Introduction: Free Homemade Water Wheel

About: I used to be a mechanic who fixed big and small engines alike. Now, do to a spinal injury, I can't do all that I used to, but I get around. I love Linux, electronics, cars, and I make it my life's work to shar…

Want Free electricity? I have A solution! All of my life I have passed an old grain mill on the way to town. I would watch the big 14 foot wheel turning from the water. That got me thinking about two weeks ago, and I decided to make A much smaller, but still powerful electric water wheel. Today I'll be showing you how to build one of these from junk you can find for A good price or FREE! By the way, the water wheel was already built when I decided to make an Instructable, the pictures will be taken from the finished product.

Step 1: The Parts

The items you need for this electric water wheel are two bike wheel rims, (I was reCYCLING A bike. Get it?) an axle for the rims (I am using some old rebar that slides nicely in the bike rims) A pool ladder for the axle stand. Some sort of motor that will produce electricity when turned. (I am using an unmodified Razor Bella scooter motor and it works great!) Some plastic based rope. Some old roof tin, aluminum plates, flat wood panels, anything that will act as A flat fin to put in the wheel. Rubber tubing. A lot of zip ties. A small pully. An old extension cord. Electric tape. A container big enough to fit over the pool ladder. Various wood. ( Blocks, boards etc.) A knife. A hammer and some nails, pliers, tin snips or hacksaw. A drill and bits of various sizes. The total cost of this project was $1.87 for the zip ties, so its not technically free. you can probably find most of the stuff needed at A junkyard.

Step 2: Assembly Line

To start off, put the pool ladder in front of you. Great! you are 1/10 of the way there! 1. Now take the bike rims and your pliers and unscrew the bolt in the middle. Once out you should see through the hole in the center of the rim. Repeat with rim 2. Remove any tires and innertubes. 2. Check your axle length. If the axle is long enough to sit on both bottom foot spokes of the ladder which are the widest apart, then great! As you can see my axle wasn't long enough so I had to make an extension with the wood blocks. 3. All you need to do is take two wood blocks and drill a hole through them. 4. You want to make sure that your axle will fit snug in the hole you drilled, maybe tapping it in the hole with the hammer. 5. Only tap one block into place. 6. Take your axle and turn it upright. 7. Take the tire rims and put them on the axle and stack 2 or 3 at most. 8. Zip tie the rims tightly together. 9. Now to make the fins. Take your flat material and cut off A large piece with the tin cutters. 10. Put the piece into the spokes And trim it down to a size that fits neatly in the rim spokes. This fin you trimmed down will be A mold for the other fin. 11. Trim 8 fins from the original mold fin. 12. Now slide all of the fins into the rim spokes with even spaces in between each fin. If you cannot get an even space between all of the fins, cut more or discard fins as needed. 13. Use A nail and hammer to punch holes in the fins to attach them to the bike rim spokes. 14. Use zip ties to tie the fins to the spokes. I would not recommend using wire to attach the fins to the rim spokes. It took me 2 hours to tie the 9 fins to the spokes. Once you have all of the fins snug on the bike rim, the hardest part is done! 15. Now slide the new bike rim-water wheel onto the halfway point on the axle. 16. Take your rubber tubing and cut two even pieces and slide one piece down the axle first, then put the wheel next, and then slide the second to keep the water wheel on the center of the axle while turning. Picture 5 shows the tube. 17. Now tap the second block onto the other end of the axle. Your almost done! 18. Set the blocks on the ladder foot spokes of your choice. (When this is in the water you want to make sure that only the bottom half of your wheel is being hit by the water.) 19. Now do A test spin on the wheel. If it turns freely, good. 20. Next, take A board and lay it on the ladder so that it is laying in the same direction and directly above your wheel. This is the motor mount. 21. Nail the motor down with shaft sticking out in front of the mount. 22. Attach the pully to the motor shaft. (That board you see in front of my motor is to attach the pully to my motor shaft since the shaft is too small to be directly connected the pully.) 23. Take your rope and wrap it around the bike rim (The rim acts as a pully as well as the water wheel) and bring it around the motor pully. 24. Hold the loose end and the other end cut where it meets the loose end. 25. Burn both ends together and let it cool. You have A custom size belt! Try pulling the weld A little to see if it will hold. 26. When you are ready, wrap the new belt-rope around both the bike rim and the motor pully. 27. When you manually turn the water wheel the motor should spin A little bit faster than the rim. Mine is A 6.1 ratio. 28. Strip the wires on the motor and the extension cord and properly tape them together. 29. To protect me motor from the rain and snow, I simply slid an old container over the top of the ladder and set A rock on it.

Step 3: Use It

Because my house is so far away from the creek, the voltage drop is significant. It does give me 5 volts continuously so that the is enough to power A cellphone, A lightbulb and you can probably hook up A voltage inverter to get 12 volts then from there 120 volts. You experiment and leave comments on what you come up with. Thanks for reading!

Make it Move Contest 2016

Participated in the
Make it Move Contest 2016