THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
If that gets you across the finish line then all power to you spinner.
Try and keep a sense of humour mate. Check the post by Tarsier above my reply that offends you. I assume we are all seeing the same posts in chronological order, so it was hard to miss.
It was a joke with Tarsier .. TP = Toy's Page .. tho some might believe it has little value.
Try and keep a sense of humour mate. Check the post by Tarsier above my reply that offends you. I assume we are all seeing the same posts in chronological order, so it was hard to miss.
It was a joke with Tarsier .. TP = Toy's Page .. tho some might believe it has little value.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
The real question, "but where does the energy come from?"
We know that its creation is impossible, so a simple triggering of an imbalance (esoteric) could keep its wheel moving. As long as man has known how to use a hammer, there have been no accidents that would contradict the laws of physics.
So for it to really turn you have to draw water from the well...
B from my point of view understood that the water was already there, and only in this case everything becomes possible.
The stork's beak is very efficient, I even think that well adjusted it could lift a weight faster than it could lower itself by gravity alone.
Everything I say is still conditional, but after endless discussions with a friend on the subject, it is my deep conviction.
The energy and in the weights in a constant way, so already there, it is enough to make the effort to understand in several MT that B shows us an ingenious mechanical escapement allowing the reset by fragment of weight to manage to maintain its wheel.
A++
We know that its creation is impossible, so a simple triggering of an imbalance (esoteric) could keep its wheel moving. As long as man has known how to use a hammer, there have been no accidents that would contradict the laws of physics.
So for it to really turn you have to draw water from the well...
B from my point of view understood that the water was already there, and only in this case everything becomes possible.
The stork's beak is very efficient, I even think that well adjusted it could lift a weight faster than it could lower itself by gravity alone.
Everything I say is still conditional, but after endless discussions with a friend on the subject, it is my deep conviction.
The energy and in the weights in a constant way, so already there, it is enough to make the effort to understand in several MT that B shows us an ingenious mechanical escapement allowing the reset by fragment of weight to manage to maintain its wheel.
A++
Not everything I present is functional, but a surprise can't be completely ruled out.Greetings.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
Well, he does sing SB's virtues in MT, thx4. And they are a main feature in the TP with its special outcomes. -Connection-.
MT38 .. "but here is not the place to show the correct application of the stork's bills"
MT41 .. "I can assure the reader that there is something special behind the stork's bills"
I'd say there has to be a correct application (what it's used for) to see first hand what's special about their influence on the outcome. They are fun to build and experiment with.
MT38 .. "but here is not the place to show the correct application of the stork's bills"
MT41 .. "I can assure the reader that there is something special behind the stork's bills"
I'd say there has to be a correct application (what it's used for) to see first hand what's special about their influence on the outcome. They are fun to build and experiment with.
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
This was also one of my failures .
This was one design I tried based on the concept of offsetting inner and outer radiuses for mass while maintaining the mechanical advantage between the radiuses , and to always use a fall action from a small radius to a larger and from a larger radius to a smaller , by using a principle similar to the RB where the position of mass along the arm extensions does not matter .
So the idea was to keep the amount of work from small and larger (or vise versa) radius down by using gravity to simply let the masses fall , but it seems you simply cannot bypass lift , the lift is inevitable and the lift can be done but only if the arms are oriented correct , the torque of rotating the the arms to keep them oriented correctly is its demise , if it were possible a cancelation of the arms torques could have done some magic .
BTW interesting thing about conservative forces ,
This was one design I tried based on the concept of offsetting inner and outer radiuses for mass while maintaining the mechanical advantage between the radiuses , and to always use a fall action from a small radius to a larger and from a larger radius to a smaller , by using a principle similar to the RB where the position of mass along the arm extensions does not matter .
So the idea was to keep the amount of work from small and larger (or vise versa) radius down by using gravity to simply let the masses fall , but it seems you simply cannot bypass lift , the lift is inevitable and the lift can be done but only if the arms are oriented correct , the torque of rotating the the arms to keep them oriented correctly is its demise , if it were possible a cancelation of the arms torques could have done some magic .
BTW interesting thing about conservative forces ,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_force , as in the initial and final position which is partly what inspired this idea .A conservative force depends only on the position of the object.
