriately equipped- the gondola has a holder inserted into it - to hold the 'seed' tile http://www.aeriallift.com/skidders.htm and the builder walks around and heat seals additional triangular tiles on to the seed - by sealing the PET edges and the plastic frames to the plastic joists - walking around the base of the growing shell. Using a remote control the builder signals the skidder after each turn, and it executes a pre-programmed raise by an appropriate amount - so one person can complete the build. . 3,050 triangular tiles each 1 meter on a side, are assembled into a truncated sphere whose bottom lip just sits on the footers built previously. The tiles come partly pre-assembled in a z-folded ring. You place them in stacks along the radial lines made in your footer construction - in sizes shown in the assembly instructions. The joists are pre-inserted in the corners of each triangle - and only need to be joined to the free corner of an adjacent tile and heat sealed in place. In this way, it should take no more than 8 seconds to put each tile in place, easily walking around the base of the skidder. The assembly should take 7 hours once everything is in place. Pre- positioning everything and marking the footers should take another 7 hours. Digging the post holes and placing and leveling them (with water filled tube) another 7 hours. So, it should take two people helping one another - 3 days to build a 4,000 sq ft structure. 6 people working three shifts - can complete a 4,000 sq ft structure a day. Not included in these estimates are interiors and finishing. When the structure is completed, it is lowered on to the footers and attached. A door is cut out as shown in the instructions with a linoleum knift, the skidder is lowered and removed - and a pre- assembled door is attached when the interior is done. When the diameter of the rising sphere is equal to the wall diameter A space frame may be attached for a ceiling. This cealing may support lighting fixtures, wiring and so forth - as well as studs for hanging wall units. The diameter continues to grow until the sphere's equator is reached, and then starts to grow smaller again. when the diameter of the rising sphere is equal to the wall diameter a second time, construction ceases and another space frame is attached, with wiring, plumbing and drainage supported from it. This is the floor line. The interior includes putting in floor tiles over the space structure, and ceiling tiles hung from the ceiling space structure - with 'great room views' near the entrance and in reception rooms. Depending on the contractor work required it may take a week to finish the interior this way. An automated system can be imagined that is trucked in and setup off the bed of a 53 ft (16.15m) long truck. Two trucks, one with the equipment, the other with the tiles, space structure, floor and ceiling tiles (pre-wired) - and completes one tile every two seconds - and completes the entire structure in less than 2 hours. In fact in a day, a factory can dispatch two workers in two trucks anywhere in a 150 mile radius from the warehouse - and finish a house a day - including interior with all wiring and plumbing. Since the floor and ceiling tiles are removable - and all the wiring and plumbing and drains are accessible - the system is easily inspected. Six workers with two trucks - each working different 8 hour shifts, can complete 3 houses a day. At $50 per tile - the shell would cost the builder $152,500. The interior space frame, $40,000 for both top and bottom ($10 per sq ft) - So, that's $232,000 for a 4,000 sq ft house. At $110 per sq ft - the house would retail for $440,000. The factory that made a 1.41 km diameter 2/3 sphere - every 180 days - makes 53,272 tiles per day. That's 17 houses per day. Or $3.9 million per day. The larger sphere costs $466 million. So, 16 distributors around the country would keep the factory busy. Selling larger spheres would pay comissions that would be equivalent to winning the lottery for that distributor! lol. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Once Upon a Time and Now Oort Cloud What if? (On the Cloud) | G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_] | Misc | 1 | November 2nd 07 12:27 PM |
City Guide | Annonymous Account | Astronomy Misc | 0 | September 15th 05 08:30 AM |
Things you can see in the city? | Drake | Amateur Astronomy | 12 | May 3rd 04 01:43 AM |
Star City | Jonathan Silverlight | History | 2 | April 9th 04 09:43 AM |
What can be seen from the city? | philip | Amateur Astronomy | 25 | September 5th 03 06:39 PM |