Fletcher wrote:I never felt MT113 was a mistake. For starters the number boxes go top -> bottom -> top -> bottom on that page of 4.dax wrote:Well Fletcher MT 113 definitely wasn’t a MT mistake.
He purposely rotated the drawing upside down. What is D on MT 111, it almost looks like in the middle the same as MT 13.
Is the whole page now upside down?
And now that you mention it the thing in MT111 does look like the artificial horizon (stator) in MT13 with the D above it. I just dismissed that strange addition as representing clock hands i.e. a clock driven by B's PM principle. But of course if as in MT13 someone were to lift the lw up at D like lightening then so could this 'clock' PM device run itself with his principle I guess.
Is the whole page upside down ? I don't think so because the feet on the other 3 pieces are at the bottom where they should be. For instance MT111 has a round end which couldn't be the bottom.
However there must be purpose behind having MT113 upside down or rotated 180 degrees ? And I think that is to highlight the problem of lifting weights (or lws) to gain GPE. The nod to MT13 (113 -100 = 13) you found also suggests that is the ultimate aim and principle behind B's PM principle.
Remember the old nugget of "Weights gained force from their own swinging (or movement)". Was that in AP and do you have the exact quote dax ? The wiki page clues doesn't have a page or book reference.
And I want to highlight these old nuggets as well.
Bessler wrote:.. one pound can cause the raising of more than one pound - what if I were to teach the proper method of mechanical application ? Then people would say: 'Now I understand!' – AP pg 342While statements by B should not be taken in isolation and the context is important there are other statements by him that point in the direction we are discussing, IMO. FWIW I don't believe B is strictly talking about breaking the law of levers per se, because he uses the word 'suddenly' to inspire a different thought of acceleration perhaps.Bessler wrote:I don't want to go into the details here of how suddenly the excess weight is caused to rise. You can't comprehend these matters, or see how true craftsmanship can rise above innate lowly tendencies (as does a weight above the point of application of a lever)" – AP pg 357
In light of my latest results, if we were to consider only momenta, rather than energy, then a 1 pound weight can output more momentum than is required to raise more than 1 pound.. not from an excess output of momentum from the former, but due to a deficit of input momentum to the latter.
Similarly, with regards to how quickly a weight is raised; this has no effect of course upon GPE, but if the lift is accelerated by an inertial torque (adding velocity without adding momentum), then the 'momentum efficiency' of the left is speed-dependent - the faster we can accelerate the lift with a momentum-conserving inertial torque, the less momentum is lost to gravity, and so the greater its comparative output when falling at the 9.81 p/s base rate, per Galileo's principle (the ambient or 'passive' momentum/time delta is not dependent on the system's ratio of gravitating to non-gravitating mass).
Likewise, the excess potential to perform work is derived directly from the masses' motion - accumulated reactionless momentum is simply worth more energy than has been paid for it.
Continuing that theme, perhaps MT's various allusions to turning systems upside-down hints at some benefit to momentum gains, in the first instance, over any direct GPE advantage.
I've also noted elsewhere that the three Kassel engravings also include deliberate 'mistakes' in the form of various occlusion errors (ie. intentionally confused background / foreground layers), causing up / down ambiguities and inconsistencies in the transmission systems connecting the wheels to the applied loads - especially the stampers, but also the water screw..
I'm convinced that if we just turn our attentions from the 'evil root' of energy asymmetries, to humble matters of prospective momentum asymmetries instead, we'll finally have our horse fore of cart, 'shunning superstitions' of inviolable symmetries, and more of the mechanical mysteries of OU - as well as B's cryptic clues - will start to make sense..