Fletcher,"Turn a negative into a positive"
or a zero. Negative or positive are directions in time. The Fletcher takes invariant
time and warps it. Makes time a variable that can be stretched or compressed.
Moderator: scott
Fletcher,"Turn a negative into a positive"
WaltzCee wrote:I appreciate all the comments yet especially yours Fletcher. I intend to name this
prime mover The Fletcher. It doesn't disprove N3, yet it does nullify it. That's
the first case, a mechanical answer to N3.
The second case is the death knell for N3. Calling Newton a liar maybe was a bit harsh.
- The Fletcher: A mechanical contrivance that catches and stores RKE using
some of that energy to negate the counter torque produced to collect it. This
mechanism will sense the appropriate time and place to send that energy then
create an arrow (hence The Fletcher) and strike the proper point at the precise time.
He just wasn't telling the truth. :)
- Walter's First Law of Motion: For some actions there exists a reaction that is
neither opposite nor equal. This absolutely is a function of time and space.
unstable,It is all very intriguing and fascinating but the main point remains obscure. Where would the excess energy come from?
I'm modeling this glitch in Newtonian physics, changing different variables in theRobinhood46 wrote:Being on the same page is a good idea, although not that easy to achieve.
It is as though we are all inventing a new language, to try and explain our way of understanding the alternative approaches we hope will get us nearer to understanding what it is we are collectively understanding wrong.
In my view, if the weights are lifted by levers then this is one theory of operation. If they are lifted by ropes and pulleys this is another theory of operation.
In both cases the weights take the same path, so they would be one and the same principal.
I don't think Newton lied, i think he made a mistake when he applied his logic to a rotating frame.
WaltzCee wrote:Does anyone know where Bessler said his mechanism would throw
Wagner's math out the window?
Something like that.
John Collins AP Page 340 digital wrote:
XXXIII (b) Wagner's childish calculation, of which he, not I,
should be thoroughly ashamed.
At this point Wagner seeks to correct a point made by my patron.
The point concerns the power of my machines. Wagner
calculates the total power of these three wheels, and says that
the figure given should be reduced considerably - so much so, in
fact, that good Master Orffyreus, the great mathematician, should
be thoroughly ashamed of himself! Ashamed also that I,
Orffyreus, did not force my patron to write the correct figure.
Listen, Wagner, I'm not your slave! Who is right? You're the one
who calculates badly! So I'm to be excused, having done nothing
wrong that reflects on my patron. Please note carefully these
facts:-
If I were to place, next to a 12-Ell wheel, one of 6-Ells, then, if I
wanted to, I could cause the smaller one to revolve with more
force and useful power than the large one. I can, in fact, make 2,
or 3, or even more, wheels all revolving on the same axis.
Further, I make my machines in such a way that, big or small, I
can make the resulting power small or big as I choose. I can get
the power to a perfectly calculated degree, multiplied up even as
much as fourfold. If I arrange to have just one cross-bar in the
machine, it revolves very slowly, just as if it can hardly turn itself
at all, but, on the contrary, when I arrange several bars, pulleys
and weights, the machine can revolve much faster, and throw
Wagner's calculations clean out of the window!