Mr Vibrating,MrVibrating wrote:Hiawatha hurbles...
Score, gents. The laws of physics are my bitch!
Schnellwagen at the ready:
A force which varies for free is a free energy gradient.
A weight placed upon a vertically-spinning wheel is subject to both centrifugal force and gravity. However their net sum undulates - it's sinusoidal because gravity adds to CF through the lower 180° arc, but subtracts from it through the upper, overhead portion of the cycle - ie. from the weight's perspective, the radial and gravitational vectors align additively and destructively each in turn, once per cycle.
This is a free energy gradient.
We can 'drop' a weight when it's heavier, and 'lift' it when it's lighter.
Additionally, conservation of angular momentum governs angular speed as a function of radius (the 'ice-skater effect'), so 'dropping' the weight out towards the rim should decelerate it. However it can alternatively cause an acceleration, by converting CF to torque (by whatever preferred transmission mechanism). Hence dropping it when it's heavier (CF and G aligned) can add more rotational kinetic energy (RKE) to the system than needs to be subtracted from it to retract the weight back towards the axle in the upper half of the cycle (when CF and G vectors are opposing each other); the outbound excursion causes acceleration, and so does the retraction (again, due to conservation of AM)!
Both extension and retraction are gravity-assisted, and both cause acceleration. Angular acceleration causes CF, CF is converted to torque, which is converted into CF, which is converted into torque.
For any given config, peak efficiency arises when CF = 1G; hence, the output force is 2G, and the input force is zero.
Ergo Bessler's mechanism used this free variation in net force as an energy source, and a positive-feedback loop to rinse it proper, like. The per-cycle gain is equal to the mass times excursion distance of the radially-displaced weight, times the integral of the equalised CF and G forces.
There's little else worth saying for now, save that gravity is for cissies; real men play with magnets. Stonking great N42 NdFeB's. Kilowatt solenoids. That's some proper force right there. The optimum config is a large radius for high radial force and excursion distance at minimum speed, and EM for the linear vector (it's x10^39 > G after all).
Force is force. If Orffyreus could've used decent magnets, he would've.
One, final note on the transmission: it's direct-drive, or OB; each has their own pros and cons. In the former case though, the requirement that "everything must go around together" is a particular limiting factor - however it's do-able (such as via a slightly-modified scissorjack mechanism). OB seems equally viable.. it's swings and roundabouts, i think..
I've only sussed all this in the last 24hrs so i'll update as i make any progress... need a wm2d sesh..
Skoodles skiboobles,
V
A link to my thread and in it, I even agree with Jim_Mich but got no green dot.
Go figure.
http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewt ... be51438643
p.s., still, other ways it might work in an oob wheel but I would advise against discussing math in such a fashion.
Starting my build this weekend. :-)