$5 gravity energy storage system provides free LED lighting

Published by

CleanTechnica

Gravity energy storage is not exactly at the center of energy-related debates. However, it does have some admirable qualities. One is that such systems can be designed to last a lifetime. This is very important to everyone, of course, but especially to those living in impoverished parts of the world.

A so-called “gravity-powered” LED lamp, GravityLight, has been created that generates its own electricity with the assistance of gravity… although it is not completely gravity powered.

This is a human-powered LED. Like “wind-up” radios, this can be powered by bare human hands, and it works.

I am not going to label this as just another “wind-up” device, or “old technology,” because it is more convenient, and it’s addressing a critical need of the day. Plus, this device seems to work very well.

When those older, hand-wound devices I mentioned got old, their batteries malfunctioned and they would have to be cranked many times, and for a long time in order to get much out of them.

This LED uses no batteries or fuels. This means that it has the potential to last a very long time, if built well.

How The GravityLight Works

To use the GravityLight, the user lifts a heavy weight attached to the lamp by pulling a rope for about 3 seconds, and then the LED operates for 30 minutes before the rope needs to be pulled again.

The weight is a bag that can be filled with rocks, or any other material, as long as it is heavy enough to pull the rope down and turn the LED lamp’s internal generator.

The generator uses gears to achieve the rotational speed it requires. Exactly how that is done, is not stated.

Normally, people would use the rope to turn a large overdrive gear slowly, and that large gear turns a much smaller gear. Due to the fact that the small gear is so much smaller, it turns at a very high-speed. So the large gear provides a large amount of torque at an extremely low-speed, and that torque is converted into a higher rotational speed (but with less torque) suitable for the generator using this arrangement. I can only guess that this is how this lamp was built, based on the nature of this type of device.

This article was originally published on CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission

Share
Published by
Tags: cleantech

Recent Posts

Banks are no longer financing the energy transition on faith, and are declining deals they once would do

Australia does not have a shortage of renewable energy ambition, capital or projects. However, it…

15 May 2026

Revamped Gippsland wind project wins state approval, but still to win over some near neighbours

Gippsland wind project gains planning permit, but still has to win over neighbours who brought…

14 May 2026

Community shocked as Australia’s most advanced renewable state moves to end fracking ban

A government's move to end a 10-year moratorium on fracking in a sensitive coastal region…

14 May 2026

Big batteries took a bite out of gas generators’ evening peak party, then they ate the whole dinner

The growth of battery storage in evening peaks has been stunning, and in the last…

14 May 2026

NSW fast tracks $60m to win over local communities, years before first poles erected in new renewable zone

NSW fast-tracks $60 million in community funds to help head off community concerns about the…

14 May 2026

Australia’s growing throng of solar panels, home batteries and electric cars to be managed by new regulator

Australia's growing throng of solar panels, batteries and electric cars will be managed by a…

14 May 2026