pokermind wrote:Stirling engines are low power 1/3 hp is a big Stirling engine.
Because we treat them as toys, mostly; look at the Japanese Sōryū-class submarines, which have four 2,000 HP Stirling Engines in their AIP system. There's nothing inherently small about Stirling engines.
pokermind wrote:Without modern metals ect they weigh more than a steam engine of the same HP. There is a reason they are not in common use they cannot compete with IC engines or electric motors. Less complex than steam? Those modern materials [like Aluminum for the displacer piston] are coming from where?
I'd say the reason is that the IC engines got massive development money for aircraft in the Great War and nothing else caught up. Like turbocompound engines versus gas turbines, it's got something to do with the historical accidents of when and how development happened.
Electric is of course Right Out on Safehold for the foreseeable.
Stirling engines are inherently less complex than steam; closed cycle, so no boiler, no water or fire tubes, no condenser that has to deal with water quality issues, no valves, it's just plain simpler mechanically. They're also quiet, which, in a setting where factories probably occur next to housing (people mostly walk to work!) is a good thing.
The "modern metals" don't need to include aluminium; good steels and copper heat sinks will work fine, Safehold's industry is not yet at a size to make the inherent rarity of copper really problematic.
Also, for a stationary engine, such as is powering a factory, I don't really care how much it weighs, I care how much it costs. A Stirling engine's more efficient than a steam engine; I'm going to pay much less in fuel over the life of the engine. It's inherently mechanically simpler; it will be less expensive to make. If Safehold has a way to get the internal pressure up to 10 bar or so, which does involve sliding seals, this is a really obvious engineering choice because they're starting with 1900-or-so steel technology, rather than 18-low-number steel technology.
For a traction engine, particularly a railroad locomotive, not having to worry about feedwater is a big deal. So is fuel efficiency, because going twice as far on the same coal means I as the railroad operator need half as many coaling stations that
don't need to also supply water which means this costs less.
pokermind wrote:Steam Engines or Diesel IC engines I can see but, little 1/3 hp engines to run a sewing machine in some lady's home get real there is only so much machine time available and making many low powered engines requiring an open flame no.
Except this actually happened. The concept of a "domestic engine" isn't still with us thanks to electricity, but it was around for a long time. Something that will run the washing machine is a very big deal; washing devours time and effort and we see now a pattern of development where washing machines are the first appliances purchased and make a huge difference to education. (Because Mom now has time and energy to read to kids.) And since powered textile mills on Old Charis are driving the price of clothes down, the need for washing is going up.