top | item 8647359

(no title)

Gurkenglas | 11 years ago

If we have enough volume that we can't use the most dense possible weight for all of it, we can find cheaper weight materials by dropping the density constraint.

Couldn't you have the weight grip the sides of the tunnel with gears attached to a generator/motor (inside the weight) so the weight wouldn't rip itself apart? It would be the same machinery that ordinarily would operate the pulley at the top, just moved down into the weights (cause with this, you would need no more pulley). (To illustrate why it wouldn't rip itself apart, imagine gaps on the weight every 100 meters.)

discuss

order

msandford|11 years ago

Technically that would work fine. Economically, it's a disaster. McMaster prices are at least 2x what's available if you buy direct from a source, and if you were buying in bulk it'd probably get cheaper still. But this is cheap, cheap stuff for not that much weight. You'd need something I dunno, 100x-10000x stronger to do what you're talking about: http://www.mcmaster.com/#racks-and-pinions/=upn9xl

The appeal of the cables is that they're cheap. And they're cheap because they're easy to make (all things considered). Once you start applying sophistication to the design the price gets higher, and it's already too high from having to drill the hole.