Imagine it. You are going to the gym, and each person is expending energy to perform various forms of work. And every ounce of work being done is to tone and strengthen one's body. Health and vanity are prime reasons people go the gym, but what if the work you did generated electricity? Your not just working for you, your work out is indirectly benefiting everyone. I have no illusions that the power generated from one whole gym or a network of gyms would be enough to start shutting down gas power plants, but it could help reduce the amount of power those plants would have to use.
And talk about motivation, I imagine with your gym membership you are given a card that you plug into each machine and for as long as your card is in that machine and you are generating power, the amount you generate is recorded and acts as a credit to your gym membership. Go often enough and you could be going for free. If you are going to do it, the work you put in should be proportional to the amount of power generated. So heavy weights produce more power, but more reps at lighter weight can also equate to the same. Would make it easier for people to track their own individual workouts and energy output.
The machines would cost more, I mean it is going require flywheels, generators, cables, custom made pieces and magnets, to start, but with support from a government lobbyist group, long-term I am thinking tax rebates on the machines.
Now I have some ideas, and my buddy Craig and I have been talking and we think we can do this, so we are going to. Simple as that. I am now in the process of putting a team together to research, design and make a functioning model, so I can't go into any technical detail. But really if you read this blog and have any background in power generation, mechanical systems, electrical and control systems, and any practical machine and electrical design knowledge I bet you could probably come to some of the same design solutions that I have.
So from here, team, research, design, bankroll, working model. Then the business stuff, but being an engineer that is always secondary to a design that speaks for itself.
Making it work is easy enough, making it the new norm is the endgame and that will be hard. But any one that knows me knows I like hard.
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