To add to the previous Math-twitch: the found 'jerk' j= -2197/273375 = 0.008037 rotations/s³ = -2.89317°/s³, and would suddenly drop to zero at time T.
Sam, as mentioned before your 10.6 seconds would give a similar reported observation as my calculus showed (when it actually was measured in Bessler's time)
Fletcher wrote:We know the acceleration due to gravity but we don't know the net imbalance force (though it appears not much) so we can guess the number of weights acting at any time over a circumference distance to come up with some figures retrospectively I guess.
Perhaps that is what ME is heading towards by running his math ? I'd be interested in what you determine ME !
I removed all assumption regarding weight, size and gravity. It's just the derivatives of displacement, measured in amount of complete rotations.
The displacement (in the above case: 3 rotations), the end velocity (26 RPM), and unknown initial acceleration, and the acceleration of 0 the time T which is also unknown)
By simply running the kinematics-formula of displacement we can determine both unknowns, depending on the accuracy of those observed values and also assuming the correct math-description. I assumed a slightly different description in my "tau"-post earlier; I guess when using more derivatives it will close in on those "tau"-values.
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When we reapply the wheel-size to the found acceleration of 0.08346 rot/s² (or 30.04°/s²), then we can speculate further.
A diameter of 12 ft is a radius of 1.8288 m (more comfortable with SI), this means at that distance (obvious some effect would have taken place inside the wheel, meaning a lower radius) things accelerate at 2*pi*r*0.08346=0.959 m/s²
That's about 10% of G.
But I think any speculation on the inside of this wheel is useless (or off-scale) as it was a bidirectional wheel, and thus initially balanced, and thus its initial acceleration was clearly zero.
Let's make it 20%, what would that say?
Let's make it 33%
(N=2.5 rotations, v=50 RPM, diameter=9.3 ft) --> for the above kinematics (3rd derivative-variant) I get t=4.5, a=133°/s² = 3.3 m/s² = 1/3 G
We can hypothesize about the 1 lifts four in two ways (?)
A down-force of 1 over all the fractions under gravity 1/(4+1) , and/or a down-force of 1 over the difference of fractions under gravity 1/(4-1)...
[while immediately glancing at the toy-page when seeing those numbers again]
So this could be a clear sign of a Gravitywheel and some leverage.
I found a relation between the final RPM and time and acceleration: a=RPM^2 * factorA, t=factorB/RPM
Note the difference between 'a' and 't' being RPM^3
So this could be a clear sign of some third derivative usage
(
you're welcome Grimer)
But centrifugal acceleration = w^2 / r, where w=angular velocity - a factor of RPM
So this could be a clear sign of some Motionwheel
Or it is some effect of a gravitywheel in motion, or a motionwheel still being limited by gravity, or something completely different.
The one thing we can determine for almost certain: it accelerated significantly but sub-G.
Marchello E.