cloud camper wrote:OK Mr V - tried screen to gif. Can't get it to come up directly but the link works!
https://s20.postimg.org/l4vs6hg8t/e7bab ... 27c95d.gif
I applied a CW torque for 6 seconds and although there is some unwanted
bouncing, no tendency to accelerate is observed.
But this is just a first attempt, will work on interconnecting the timing mechanism to try and dampen out bouncing of the levers.
Haven't given up yet!
Cloud Camper WOW, that is incredible!
To get img tags to work, remove the "S" from the "httpS" part of the addy.. everyone's gotta see this!
Superb stuff, really... but this is also exactly what i feared - that talented people will waste good efforts on ill-fated designs - not that i doubt the maths, but simply whether or not any prospective mechanism is really doing what the maths are..
Your design here has the same issue as mine above - in my case it's the input GPE, which is forming a 3-way inertial interaction... which may or may not preclude the intended outcome, but it complicates it.. similarly, on yours, the weights are torqued against the main system body...
..but the only system i've mathematically proven has no other intervening inertia between that of the interacting masses. It's just a 2-way inertial interaction, at least during the critical phase when only one mass is accelerating.
Also, i only tested a mutual acceleration, not an actual collision.. if we can also generate the effect with elastic collisions in freefall, all the better, but i haven't tested for this yet..
I think that getting this to work - actually accessing this free energy gradient - is going to take slow, careful work, analysing each step empirically to ensure its doing its job, and how well or not.
At the same time, it's equally possible some bright spark could make a break for the finish line and beat us to it, especially using the first example i described of two linear masses,
because it's so crude and easy to follow..
Obviously Bessler didn't have carbon fibre storksbills, and it may be inevitable that there has to be some intervening mass between the two key inertias... but it's absolutely essential, at least as far as i'm currently aware, that the two masses are interacting as cleanly as possible, ie. being forced to move
against one another's inertia,
not against that of a third, intermediary inertia such as that of the net system. On the contrary, our interaction is only allowed to interact with the rest of the system
after the mutual acceleration has caused the momentum asymmetry.
Then we can collide it with the main system's inertia, and so adding / consolidating the gain generated during the exclusively 2-way mutual acceleration...
Does that parse? More paragraph breaks? Sorry i absolutely do not want to sound condescending, i'm sure you've already got the concept and just got side-tracked in trying to mechanise it (happens to me all the time)...