daxwc wrote:Fletcher this sim had me bamboozled for a while till I realized the rim is not free of the wheel and that is why the RBGS has rotated downward.
If you look at the diagram of the sim of a normal weight force displacement RB then you can see a circle orientation line (the black radius line from COR to 3 o'cl) for the background wheel - to that background is pinned the gears of the RBGS, as are the rim stop boards - they are always located in the same relative position on the background wheel - one can't move without the other moving also - this makes it a lever on a fulcrum.
If you have a lever with equal weight at 1 meter each side of the fulcrum then it is balanced - if you take some weight off the rhs & put it at 2 meters the lever is no longer balanced & the lever rotates CW - this is what this system does in this diagram - we shift weight force to a greater lever arm distance.
daxwc wrote:If the rim and stop was independent of the wheel like your wheel proposal then the RBGS would have back torqued due to the counterweight.
Yes, if the rim stop board were just a shelf fixed in space to put the hanging weight on then there would be CCW torque turning the RBGS anticlockwise - IOW's some weight has been removed from the rhs making the lhs heavier - just like a lever.
But my proposal has the RBGS & background wheel (with rim stops) always locked together, they are not independent.
daxwc wrote:The RBGS will back torque till the string is tight again. Yes, then it will coast because it is weight balanced again.
The back torque after the load is dropped is why your wheel needs a feedback system to turn the RBGS. Enough CF might provide enough power to do both.