Ah, and what causes the initial rotation in the first place . . .?
regards ruggero ;-)
Moderator: scott
Well now, are we discussing Bessler's early one-way wheels?ruggero wrote:Ah, and what causes the initial rotation in the first place . . .?
You could say the same about a Gravity Wheel, wherein the weights move to keep the wheel in a constant state of imbalance, and gravity would accelerate the imbalance constantly. It is all about the reset, only gravity give us more options.In either case, the initial starting force was rather weak, and then as the internal weights start moving in a specific fashion, the motions of the weights cause their motions to grow stronger each cycle.
I'm sorry, but gravity gives you no options. You talk about reset, which means raising the fallen weights back upward to the top of the wheel. So where does this reset energy come from? It can't come from gravity, because of the conservative nature of gravity.Trevor Lyn Whatford wrote:You could say the same about a Gravity Wheel, wherein the weights move to keep the wheel in a constant state of imbalance, and gravity would accelerate the imbalance constantly. It is all about the reset, only gravity give us more options.
To conclude; we need an energy input. . .initially.jim_mich wrote:In either case, the initial starting force was rather weak,...
Hi Jim- Mich,jim_mich wrote:I'm sorry, but gravity gives you no options. You talk about reset, which means raising the fallen weights back upward to the top of the wheel. So where does this reset energy come from? It can't come from gravity, because of the conservative nature of gravity.Trevor Lyn Whatford wrote:You could say the same about a Gravity Wheel, wherein the weights move to keep the wheel in a constant state of imbalance, and gravity would accelerate the imbalance constantly. It is all about the reset, only gravity give us more options.
Bessler in AP in German, wrote:Nun die Nachricht (deucht mich) ist gut,
Dem, der sie fein einfassen thut;
Denn manche Möb’lemacher denken,
Wenn ihre Sachen sich nur lenken,
Heraus ein wenig weiter hier
Als dort – o! so wird’s lauffen schier;
Ich habe dieses selbst erfahren
Mit lauter Müh’ vor vielen Jahren,
Bis mich das wahre Sprichwort schlug:
Ein jeder wird mit Schaden klug. x
Drum steckt im mechanischen Grunde
Noch viel verborgen diese Stunde;
Doch weil mich keine Noht hier treibt,
Von mir mehr Nachricht unterbleibt.
Bessler in AP in English, wrote:Now the message (thinks me) is good,
To him, who they good grasp do;
because some Mobile-makers think
when their stuff themselves just guide
Out a little further here
as there - oh! so wouldst run purely;
I have this even learned
with nothing but toil prior many years,
to me the true proverb suggest:
One each would with loss (get) smart.
That's why stuck in mechanical basis/rationale
Still much hidden this hour;
But because me no need here push,
From me more message omitted.
Paraphrasing, Bessler says that the message just previously disclosed is good to him who can get a good grasp on it, because some mobile-makes think an unbalanced wheel (weights further out here as there) should surely run. Bessler than writes that he learned about this many years prior from nothing but toil. Bessler then quotes a proverb which means you must learn from your errors.Bessler in AP by JC, wrote:I also think it's a good thing to be completely clear about one
further point. Many would-be Mobile-makers think that if they can
arrange for some of the weights to be a little more distant from the
centre than the others, then the thing will surely revolve. A few
years ago I learned all about this the hard way. And then the
truth of the old proverb came home to me that one has to learn
through bitter experience. There's a lot more to matters of
mechanics than I've revealed to date, but since there's no urgent
need involved, I'll refrain from giving more information at the moment.
There are physics laws that prevent the motion transfer from re-occurring, though. It's a one shot occurrence, the same as a gravity wheel. I'm surprised you don't see that. I guess you will when you try it.jim_mich wrote:Marchello, in the past, I've attempted to explain that a motion wheel is not totally constrained by thermodynamic laws. TD laws forbid spontaneous transfer of heat from colder mass (having less KE) to warmer mass (having greater KE). Such just does not ever happen in a spontaneous manner. Energy input is required such as by using a heat pump.
But there exists a very simple mechanical arrangement (Bessler's principle of PM) whereby a slower moving weight (with less KE) can spontaneously transfer much of its motion to a faster (with greater KE) moving weight. Momentum is transferred. Thus momentum is conserved.
As an example. Assume you have two weights moving a same speed. Transfer momentum from one weight to the other weight. This can be done spontaneously in a rotating environment of a wheel with little or no effect on the rotation. Do the math. Assume both weights were moving at say 20 feet/second and both weights have a same mass of two units. The weight's KE is 1/2 × 2_mass × V^2. Since 1/2 × 2 equal 1, we can make the formula very simple as KE = V^2. Thus KE of each weight equals 20^2 = 400 KE units. Total KE combined of two weights is 800 KE units.
Now one weight spontaneously gives up half its velocity to the other weight.
Weight #1 V = 10 ft/s. Its KE = 10^2 = 100 KE units.
Weight #2 v = 30 ft/s. Its KE = 30^2 = 900 KE units.
Total KE combined of two weights is 1000 KE units.
Thus we gained 200 KE units simply by allowing motion to transfer from a weight that is slowing down to a weight that is speeding up. We added no energy. Momentum was conserved. The weights changed their velocities spontaneously without consuming any energy. Thermodynamic Laws forbid KE from spontaneously transferring from cold material to warmer material. But there is no physics law that prevents motion from transferring from slower weight to faster weight. Of course such requires certain specific circumstances, which are Bessler's secret principle of perpetual motion.
This is your opinion. You don't know the design. There are no physics laws that prevent the motion from re-occurring. But you'd need to see the mechanisms to understand this.eccentrically1 wrote:There are physics laws that prevent the motion transfer from re-occurring, though. It's a one shot occurrence, the same as a gravity wheel. I'm surprised you don't see that. I guess you will when you try it.
49 inches.eccentrically1 wrote:How big is your wheel diameter?
Since I changed the materials for some parts, I've lost track of the wheel's estimated weight. It's somewhere in the range of 120 lbs. About right for two men to heft. The weights themselves are about 83 lbs total. The wheel and mechanisms are maybe 40 lbs?eccentrically1 wrote:How much will it weigh?