Well I just hate to rain on anyone's parade, especially a fun secret parade, but
we have this pesky formula that calculates the CF force (actually pseudo force but that's another issue).
So for a wheel of radius 1m and a small weight mass of 1kg we need an overall wheel rpm of 19 rpm to generate a force necessary to lift another 4kg weight. Presumably you want to move the heavy weight into a OB position
with this force.
But we can't wait until 3 pm to start moving the weight as it takes time to make the translation so we need to start much earlier around 12 to get the weight in ideal position by 3 pm. So that means lifting the 4kg weight uphill, not just sideways.
With gravity in the picture it's all really a wash except for now we have to lift the heavy weight against gravity AND CF to get the heavy weight back into the reset position.
So we have to generate 19 rpm in the wheel first before we can generate enough CF to even move the heavy weight enough to create an overbalance.
Of course this still assumes that ANY overbalance can ever generate self rotation as we are now trying to cheat the Law of Levers which can never be violated.
So Ms Smartypants, how do you propose to generate 19 rpm before one can even attempt to apply your trick?
And then there's the issue of not matching either of Bessler's startup modes, the diectional wheel being self starting and the bidirectional only needing a small pushoff.
And here is Stewart's original idea from 2007 that exactly matches yours:
"I think many people are put off by gyroscope/flywheel/CF ideas because they can't see how Bessler's wheel could self-start.
I don't see this being a problem if they are one of two systems, the other consisting of overbalancing weights that are shifted by them.
For example the spinning weight units I'm showing here (or something similar) could possibly be used to shift overbalancing weights which cause the wheel to turn, which causes the rotating weight units to spin up again and in turn shift the OB weights".
http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewt ... experiment