Talk:CEB Press Intro: Difference between revisions
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Please link to CAD drawings from Open Pario. | Please link to CAD drawings from Open Pario. | ||
== Collaboration with [[Auroville Earth Institute]]? == | |||
The [[Auroville Earth Institute]] also has a CEB press, which seems capable of producing various block shapes. | |||
What should we copy from them? How to best collaborate with them, so that both sides improve their machines? | |||
--[[User:Elifarley|Elifarley]] 22:22, 5 May 2011 (PDT) |
Revision as of 05:22, 6 May 2011
This page will hold the final version of the CEB Press Intro after the wiki reorganization. This is a list of pages that might hold relevant info. These need to be consolidated here: --Conor 10:00, 20 February 2011 (PST)
- The Liberator Beta v1.0 Specifications
- The Liberator Full Product Release Improvements
- CEB Press 2
- Full Product Release - The Liberator, Manual Version
- http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/2009/01/factor-e-live-distillations-part-5-the-ceb-story/
- http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/2010/05/brick-pressing-rate-maxed-out-16-bricks-per-minute/
- Blog category Compressed Earth Block Press
- Blog category Open Source CEB Press
- 10 page overview from Oberlin team
== According to http://openfarmtech.org/weblog/2010/06/full-product-release/ -
- The design of the manual machine is identical to the fully automatic version, minus the large hopper, vibrator, sensors, controller, and solenoid valves.
- We achieved 16 bricks per minute with a hydraulic power source of 24 gallons per minute
- The next competitors with a machine of comparable soil throughput appear to be priced between $45k (Powell and Sons) and $65k (AECT)
- Materials costs were $3610 for fully automatic version
Comments
Very nice! It's good to start seeing the documentation come into place.-MJ
Please link to CAD drawings from Open Pario.
Collaboration with Auroville Earth Institute?
The Auroville Earth Institute also has a CEB press, which seems capable of producing various block shapes.
What should we copy from them? How to best collaborate with them, so that both sides improve their machines?
--Elifarley 22:22, 5 May 2011 (PDT)