Last edited by johannesbender on Mon Nov 28, 2022 1:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Its all relative.
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
This was the same concept and also a failure , a pendulum design to switch from a large radius to a smaller radius without climbing up at 6, by being at the same height of the inner radius position while actually being part of the outer radius (based on the RB concept) ,then switch over to the small radius at 6 , such that when momentum conservation has to occur , swing the mass over 12 along a small radius with a massive force , however it works perfect if you place the mass along a bar at its end (large radius) then move it in at 6 to the small radius , but it doesn't apply to a RB type (parallelogram) mechanism .
The need for extra or removal of negative forces ,simply cannot be dismissed.
The need for extra or removal of negative forces ,simply cannot be dismissed.
Its all relative.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
Thanks for the demo for it get a person thinking; were is the twist.johannesbender wrote: ↑Mon Nov 28, 2022 2:26 pm This was the same concept and also a failure , a pendulum design to switch from a large radius to a smaller radius without climbing up at 6 ...
You know I like to think in three dimensions.
The toy page, central toys, one with heavy hammers and the other with the hammers twisting in their action.
[possibly]
There are possibilities
Regards
Last edited by agor95 on Mon Nov 28, 2022 2:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
[MP] Mobiles that perpetuate - external energy allowed
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
Fletcher, it is all good. I just want to know if I am being annoying or not.
Last edited by spinner361 on Mon Nov 28, 2022 4:38 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
This was also a RB type principle , which also was suppose to swap between 2 different radiuses or lever distances and maintain its respective mechanical advantage by not moving the weight in and out , I did not test this as a rotational build yet for obvious reasons it was too complicated , and I cant remember why I dropped this particular design right now .
The 3d and 2d were two different versions...
The 3d and 2d were two different versions...
Last edited by johannesbender on Mon Nov 28, 2022 7:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Its all relative.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
Not to me .. this is annoying .. the other day a friend lent me his book on anti-gravity to explain B's. wheels .. damm .. it's impossible to put down.spinner361 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 28, 2022 4:26 pm Fletcher, it is all good. I just want to know if I am being annoying or not.
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
Fletcher, that is really funny from retrospect. I had just finished a really long shift and I did not take the time to read through everything. IF nothing else can teach me, embarrassment will.
I am sure that anti-gravity is very interesting. What is anti-gravity?
I am sure that anti-gravity is very interesting. What is anti-gravity?
Last edited by spinner361 on Mon Nov 28, 2022 9:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
I found it on Wikipedia. According to the definition, this is something that I am very good at. Maybe. I am in the process of proving this.
Last edited by spinner361 on Mon Nov 28, 2022 9:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
IF Besslers wheel ran on an inertial/momentum gain, theoretically the same principle should be able to be implemented in inertial propulsion, anti gravity, and my favourite, a small powerful CF engine. It would truly open up the floodgates for technology.
If it ran on stealing Earth momentum, we probably wouldn't want to make them too powerful or numerous.
JB, I would be interested if you explained your designs.
If it ran on stealing Earth momentum, we probably wouldn't want to make them too powerful or numerous.
JB, I would be interested if you explained your designs.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
Weird, yet that's exactly where my mind went when Kaine asked.
I have more to say, however I'm just going to keep it too mysefe.
Of cause. I know big words two.
Please discuss. I'm just a spec-tater.
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Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
I make a lot of mistakes with communication. I am quite terrible at it.
Last edited by spinner361 on Tue Nov 29, 2022 1:03 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: THE wheel fatal flaw that no one notice
It's 1 of 2 competing theories I have Tarsier. Ockham's says it will be the simpler one. The second (less favoured atm) relates to physically creating a physics paradox around time - the ol' asymmetric manipulation of .. mv = ft. Yes, I know the arguments against it. Oh the vicissitudes (one for Walt to discuss ;7) of unconfirmed theories.Tarsier79 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 28, 2022 9:49 pm IF Besslers wheel ran on an inertial/momentum gain, theoretically the same principle should be able to be implemented in inertial propulsion, anti gravity, and my favourite, a small powerful CF engine. It would truly open up the floodgates for technology.
If it ran on stealing Earth momentum, we probably wouldn't want to make them too powerful or numerous.