Simanek just reiterates the laws of physics there andI think he means: things are doing fine up to the 100% conversion limit (which could practically never be reached) - and warns against expecting any surplus.Phaedrus wrote:I wouldn't pay too much attention to Donald Simanek. After all, on that 2nd page you've linked to, he states:
"The fundamental laws of physics do not prohibit perpetual motion."
I think that motor has simply two settings: Slow and Fast.But all kidding aside, you actually think that there is some kind of friction that is causing the behavior you see in these videos?
Both separate wouldn't give such effect and would just wobble in its place: - one can see the "wobble"-action going backwards when moving slow.
The main reason for motion is the fractional acceleration-parts (added force) when speeding-up and slowing down at the appropriate locations.
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Actually that acceleration doesn't work either, as it should still wobble.
So I now tend to agree with the (static/dynamic) friction explanation...
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Must be really something to have such swimming clock.rlortie wrote:I have a battery driven clock hanging on the wall that does what we see here!
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About FC,
I agree with Fletcher, the mentioned lever-example should just be balanced:
[Five weights 8 inches, will lift one weight dropping 40 inches]
[One weight dropping 40 inches will lift five weights 8 inches]
- these are equal!
Fcdriver makes it sound simple and obvious, but in his short phrases all important information is missing: hence the continues requests for explanatory diagrams; as those kinds of remarks make no sense without them (I hope).