I'm just suggesting it be done to capture electrical power with a brushless motor, attic heat and a small bank of sterling engines could probably light a western home.
In conjunction with a controller and a battery to only use the power when electricity costs typically peak it should save a non trivial sum of cash. Obviously this sort of thing should be done in conjunction with other forms of energy production. The engines get more powerful the higher the temperature differential so as 3d printing technologies develop and metal costs plummet custom sterling engines built to wedge into anything which produces stout temperature differences like a heat pump could scavenge energy from the system; at that point it becomes about not leaving power on the table.
Yeah, doesn't work. Put a load (brushless motor) on a sterling engine, and it won't work. You may be able to scale it up to the point where it can do a little bit of work. But, it will be a lot of material for a few volts.
The Sterling engine is an oddity. It's cool looking, but worthless.
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