Patents by Inventor Ted M. Godett

Ted M. Godett has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 5074114
    Abstract: A cogeneration system is disclosed using a Stirling cycle engine in which the waste heat from the engine and a generator driven by the engine is used for space heating or producing hot water and the generator used to produce electricity. A Stirling engine has numerous advantages over a reciprocating internal combustion engine in cogeneration systems in that the Stirling engine has a longer life, less maintenance cost, less noise and vibration and fewer emissions. With cogeneration, the added energy and fuel required over and above that required to produce a comparable amount of heat allowed to produce the same amount of heat with a conventional furnace or boiler is often less than the amount of electric energy produced from the system thereby resulting in a efficiency greater than 100% in the production of electricity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 14, 1990
    Date of Patent: December 24, 1991
    Assignee: Stirling Thermal Motors, Inc.
    Inventors: Roelf J. Meijer, Ernst J. Meijer, Ted M. Godett
  • Patent number: 4996841
    Abstract: Stirling cycle heat engine adapted for use as space heating and/or air conditioners. One embodiment features a Stirling engine prime mover providing a hybrid Stirling machine. Another embodiment utilizes an electric drive motor as a prime mover and a final embodiment is an open drive Stirling thermal engine particularly adapted for automotive belt driven applications. Enhancements in performance are provided by using pressure ratios significantly lower than that ordinarily provided for Stirling cycle engines. Decreases in pressure ratios are provided by intentionally adding dead volume to the cycle and particularly adding this dead volume strategically in the regenerator of the device which has been found to provide performance benefits. The systems according to this invention can be used either as space heaters or air conditioners by appropriately directing heat absorbed and rejected from the heat exchangers of the device to the approrpriate environment.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 2, 1989
    Date of Patent: March 5, 1991
    Assignee: Stirling Thermal Motors, Inc.
    Inventors: Roelf J. Meijer, Kaveh Khalili, Ernst Meijer, Ted M. Godett
  • Patent number: 4911144
    Abstract: A solar collector particularly for receiving concentrated solar energy from a large parabolic reflector and which forms the evaporator of a heat pipe type heat transfer mechanism. The solar collector is formed from a pair of spherical shell portions which are joined at their perimeters such that they are nearly tangent at their joint. This configuration provides low mechanical stresses on the welded joint, making the structure resistant to creep failure. The inside surfaces of the solar collector are preferably covered with wire screens for the transport of liquid heat pipe working fluid. Various finenesses of mesh can be used. Preferably, a coarse mesh is in intimate contact with the inside surfaces of the collector to act as a transport medium with a finer mesh covering it. These mesh layers can be applied to surfaces of sheet metal blanks through sintering or other processes which are thereafter deformed to the desired shell configurations.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 1, 1989
    Date of Patent: March 27, 1990
    Assignee: Stirling Thermal Motors, Inc.
    Inventors: Ted M. Godett, Roelf J. Meijer
  • Patent number: 4579046
    Abstract: Improved lubricant control assemblies for reciprocating piston rods of an engine which prevent crankcase lubricant intruding into the cylinders and fluid from the cylinders from escaping into the crankcase. Each assembly comprises a tubular scraper fitting closely onto a piston rod and yieldably mounted within the bore between cylinder and crankcase through which the piston rod extends. The yieldable mounting is by means of a compliant housing. The compliant housing allows the scraper to be displaced radially and thereby follow limited radial displacement of the piston rod while maintaining substantially full effectiveness of the scraper's action on the reciprocating piston rod. The scraper is urged into forceful contact around the piston rod by means of a crown spring which is supported on a tubular part which attaches to the compliant housing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 29, 1984
    Date of Patent: April 1, 1986
    Assignee: Stirling Thermal Motors, Inc.
    Inventors: Roelf J. Meijer, Benjamin Ziph, Ted M. Godett
  • Patent number: 4532855
    Abstract: An improved construction for a thermal engine, particularly a Stirling engine, comprising a two-part drive shaft. One part of the drive shaft contains the swashplate mechanism and is journaled on the engine housing so that the component of force acting on the swashplate which induces bending of the drive shaft is reacted on the housing by the journaling of the one part of the shaft. The second shaft part is separate from but operatively coupled with the first-mentioned shaft part and has its own journal mounting on the housing. The operative coupling in the disclosed embodiment is by means of a spline connection between the two shaft parts which are in coaxial alignment. The second shaft part is journaled on a housing part which is separable from other parts of the housing on which the first shaft part is journaled.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 4, 1984
    Date of Patent: August 6, 1985
    Assignee: Stirling Thermal Motors, Inc.
    Inventors: Roelf J. Meijer, Benjamine Ziph, Ted M. Godett