I have received a short e-mail from him:
Got interesting news of a breakthrough in India. You still with us I hope!
Ralph
Moderator: scott
Got interesting news of a breakthrough in India. You still with us I hope!
The first law of thermodynamics is falsifiable like any of the other laws. But throughout the history of the universe, it's never been falsified.Lloyd Burton wrote:eccentrically1
I am open to conviction but I am not yet convinced. This sounds like the proof for the First Law of Thermodynamics: the First Law is because nobody has ever built a PPM therefore the 1st Law is etc etc etc....Likewise, PK always = KE because nobody has yet proved an exception to the law.
If anyone has ever found an explanation for the alleged Over Unity in the Milcovic pendulum I would be glad to see it.
Lloyd
What I'm working on is knowledge that could be gained from understanding the pendulum. If the swing is 1 meter at 1 m/s, then if the weight is raised to 1/2 meter then it's velocity is 4 m/s.John Collins wrote:I have no idea what German word Dr Minaria took to mean pendulum, but then he quotes extensively from my English translations and then adds his special interpretations of what he read. In my biography of Bessler I discussed the presence of the pendulums in the published images, but which were never described by a single one of the many witnesses. I suspect that Minaria took my discussion and ran with it to pastures unintended.
JC
That would be easy to find experimentally. Just measure the reduction in height the bob reaches when it returns to the starting side. Unfortunately I am too busy building my wheel to do this myself.Tarsier79 wrote:You also need to understand how much velocity the bob loses due to pumping the main arm, vs how much work it is actually doing. I wish I fully knew all of that.
It would perhaps be more interesting to boost the Milkovic pendulum from a ±60° to ±360° thus boosting the nadir pulse by a factor of 4 if my memory serves me correctly. This would make the measurement of the difference between a stationary and a Milkovic pendulum easier and be a more sensitive device for measuring the effect of changing various relevant variables.Lloyd Burton wrote:That would be easy to find experimentally. Just measure the reduction in height the bob reaches when it returns to the starting side. Unfortunately I am too busy building my wheel to do this myself.Tarsier79 wrote:You also need to understand how much velocity the bob loses due to pumping the main arm, vs how much work it is actually doing. I wish I fully knew all of that.