It was late (plus i'm a complete div) - the fix was simply to rotate the synchronisation 90° (duh!); now it's finally doing what i originally envisaged:
Yay! We're proper hoovering up momentum from gravity now!
Note well that we haven't actually broken N3 (that's impossible), hence what you are witnessing, if built in the real world,
is altering Earth's resting momentum state.
The system is gaining more momentum - from gravity - as the weight falls, than it's paying back when it rises.
But momentum is always distributed symmetrically between the accelerated mass and source of the applied force - so if we're adding 'downwards' momentum to our descending weight, we're likewise adding equal 'upwards' momentum to Earth.
Please, anyone - now you can actually see it, argue or agree with me? This point is more important than our energy needs - the concern is that the above process
can only be changing Earth's resting momentum state.. and thus potentially destroying all life in the universe as far as we know.. Weighty issue for a Tuesday afternoon but this demands open discussion and just
friggin' acknowledgement that it ain't merely some crackpot Chicken Licken psychosis... Anyone? Bueller..?
Either way, this is a tremendous breakthrough in our quest - we can now robustly accumulate momentum
from gravity (can't emphasise that enough), which really
is the single most pivotal detail for establishing OU...
All that remains now is the final decoupling of input to output energies - if it hasn't happened already! I'll start pulling the integrals ASAP; wanna check the
amount of momentum (from gravity!) that we get each cycle is constant - it
should be since there's no such thing as terminal velocity in vacuum; ie. the ambient rate of change of momentum of a gravitating system is 9.80665 p/s per kg of gravitating mass
irrespective of whatever the current velocity...
...so for example if we're getting a 1 p rise in momentum from the first cycle, we'd expect the same rise for every cycle thereafter, no matter how fast the RPM's get.. so this detail needs establishing.
Then we want to know the energy cost of that momentum; principally, does it square with velocity, per ½mV², because even if it
does increase with velocity, unless it does so by that exact amount then we still have a threshold velocity beyond which we're OU.
Since the workload here is against centrifugal force, which does increase with RPM's, the cost seems inevitably to be speed-dependent, so let's not get too hopeful just yet..
..which brings me to my final point for this post - we're cyclically gaining momentum (from gravity!) without collisions, which is great, however in the original mathematical solution, collisions served two purposes - consolidating momentum gains, but also decoupling input and output energies...
The reason it also does the latter job is because in the maths solution, when the accelerated mass undergoes an inelastic collision with the non-accelerated mass, sharing its momentum gain back with it and thus accelerating the net system, spontaneously doubling the inertia that a given quantity of momentum is distributed into like this
quarters the corresponding KE, which means the first cycle's 75% inefficient, but that efficiency climbs by 25% each cycle thereafter, so the second one's only 50% inefficient, the third, 25%, and by the fourth cycle we hit unity - equal energy in as out. On the fifth such cycle, we hit 125% efficiency, and from thereon the sky's the limit.
But point is, that's five collisions to OU. I found a further trick that can knock it down to just 1 collision, but that's still not zero collisions..
Hence don't expect too much from the energy results we're obtaining above - it's probably not OU yet..
..but we
have just passed a truly momentous milestone..! (and look at it! it's
soo simple! love it!) Endless momentum, on tap, in an otherwise 'closed-system' of interacting masses! Just a gravitational interaction, coupled with an MoI variation.. and nowt else! These two
elementary raw ingredients, working in unison to produce a result that challenges the most basic tenets of physics, and - even in it's current, presumably non-OU state - appears to be propelling the 'net system' of rotor
plus Earth through the vacuum of space, the whole system essentially 'falling' through Earth's own gravity field, gaining momentum
from it along the way.. eat your heart out Alcubierre!
Anyone left who still doesn't believe magic is real?