Question for John C.

A Bessler, gravity, free-energy free-for-all. Registered users can upload files, conduct polls, and more...

Moderator: scott

Jeff
Dabbler
Dabbler
Posts: 9
Joined: Sun Nov 09, 2003 11:46 pm

Question for John C.

Post by Jeff »

These questions are directed mainly to John Collins, and I would also like to hear from anyone with ideas or comments:

John,

Do you think Bessler developed the principle first and then applied that to a "wheel", or was he planning from the get-go to have a wheel-type device. His Poem has several lines and then "a wheel appears".

Do you think his "principle" would work if it was not in a rotating wheel-like configuration?

Jeff
User avatar
John Collins
Addict
Addict
Posts: 3269
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:33 am
Location: Warwickshire. England
Contact:

re: Question for John C.

Post by John Collins »

Do you think Bessler developed the principle first and then applied that to a "wheel", or was he planning from the get-go to have a wheel-type device. His Poem has several lines and then "a wheel appears".

Do you think his "principle" would work if it was not in a rotating wheel-like configuration?
Hi Jeff,

My impression is that he got there by trial and error, but that implies a lack of thought and that is the last think I'd accuse Bessler of. I think that he had an idea of how it might work but that rather than sticking to paper and pencil, he designed and built dozens, hundreds of prototypes to see what would and what wouldn't work. He learned from his work and began to see what was needed and eventually by refining his designs I think he got there.

He does mention that he had numerous ideas and suffered hundreds of failures but kept thinking of new configurations and says that he eventually discovered a new line of thought that finally led him to success.

I have always advocated the trial and error method myself and am a firm believer that the solution will not be found by using computer graphics but by hard graft and constant tinkering with prototypes - it's the best way to learn, in my opinion.

As to whether his wheel would work in a non-rotating wheel configuration - I don't know but I think not, although you can easily remove the "wheel" design and replace it with arms but in the end something has to rotate about a central point and I'm sure that that is a necessity.

John Collins
Georg Künstler
Devotee
Devotee
Posts: 1718
Joined: Fri Nov 07, 2003 12:22 pm
Location: Speyer, Germany
Contact:

re: Question for John C.

Post by Georg Künstler »

Hi Jeff,
I agree to John, Bessler had buildt many,many prototypes until he found the princible. When you have a look to machinen tractate, Bessler always tried to lift mass fast, and let then slow down. I showed on this board how you can mangage this. Everyone who try to get an unbalanced wheel with geometric order will fail. The unbalance is 'Generated' thru the fist fall, and can not be balanced any more. I said that again and again. The function in the wheel is a tilt oscillation with a trouble force.

I disagree with John, that this function is only possible in a wheel. It is easyier to have two seperate wheels. One is the breaking wheel, the other the wheel with the swinging mass. I made an example how you can lift 3 kg with 2 kg on Georg's ideas. Constant force against oscillation force. The swinging of mass is an essential construction element.

You can use also a falling forward technic, showed on http://www.kuenstler-energie.de and then COG page. It is the princible and works also without springs.

The future has begun

Best regards

Georg
User avatar
Jonathan
Addict
Addict
Posts: 2453
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:29 am
Location: Tucson, Az

re: Question for John C.

Post by Jonathan »

Well Georg, I must have misunderstood how that device was supposed to work, because I completely modeled it and the 3kg weight falls, not rises.
As to Jeff's question, I agree with John Collins.
I also I have a question myself: What do you think is meant by "...it is really a wheel, for it does not have a normal rim."?
Disclaimer: I reserve the right not to know what I'm talking about and not to mention this possibility in my posts. This disclaimer also applies to sentences I claim are quotes from anybody, including me.
User avatar
TommyK
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 107
Joined: Sun Dec 21, 2003 3:14 am
Location: Retired/Vacation.

re: Question for John C.

Post by TommyK »

Johnathan,

I forgot who said it, but someone suggested that Bessler may have been referring to the moon when he said that.
I do forget who said that, but credit to whomever it was.
Georg Künstler
Devotee
Devotee
Posts: 1718
Joined: Fri Nov 07, 2003 12:22 pm
Location: Speyer, Germany
Contact:

re: Question for John C.

Post by Georg Künstler »

Hi Jonathan,
in the model are 3 weights, one of 2 kg and 2 with 1,5 kg. If you put 1,5 + 1,5 together in one point, then it falls, you are right. But if you leave 1,5 opposite of the other as shown, then you have an oscillation, pulsating force on the right.
Then it can roll up.

For better explanation. If you had a stick with 2 weights, one up, one down, in which direction the stick will fall ? Left or right ? uphill or downhill ?

Best regards

Georg
User avatar
John Collins
Addict
Addict
Posts: 3269
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:33 am
Location: Warwickshire. England
Contact:

re: Question for John C.

Post by John Collins »

What do you think is meant by "...it is really a wheel, for it does not have a normal rim."?
I've pondered this for years Jonathan, but all I can come up with is this:- Bessler's "wheel" rotated about an axis but it did not bear weight on its rim as in, for instance, a wagon. Perhaps he meant that it was a wheel because it rotated and was wheel-shaped, but it was not like other wheels which had rims and were designed to roll along the ground.

John Collins
John Lindsay
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 79
Joined: Sat Nov 08, 2003 8:20 pm
Location: St. Louis, Missouri

re: Question for John C.

