Patrick wrote:Robert,
If you get a working wheel, wouldn't it be better to have other enthusiasts support your work rather than compete against them?
Also what is the benefit to talk about the toothpick force if others do not know what it means? Why not post a refernce photo so people can get a general idea of your work?
Maybe after I get it, but not before. There's nothing like fighting, to open up all the brain cell pathways so I can see farther. Fighting to me is another man's nicotine.
I want to see Sir Isaac Newton standing on my shoulder when I turn to look at my working wheel!
bluesgtr44 wrote:I am thinking that the toothpick force you need has to be able to remain synchronized with the weights. As the speed of the wheel increases, the positions of the weights are moving more outwards and the toothpick force has to remain synchronized with this movement. So, not only do you have to arrange a constant applied force to shift the weights, you also have to keep it in alignment as the wheel speeds up. Would you say that is a correct assumption?
Steve, yes it has to remain in sync with the weights. Speed makes no difference, just need a small force applied at one spot, one at a time.
This one spot force is something Ken maybe will remember that I've been working on for a long time. Left it for awhile, now I need it again.
I can't say what the motion of the drive weights is. Just that once this small force is applied, the drive weight "crashes" and creates a huge imbalance which is more that enough to advance to the next weight position.
robert