Monday, December 31, 2007

GOING.

RV and I get up at dawn, spend 10 hours a day at the workshop and then work on the computer until after midnight before sleeping until the pattern repeats. It’s working: I have anywhere from 1 to 7 people following my directions at any given moment in time when at the workshop. From the neighborhood children who sit around saluting us and chanting ‘toobaboo’ (whitey) at us while making us tea, to Diadié a shop man with impressive skill (it’s his workshop), his apprentice Drisa, RV, Konan, Yusuf (an economics student who wants to help promote the array) and a seemingly endless supply of interested randomers who have dropped by to lend a hand for the simple, long and repetitive work of making the spiders.

Today we finished the frame, and the mirrors have been glued up and ready for a couple of days now. Tomorrow is going to be a big and exciting day: we’re going to mount the mirrors, concentrate them, and start experimenting with local supplies for insulation (vermiculite and fiberglass insulation don’t seem to exist here). Next week, before Karim gets back on the 5th I hope to have painted the machine and built a hybrid oven/roaster, since two of the most interesting applications are bread baking and peanut roasting.

The real fun should begin then. For now, enjoy some pictures from around the workshop.

Proof that the solar arrays can be built just about anywhere:

Instead of giving the full explanation to every passerby (you never know who will be the vector that makes the connection to the precise person you want to talk to) I got the schematics printed up and I taped them to the wall of the ‘shop’ and they inform themselves, and if they’re interested (most are) they come over and talk it up.

RV at work slitting the spiders (if you’re interested in knowing more about the construction process, it is outlined in some detail at http://www.solarfireproject.com/spider )


Tea a la Mali is like teaspresso: they basically fill the teapot with green tea, fill up the between space with water, boil for half an hour, remove some water to add the sugar and then boil for another 15 minutes while pouring it back and forth ceremoniously. They then serve a half shot of it and you’re good to go for the next 45 minutes while 2nds gets made.

Here’s the jig we made to make sure the spiders get welded square (it’s important or else the screws fall outside the perimeter of the mirror and do nothing).

Work gets interrupted by Didier’s daughter; he gives her a coin and she goes to the corner store to get a candy (even though she can’t yet speak).

RV is good to go.

Didier isn’t impressed though:

By curving the main beam by weighting down the middle we’re able to weld some strap iron to make a tensor which strengthens the structure.

Warning: getting Bulldog glue out of the tube without the glue gun is surprisingly and amazingly difficult.

Headlamp to the rescue! We were able to glue up all the spiders.

On the way to work I stopped by the local bakery and found a bunch of jovial bakers willing to let me walk around and observe things. They didn’t speak to much French, but I got across that I was trying to build a bread oven and wanted to know how it worked. That’s not a wall behind them, that’s the oven. It’s over 2 meters tall by 3.5meters by 2 meters deep. It has two levels of bread and can make 240 baguettes measuring 80cm long at a time.

Finally we finished the frame. The mirrors are all glued up, and we’ve got a game plan for figuring out how to build the oven. Tomorrow, with the first sun of the new year we’ll light a Solar Fire.

1 comment:

solander said...

C'est excellent! Je lis vos aventures attentivement et j'ai l'impression de faire le voyage, d'aller à l'atelier le matin, de boire le thé, d'avoir un tee-shirt sale et tout... Courage et un grand salut à tout le monde.