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The key to the future is — more and more frequently — found in the past. Reflecting, man recalls earlier efforts and ideas; modifies and improves upon them. Primitive rockets were the precursors of travel to the moon. Da Vinci's sketches of an airfoil, which would carry a man, foretold supersonic passenger travel. The list is endless.
It may well be that air engines, such as the Stirling cycle engine detailed in this book will put a technology devised in 1817 against the problems of today, especially the petroleum energy crunch.
As the reader will learn, this remarkable engine will run on a variety of fuels in automotive applications and is the focal point of on-going development in that area.
Perhaps more important, the Stirling is a basically simple engine which will operate on solar energy, and, as a result, it promises to be a most powerful weapon in a yet-to-be-declared war on starvation by providing the power to irrigate food crops on arid soil now barren.
It's a story as old as time. By looking back, one may plot a truer course for surging forward.
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Edition Notes
Bibliography: p. 113-117.
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- Created October 31, 2008
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July 23, 2017 | Edited by Jorge Reinaldo Galindo | Added new cover |
December 15, 2009 | Edited by WorkBot | link works |
October 31, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from University of Toronto MARC record |