| By Peter Bowes BBC News, Portland, Oregon |
A US gym has installed specially-adapted exercise bikes that recycle energy generated by people as they work out. The Green Microgym in Portland, Oregon, aims to be a carbon neutral exercise facility through the use of solar power and human-generated energy from clients as they pedal and run. “The big challenge has been finding the right equipment and adapting the technology,” says Adam Boesel, the gym owner. The science behind generating electricity from gym equipment is not new. For decades people have been using dynamos on their bikes to power the front and rear lamps. Generating power in a gym setting is based on the same principle. “If you think about a gym, almost all of the exercise equipment has a spinning wheel, and if you can spin a wheel you can make electricity, just like a windmill makes electricity,” explains Mr Boesel. The gym has teamed up with a Texas-based company, Henry Works, which is in the process of developing what it has dubbed the Human Dynamo. The device connects several exercise bikes with a battery that stores the energy generated as people pedal. External appliances, such as a TV set or a lamp, can then be plugged into the box, to utilise the power. The exercise equipment generates DC power. The Human Dynamo uses an inverter to convert it into AC, which is required by domestic appliances to work. “A lot of gyms have large spinning group exercises with 30 or 40 or 50 people exercising at the same time - and that’s a perfect environment to use a machine like this,” explains Mike Taggett, who invented the Human Dynamo. “Everyone is working extra hard and you have a lot of people doing it at the same time, and a machine like the dynamo, if you figure a 100 watts per machine and you have 40 machines that’s 4,000 watts. “In a club that doesn’t have high air-conditioning requirements, for example, they would definitely be powering the whole gym, during that time period.” Connecting to the grid The challenge for the future is developing a mass storage system for the electricity. The most efficient way is channel it into the grid operated by a local utility company. The system is already used to integrate solar generated power with the electricity supply system. “We are working on a new generation technology which we call fire wheel which is a really interesting way to connect the power directly to the grid, says Mr Taggett. “Most utilities now have net-metering types of agreements for solar use or if you have wind turbines or something like that. “So it would be a matter I think of notifying your local utility company that you have this human power fire wheel equipment installed.” The downside, for gym owners, is that the system requires a significant amount of capital to install energy-generating equipment.
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