Leonardo's Perpetual Motion Idea
Moderator: scott
Leonardo's Perpetual Motion Idea
This website www.mutr.co.uk claims that the design below seems to work...
re: Leonardo's Perpetual Motion Idea
The tapered axle & the offset rails allow the wheels COG to lower as it traverses imo.
re: Leonardo's Perpetual Motion Idea
It's the old cone on a tapered ramp trick. It is good until it runs out of cone taper or track width.
The clear plastic with the balls is for show! it will function better without them. Probably even faster, but then that would shorten the thrill. You have to manually reset it to the narrow end of the ramp for a repeat.
Strictly a novelty item and nothing more. Its a poor mans version of the Finsrud machine.
Want to make one, get two funnels of the same size tape them together, plug the end of one and fill both with sand or whatever. make a track out of what ever you have available and you have saved your self a few pounds Sterling.
Ralph
The clear plastic with the balls is for show! it will function better without them. Probably even faster, but then that would shorten the thrill. You have to manually reset it to the narrow end of the ramp for a repeat.
Strictly a novelty item and nothing more. Its a poor mans version of the Finsrud machine.
Want to make one, get two funnels of the same size tape them together, plug the end of one and fill both with sand or whatever. make a track out of what ever you have available and you have saved your self a few pounds Sterling.
Ralph
re: Leonardo's Perpetual Motion Idea
My question is... could it possibly be oscillating back and forth...reaching the end of the track then overbalancing then returning?
re: Leonardo's Perpetual Motion Idea
Ralph is right. I've seen one of these in a store. The description of the toy even says: "When assembled this kit is a very stylish statement suggesting that it actually works."
'nuff said?
'nuff said?
Thanks for visiting BesslerWheel.com
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- Pierre Proudhon, 1881
"To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind for it."
- Michel de Montaigne, 1559
"So easy it seemed, once found, which yet unfound most would have thought impossible!"
- John Milton, 1667
"Liberty is the Mother, not the Daughter of Order."
- Pierre Proudhon, 1881
"To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind for it."
- Michel de Montaigne, 1559
"So easy it seemed, once found, which yet unfound most would have thought impossible!"
- John Milton, 1667