A precursor to the Abeling Gravity Motor
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re: A precursor to the Abeling Gravity Motor
with six vassal slaves under your charge does this make you the head foreskin ???
re: A precursor to the Abeling Gravity Motor
Check this video out...like the rubber band engine this too works with gravity and has more torque and speed...
http://youtu.be/bs_OtCsDJoY
http://youtu.be/bs_OtCsDJoY
The power of The One...
re: A precursor to the Abeling Gravity Motor
Very interesting Neo. Thanks for that. It took me some time to work out what was going on - then I realised that fluid was being pumped from one side to the other.
That is of course a heat engine and I suppose could be seen as a variant of the Stirling engine.
The Rubber Band Motor is different. It relies on adiabatic oscillation of the rubber bands.
The internal action of the bands is modelled by the above whirler toy. The circular disk oscillates from +Npi clockwise to -Npi counter clockwise. At the two end point the disk is stationary and the string is short. At the mid point the disk is rotating at its maximum speed and the string is long.
In the limit this oscillation is adiabatic and no energy input is needed.
In the limit a pendulum is an adiabatic oscillator and since Bessler has a ruddy great pendulum on the outside of some of his wheels it seems likely that he used the same principle of polarizing the acceleration vector as is used in the Rubber Band Motor.
That is of course a heat engine and I suppose could be seen as a variant of the Stirling engine.
The Rubber Band Motor is different. It relies on adiabatic oscillation of the rubber bands.
The internal action of the bands is modelled by the above whirler toy. The circular disk oscillates from +Npi clockwise to -Npi counter clockwise. At the two end point the disk is stationary and the string is short. At the mid point the disk is rotating at its maximum speed and the string is long.
In the limit this oscillation is adiabatic and no energy input is needed.
In the limit a pendulum is an adiabatic oscillator and since Bessler has a ruddy great pendulum on the outside of some of his wheels it seems likely that he used the same principle of polarizing the acceleration vector as is used in the Rubber Band Motor.
Who is she that cometh forth as the morning rising, fair as the moon, bright as the sun, terribilis ut castrorum acies ordinata?
Ralph dug up an interesting link on harnessing gravity by a pendulum oscillator.
See here ....
http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewt ... 9257#89257
..... and my comments in the post that follows his link.
See here ....
http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewt ... 9257#89257
..... and my comments in the post that follows his link.
Re: re: A precursor to the Abeling Gravity Motor
Grimer I'M sorry but your wrong their, they are both heat engines, they simply use a different working medium. But I digress, the point of the video is that it turns by the force of gravity acting on the vessels and another point is that this wheel shows it can do work has torque. Secondly the speed at which the wheel turns as the vessels reset.Grimer wrote:Very interesting Neo. Thanks for that. It took me some time to work out what was going on - then I realised that fluid was being pumped from one side to the other.
That is of course a heat engine and I suppose could be seen as a variant of the Stirling engine.
The Rubber Band Motor is different. It relies on adiabatic oscillation of the rubber bands.
The power of The One...