Georg Künstler wrote:Nice way of walking, great construction !! what set it in motion ?
hmm... you are looking at an egg, so you ask for the whereabouts of the chicken.
A fair question neighbor!
Short answer: this 'egg' is just a bad wheel devoid of any 'chicken'.
'Bad' because it needs a slope of I guess 3 to 5 degrees before it goes down a ramp by itself.
It is based on a straight-line linkage (
chebycsjev) where rotational motion gets flattened out as much as possible. Such feature makes very nice
legged walkers.
Those mechanisms are all still in need of some kind of prime-mover (the 'chicken' so to speak) to provide the needed input energy.
But here, instead of a walker, we see a rotational motion converted into yet another but flattened rotation.
In this mechanical flat tire there's this lowness of the axle, yet at 12-oclock things are higher up.
Besides being a mechanical curiosity, what could be the benefit for perpetual motion research.....
When things can be lifted --relative to the axle-- then perhaps we might get a little bit closer to overbalancing a weight --relative to the axle--.
An absolute climb against gravity still requires an energy input, so why not look at a relative one when that climb could be less.
So maybe lowering the axle is the *work around* we are looking for and for all we know Bessler's wheel worked solely because of such flat tire.
Hence it is possible this 'egg' could be that 'chicken' in disguise we are all looking for.
asifsound wrote:I've challenged to make the GIF animation by Google Photo like a "Prof. ME".
Not much of a challenge so it seems. You easily solved it within Geogebra.... as a pro yourself:-) Nice!
If you want to get rid of that kink (how to mechanically implement such thing anyway?) and also keep those lower edges flat to the ground then, according to calculation, it seems the following distance-values do just that trick.
Inner radius: 1 (or axle diameter 2)
Edge-length: 4.0828459...
Radial-length: 5.1674077...
What's your plan with this mechanism?