See here an example of scissor actuated by the centrifugal force, the Watt regulator:eccentrically1 wrote:What is retracting the scissors?
http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewt ... 3392#53392
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See here an example of scissor actuated by the centrifugal force, the Watt regulator:eccentrically1 wrote:What is retracting the scissors?
Quite right. And the Besseler "wind mill" uses the Newtonian Gravity Wind that blow steadily downwards for fuel.eccentrically1 wrote:Right. The sequence begins with a steam engine generating the energy. If James, or 8. attaches his scissor mechanism to a steam engine then it will open and retract the scissors like the steam engine spins the two flyballs in the Watt governor.
The steam engine used coal for fuel. All sources of energy use some type of fuel. That's the principle behind the Watt governor; burning coal.
Wind has mass and velocity. The more velocity it has the less mass it needs for a given momentum.jim_mich wrote:It seems many people like to compare gravity to wind. There is a very big and very significant difference. Wind is moving air. It has mass and it has momentum. It is the momentum of the moving mass of air that gives wind the ability to turn a wind mill. Gravity does not have any mass and thus does not have any momentum. With gravity you must supply the mass and only then is gravity able to supply movement. But the problem is that once the mass has moved then you must also supply energy to reset the mass back to a higher location again. Gravity is constant on this Earth. It supplies a constant downward force that can be used only once. Then you must supply the same force over the same distance to reset the mass.
If gravity had mass and momentum then it could be compared to wind. But gravity does not have any mass or momentum. So it is an unequal comparison.
So then the earth is growing? It seems a poor boundary case asGravitational wind is the boundary case where the velocity is immeasurably great and the mass is vanishingly small.
Certainly.daxwc wrote:So then the earth is growing?