Events: detail
Easter Fun & Giants of Steam
- Hosted by:
- Kew Bridge Steam Museum
- Speaker:
- None listed
- Starts:
- March 30, 2008 at 12:00 pm
- Ends:
- March 30, 2008 at 06:00 pm
- Location:
- Kew Bridge Steam Museum, Green Dragon Lane, Brentford, Middlesex, TW8 0EN United Kingdom
- Maps:
Description
Hot Foot It to Stirling Air Engine show at Kew Bridge Steam Museum
Concerned about global warming and the size of your carbon footprint? – want to do something about it? – well rally round for the Stirling and Hot Air Engine Rally on Sunday 30 March at the Kew Bridge Steam Museum and find out more about these amazing machines.
Get all steamed up at this rally and engine competition where visitors will see over 80 working engines taking part and will also get the chance to meet the experts and find out more about these fascinating engines. The show will focus on working models and engines that are designed to stretch the application of this technology, which some engineers believe has a real place in helping to combat climate change. A Stirling engine is an engine that converts heat energy into mechanical work without the need for a fuel such as coal, gas, petrol or diesel and can literally use the power of the sun.
The rally will bring together probably the most diverse collection of Stirling and Hot Air engines ever assembled under one roof, with many participants demonstrating new models and engines that they have built since the last event. This year the Stirling Society will also be awarding the Peter Stanwell trophy for innovation in the field of Stirling engines.
There will be model and full size engines, some solar powered, on show in the museum’s galleries, and the engine competition will feature Stirling–engined, model buggys. The Stirling technology has been applied to Combined Heat & Power installations and to generators, which makes its potentially ideal for developing countries. In the 1950s and 60s, Phillips even built a Stirling engine bus and their Stirling powered radio sets played an important role during the disastrous flooding that hit the Netherlands in the early 1950s. The Stirling Rally is a great way for people to discover more about the science behind the principle.
Hot Air engines were commonplace around 1880 to 1920, but fell from fashion as the electric motor took over for water pumping and driving machinery. The Stirling engine is a closed cycle external combustion engine. The Stirling engine principle was invented in 1816 by the Rev. Dr Robert Stirling a Scottish clergyman and patented in 1817. It incorporates several key features which can make it a very efficient heat engine – but only at a high engine cost. The true Stirling engine incorporates a heat store known as the regenerator, which stores heat energy during one part of the cycle and then releases it later. This all helps to save the amount of heat which is needed to run the engine, thus making it overall more fuel-efficient. An engine without a regenerator is generally known as a Hot Air Engine.
Also available:
· Visitor operated model of the Boulton & Watt engine
· Water For Life Gallery
· Giant beam and rotative engines in steam at the weekends
· Museum café and shop
· Education facilities and group visits
· Partial wheelchair access and wheelchair accessible toilet
· Free Car park with extensive parking facilities
- Registration required:
- No
- Free:
- No
Additional information
How to find us: In Green Dragon Lane, Brentford, Middlesex about 200 yards from the north side of Kew Bridge under the tall Victorian Tower. Nearest motorway is M4 (coming into London, turn off at Junction 2 signposted to Kew Gardens and North/South Circular roads, down to Chiswick roundabout, then pick up signs for Kew, Brentford and Hounslow. Keep right at the traffic lights before Kew Bridge and then turn first right into Green Dragon Lane). The Museum car park has space for 40 cars.
Public Transport:
• Buses: 65, 237, 267, 391.
• Main Line Train: Kew Bridge (South West Trains from Waterloo via Clapham Junction). Gunnersbury (North London Line) then 237 or 267 bus.
• London Underground: Gunnersbury (District Line) then 237 or 267 bus. South Ealing (Piccadilly Line) then 65 bus
Admission:
• Cornish Experience Weekends and some special events weekends Adults £8.00 Concessions: £7.00
• Other Steaming Weekends Adults £7.00, Concessions £6.00
• Weekdays (engines not in steam) Adults £5.00 Concessions £4.00
• Children 15 and under FREE – children aged 15 and under are admitted to the museum for FREE, but must be accompanied by a paying adult. Proof of age may be required. Please note different rates may apply at some special events and activities.
Further information: The museum is open from 11.00am to 5.00pm Tuesday to Sunday. Closed Mondays except Bank Holidays.
For more information
- Contact person:
- Kew Bridge Steam Museum
- Phone:
- 020 8568 4757
- Email:
- info [ at ] kbsm.org
- Website:
- Easter Fun & Giants of Steam