Any comments?
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Thank goodness some quantitative analysis that is shared !!
Moderator: scott
Any comments?
So using potential energy, to keep the wheel turning against air resistance, we would have to drop 100kg about 27cm per second to keep it running at the same speed....So, with a continuous power input of 267 watts, you can lift a 100kg mass to a height of approximately 0.271 meters (or 27.1 centimeters) in one second.
I like your healthy attitude to rigorous analysis.
The more data points the better. Finding the power in to the power out of the motor would help.
Can you not find a "flywheel energy storage calculator" that will allow you to put in all the variables you think appropriate, and calculate losses, which would = the energy needed to keep it turning?
:) Now that is what I call a back seat driver.Robinhood46 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 03, 2023 12:18 pmCan you not find a "flywheel energy storage calculator" that will allow you to put in all the variables you think appropriate, and calculate losses, which would = the energy needed to keep it turning?
dax wrote:If there was fraud it seems it was contained inside the wheel itself.gravesend wrote:if the servant says the above, she tells
a great falsehood.
Perhaps it was both internal and external.t79 wrote: So in terms of Potential energy: how high could I theoretically lift 100kg with 30,240 Wh
ChatGPT:
......So, with 30,240 watt-hours of energy, you could theoretically lift a 100kg mass to a height of approximately 110,935.88 meters (about 111 kilometers) on Earth, assuming ideal conditions and neglecting losses due to friction and other factors.
Even if the wheel only used 5W (older tvs can use that much in standby), that is still equivalent to a PE of 100KG lifted 18.5 Km.
From this alone: If the Kassel wheel was a fraud, It was not internal. If someone was turning it from another room, It would require a team of strong men.
I felt that way reading those numbers.t79 wrote:I feel like there has been a mistake in the calculation logic here...
Odd. What does that mean. We know the shaft was tapered and 1/6 of an inch had contact? Wish we knew the bearing arrangement.The diameter of the wheel is about twelve feet, and as well, the bearing was quite thin, about one quarter of an inch and only a sixth of its length was subject to friction. PM 70 Christian Wolff letter to Leibniz
"February 3rd, 1729: Professor Jean-Pierre de Crousaz (tutor to Karl's grandson) wrote a letter to Professor 'sGravesande, stating, 'It is true that there is a machine at his house, to which they give the name perpetual motion; but that cannot be transported, it is much smaller, and it differs from the first, in that it only turns one way.' - PM 147"
Ecc:I feel like there has been a mistake in the calculation logic here...
My concern was only how it calculated the drag on the 12 foot wheel.I felt that way reading those numbers.
So the letter was written in 1723. That means MT could have been done by 1725.The Treatise will be presented in two folio volumes and should be ready for publication in approximately two years from the start of the project.
Doesn’t even make sense.“However, the machine that has been sold will not be included in the treatise, as my intention is to sell only one specific type of machine, not all of them. I possess a variety of machines, each operating on distinct principles, including those driven by weights, balls, springs, internal gears, internal water, oil, alcohol, and wind." - PM 124
So, with 30,240 watt-hours of energy, you could theoretically lift a 100kg mass to a height of approximately 110,935.88 meters (about 111 kilometers) on Earth, assuming ideal conditions and neglecting losses due to friction and other factors.
That calculation from ChatGPT was correct
I don't think we can assume ideal conditions and neglect losses if we want a number for how high with X amount of power either.
VsEven if the wheel only used 5W (older tvs can use that much in standby), that is still equivalent to a PE of 100KG lifted 18.5 Km.
5W or 5J is not a lot. I would be surprised if we can keep a flywheel this size running on 5W, so for me 5W is a best case scenario. (Even if we could run it on 1W, just divide the end answer by 5. It is still not a plausible solution.100kg is lifted approx 5mm per second.
There are approx 3,630,000 seconds in six weeks
100kg is lifted approx 18.15Km