In relation to the concept of separate Prime Mover's I'd like to raise the topic of MT's 44 and 48 again (see pics below). To see what opinions there are about them and how they might be augmented to become workable.
Here are the quotes from Bessler's MT.
MT44 ..
Bessler wrote:No. 44: The sphere-method is reintroduced here. The problem shows 2 wheels: A is the main wheel, the axle of which has a gear at B. B drives the somewhat larger wheel C at point D. At side E are spheres which fall out of side G at point H below and into wheel C at point I and then out of C again into A at point F.
This problem looks good, but as sketched it does nothing special as long as no other application is present, for the wheel A must revolve several times before C revolves a single time.
Thus not enough spheres move from the former into the latter.
MT48 ..
Bessler wrote:No. 48: This is a sphere invention having a paternoster with pockets. A is a wheel. As the pocket-patemoster C raises the spheres, it passes over B, the axle of the wheel. At D the spheres are ejected into a channel. At E the spheres fall into the wheel, and at F they are ejected again into the paternoster.
Here, an insufficient number of spheres is carried to the wheel A by means of the paternoster.
The principle is good, but this figure will bring about no mobility by itself until completely different, additional structures have been provided.
Here Bessler says, in two separate paternoster (elevator) concepts, that the 'lift' can not keep pace with the wheel i.e. it can not run (be geared) fast enough to lift the required number of balls to keep the wheel full. And so they run out of balls.
In MT44 the balls are loaded well into the top half of the wheel whilst in MT48 they are only lifted as high as the axle (1/2 wheel height approx).
So the questions are ..
1. are the different additional structures (also called the other application present) the Prime Mover(s) ?
2. is the 'other required structures' to make it run just a simple tweak of the elevator concept so that the gearing of the delivery 'lift' will keep pace with the wheel, or something more substantial and separate ?
N.B. looking at MT48 the elevator delivers the balls at axle height. Any assistance rendered to the concept so that it might run as a true PM wheel must therefore happen below axle height. I suggest it is a push or pull force (energy f x d) that is applied to the elevator gearing or cog, or perhaps directly to the elevator chain, so that it can lift the prerequisite balls at the required speed.
By deduction this must also be true for MT44.
3. are there any different or competing ideas about how these elevator wheels could have the delivery speed increased to keep pace with the wheel ?
If the conclusion is that the additional structures and 'application' is the Prime Mover(s) then a separte Prime Mover(s) would also work to augment practically any other OB wheel design, by lifting the weights at either 12 or 6 o'cl, or both simultaneously ?!