Ynot, hi, continuing from your recent success with the cart on a turntable (tt):
I was a little surprised that you plan to do the double-sided cart after such 'amazing' speed, but I guess that suggests that your motives now aren't about proving the principle so much, and have become something else, like just doing something new for the sake of innovation or improving the performance as much as possible.
However, I would have thought it would be well worth your trouble doing tests, even fairly rough and ready ones, on the single cart before you add the second, for comparison purposes. (I'm just curious as to how much better the double is.)
It would also be best to make sure you get the constant turntable drive sorted out first, as that's fairly crucial to correct test results, I think.
I might be going on about things you already know, but you could get a pretty good test result just by counting the revs of your tt, then counting the counter-revolutions of your cart over a certain time. I guess actually the first is more difficult than the cart revs, because its so much faster. You might manage to count a mark on the circumference over a given time. I suppose it can't be taken from 'known revs' quoted on a motor, because that will vary with load. You really need the absolute revs of the tt. Otherwise, if it's too fast to count a mark, one way would be to hire a strobe light with a fairly accurately calibrated and variable pulse with a readout, and adjust the period until it coincides with your edge mark. I'd be interested to know how you decide the revs.
Then there'll be a simple formula involving those figures tt-revs and cart-revs and the radius that will give you the relative speed, or the 'multiple of windspeed' or whatever you want the performance as. Being slightly math-o-phobic, I'll set myself the task of working it out, since it can hardly be that difficult and I really should start my aversion therapy!
Do you expect approximately twice the performance from the double-cart? I can't see any reason why not....or maybe your testing will be more approximate or even 'yes-no' (although you surely can't have any doubts that it's a yes now).
Anyway, well done. I reckon at some point, if this principle continues to attract enthusiasts, there's going to develop a 'world record' in the form of a multiple of windspeed achieved (probably one for 'wild' wind and another for more accurate indoor tests on treadmills and turntables). You never know, your twin cart design might just set it.
I'm working on a DD cart using a completely different approach. It's in the design stages at the moment, top secret, and probably complete rubbish!