raj wrote:So prove me wrong without referring to the laws of thermodynamics. Prove me wrongs with your own explanations and facts.
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Then it will be a fair debate.
Raj, I agree with Ovvyus when he says your sharing is commendable, and please believe I am not just having a go at you, but I am trying to help you, and hopefully others, when I point out issues with some of your methods.
Also, do not get the idea that just because these findings are not currently positive, that I viewed what you presented casually.
Your idea as presented here will not work and let me show you why.
Raj's sketch with kinematic overlay
Video of motion of linkages
In the first link, you will see you latest graph paper sketch overlayed with a reproduction using a vector based kinematics program. Basic ask a program that can have connections defined and allow you to see movement of mechanisms, but it does not simulate gravity or forces, etc. so there is no need to worry about bad simulation data, but it is an accurate review of how these linkages would behave connected like this.
Forget that you present no calculations of any kind for the forces, but you don't even use basic trigonometry to correctly draw this idea on graph paper, thereby potentially misrepresenting the entire design, to yourself and to everyone else. You also don't even present the pendulum in consistent dimensions.
In this fast-paced, 140 character world, it seems more of us are losing patience with performing even the slightest amount of work. Oh, we think we are doing work when we are utilizing our brain to simulate an idea "frame-by-frame", with endless hours of speculative thought, but even Bessler talked about it "taking him a long time to calculate everything out and get it just right", not having the idea given to him in a dream and moving on directly to a build but having to figure it out, step by step.
As I've said before, Raj, you have great skill when it comes to physically building, and I'm sure you measure twice and cut once and all of that, right? I'm just discussing the earlier stage version of measure twice cut once, but using basic maths and/or software to help visualize and even confirm the validity of an idea or to more quickly rule it out.
I'm sure most of us on this forum have many of these skills, and if not, they are skills worth honing IMHO.