In my version elasticity doesn't work. It's there but just doesn't have any effect. It may not in yours too.
If I have pulleys with slack in them, then as the sim gets more complex I can change a length of a rod for example and ALL pulleys suddenly change length spontaneously to the shortest length available. Then I have to manually change lengths again to the length I want. This seems to be a artifact from complexity of modeling coz it doesn't happen when things have few moving parts etc.
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The pull thru pulleys (ropes) are not mentioned by Bessler. In fact he goes a step further and doesn't label anything with letters (your label 'G') in these two designs. Yet he mentions everything else as was discussed earlier in the thread.Bessler in MT (wiki) wrote:No. 24 This invention ought not to be scorned. It consists of separate levers with weights. Between the weights are small iron poles with hinges. The poles fall inward when the levers close. There is something one must learn first before one can grasp and correctly understand the good quality of the invention.
No. 25 This is the previous model except for some differences. It is sketched with longer poles. There is something misleading about the diagram, for the poles, when coming out, must not project so far out but must bend somewhat further inwardly. There is more to it than one supposes; one must study the diagram extensively.
Perhaps it is the connectedness 'principle' (omission) itself that needs careful study ? But not in that configuration IINM ! He after all tells us first up in MT9 and MT10 the following warnings ...
Bessler in MT (wiki) wrote:No. 9 Because one has learned that little is to be accomplished with the sphere-wheels like those just now seen in the figures and diagrams, one speculates on another principle, namely: on weights! In all places where I have found weight-figures, these weights are seen to be simple and nothing is attached to the belts or chains. Such is the case with Leupold, but nothing is to be accomplished with his thing unless one acts out of my connectedness principle; but here I do not yet wish to show or discuss the figure for the time being.
No. 10 This is exactly the previous model, except that the weight-poles are more curved and longer. The principle is good, but the figure is not yet complete until I delineate it much differently at the appropriate place and indicate the correct handle and construction.