Post by John Lindsay »

You could think of what a peacock looks like with less feathers. John
User avatar
Jonathan
Addict
Addict
Posts: 2453
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:29 am
Location: Tucson, Az

re: Question for John C.

Post by Jonathan »

I just did a translation, and got a completely different version of the same two verses:
One sees a wheel and also no wheel,
Because it has rims and also none.
Disclaimer: I reserve the right not to know what I'm talking about and not to mention this possibility in my posts. This disclaimer also applies to sentences I claim are quotes from anybody, including me.
VergingOnDone
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Posts: 91
Joined: Sun Dec 14, 2003 7:45 am
Location: Vancouver, BC

Re: re: Question for John C.

Post by VergingOnDone »

John Lindsay wrote:You could think of what a peacock looks like with less feathers. John
It looks like a peacock's TAIL only while in "motion" and inversely at that, also I'll connect the dots here, ask me about the three small white sections in the black circle and it may have to do with "motion" too.

Just me and my "opinions" but from my hindsight, the statement: "wheel no wheel" is because it looks like a wheel on the outside but the innards aren't like anything else around, and "rim and none" because the outside again looks like a complete rim but it needs to be round to encompass the workings inside to hide them, so it is just cosmetic in nature.

So far the most important info comes from Count Karl and Bessler, the eyewitness reports only have minimal bearing on the wheel, especially their "thoughts on how it works".
User avatar
WaltzCee
Addict
Addict
Posts: 3361
Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2007 9:52 pm
Location: Huntsville, TX
Contact:

Re: Question for John C.

Post by WaltzCee »

Jeff wrote: Mon Feb 16, 2004 1:49 pm These questions are directed mainly to John Collins, and I would also like to hear from anyone with ideas or comments:

John,

Do you think Bessler developed the principle first and then applied that to a "wheel", or was he planning from the get-go to have a wheel-type device. His Poem has several lines and then "a wheel appears".

Do you think his "principle" would work if it was not in a rotating wheel-like configuration?

Jeff
........................¯\_(ツ)_/¯
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ the future is here ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Advocate of God Almighty, maker of heaven and earth and redeemer of my soul.
Walter Clarkson
© 2023 Walter W. Clarkson, LLC
All rights reserved. Do not even quote me w/o my expressed written consent.
User avatar
John Collins
Addict
Addict
Posts: 3269
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:33 am
Location: Warwickshire. England
Contact:

Re: Question for John C.

Post by John Collins »

Jeff wrote: ↑Mon Feb 16, 2004 1:49 pm
These questions are directed mainly to John Collins, and I would also like to hear from anyone with ideas or comments:

John,

Do you think Bessler developed the principle first and then applied that to a "wheel", or was he planning from the get-go to have a wheel-type device. His Poem has several lines and then "a wheel appears".

Do you think his "principle" would work if it was not in a rotating wheel-like configuration?

Jeff

Hi,

The second option and no it wouldn’t work if it wasn’t in a rotating wheel-like configuration.

JC
Read my blog at http://johncollinsnews.blogspot.com/

This is the link to Amy’s TikTok page - over 20 million views for one video! Look up amyepohl on google

See my blog at http://www.gravitywheel.com
User avatar
Tarsier79
Addict
Addict
Posts: 5014
Joined: Fri Mar 12, 2010 2:17 am
Location: Qld, Australia

Re: Question for John C.

Post by Tarsier79 »

nd no it wouldn’t work if it wasn’t in a rotating wheel-like configuration.
I strongly disagree. Any principle of operation that would make a wheel rotate could operate on a see-saw IMO. (And that amounts to lifting weight in a gravity environment.)

A rotating output is the easiest to use, and can be converted to nearly anything we would require.
User avatar
WaltzCee
Addict
Addict
Posts: 3361
Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2007 9:52 pm
Location: Huntsville, TX
Contact:

Re: Question for John C.

Post by WaltzCee »

.
.
I hate to act all agreeable & such, yet I think
K. wrote:I strongly disagree. Any principle of operation that would make a wheel rotate could operate on a see-saw IMO. (And that amounts to lifting weight in a gravity environment.)
K. makes an excellent point.

An irrefutable one, actually.

ETA
a good question might be
JC wrote:if it wasn’t in a rotating wheel-like configuration.
can the arcs a seesaw describe be considered part of a wheel? It's driving force has RKE.
Last edited by WaltzCee on Wed Oct 18, 2023 3:43 am, edited 1 time in total.
........................¯\_(ツ)_/¯
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ the future is here ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Advocate of God Almighty, maker of heaven and earth and redeemer of my soul.
Walter Clarkson
© 2023 Walter W. Clarkson, LLC
All rights reserved. Do not even quote me w/o my expressed written consent.
User avatar
John Collins
Addict
Addict
Posts: 3269
Joined: Wed Nov 05, 2003 6:33 am
Location: Warwickshire. England
Contact:

Re: Question for John C.

Post by John Collins »

I’m sure you’re both correct. I just can’t think of a way to apply it to a see-saw configuration.

JC
Read my blog at http://johncollinsnews.blogspot.com/

This is the link to Amy’s TikTok page - over 20 million views for one video! Look up amyepohl on google

See my blog at http://www.gravitywheel.com
Post Reply