evilauthor wrote:Given that Houseman's factories have all converted to pneumatic power, I'd bet on compressed air tanks.
Hmm... so how far can pneumatic power go as an electricity substitute.
~80% of my 1984 Dodge Charger's control systems (gauges, sensors, and controls) were pneumatic (either vacuum or pressurized) and my '78 Honda was just shy of ~95% (Vacuum powered brakes totally suck when the master hose collapses - thank god it was a stick). These controls usually included the carburetor, emissions controls, gauges. Before the mid 80's only a handful of items on cars were "fully" electric.
The German ME-163 Rocket plane had a Pressurized air tank to power it's flight controls. There were instances where the pilot had run out of air pressure and lost control of the aircraft prior to (or during) landing if he had been maneuvering too much.
I saw a documentary several years ago, where the last surviving steam shovel used to dig the original Panama Canal was discovered in some Minnesota woods, where it had been rotting for ~20 years. They spent 2-3 days replacing some steam lines and chipping the worst of the rust - hitched a Sull-air industrial compressor trailer to it, connected the air lines, and drove the shovel out of the woods using it's own tracks (notice, no one trusted the steam engine...).
These "Large" Bucyrus Steam Shovels were about the size of a medium sized backhoe today, but we're still talking about something weighing 10+ tons, so along with everything else, yes, a pneumatic tank is 100% possible.