The Minto wheel is a heat engine named after Wally Minto. The engine consists of a set of sealed chambers arranged in a circle, with each chamber connected to the chamber opposite it. One chamber in each connected pair is filled with a liquid with a low boiling point and R-12. Ideally, the working fluid also has a high vapor pressure and density.
Operation
As the lower chamber in each pair is heated, the liquid begins to vaporize, forcing the remaining liquid to travel to the upper chamber. This fluid transfer causes a weight imbalance, which causes the wheel to rotate. Minto's pamphlet also suggests obtaining a pressure differential with a dissolved gas instead of a boiling gas. Soda water or propane dissolved in kerosene are suggested.
In 1881, the Iske brothers got a patent granted for a design similar to the Minto wheel. The patent suggests lamps as heating sources. Later the same year, Israel L. Landis got a patent for a similar engine. Different to the Minto wheel and the Iske brothers' patent, the engine was oscillating, not revolving. In the following years, the Iske brothers were granted various patents, including some relating to modification and/or improvements on engines similarly to the Minto Wheel and an oscillating engine similarly to Israel L. Landis design.
Drinking bird
The oscillating types by the Iske Brothers and Landis are related to the drinking bird toy. The drinking bird is dating back to 1910s~1930s. The drinking bird was patented in the US in 1945 and 1946 by two different inventors.
Wally Minto's contribution
Wally Minto experimented with different working fluids. With the working fluids he used, he got the required temperature difference down, enabling the engine - for example - to run onsolar power. Based on the working fluid, his improved wheel is also known as "Freon Power Wheel". Popular Science reported about in its March 1976 issue.
Examples
A working example of a Minto wheel was first published in a series of articles in The Mother Earth News, Issues #38 March, #39 May and #40 July 1976. Test units constructed by Mother Earth News and the MythBusters did work to convert temperature difference into torque; however not as well as overenthusiastic boosters claimed.