
200 Hz = fast, but poor MoI lock
..remember, it only looks like it's over-balancing..
..in reality, it's perfectly balanced whenever the green light's on! It's only able to accelerate when braking - and then, most of that acceleration is momentum being dumped from the weight axes - plus a fleeting moment of over-balance, but only while that red light's on..
Key points to note:
• input work by the motors is constant
This is because inertia is speed-invaraint - a 1 kg-m² inertia is always 1 kg-m², regardless of its current RPM. So motor work evolves linearly with respect to time - doubling the amount of momentum being generated only requires a doubling of input work / energy.
Thus the input workload is relative to - and resides within - the rotating reference frame.
• KE values of those braking counter-momenta are increasing with respect to RPM - the step heights are getting progressively taller, the more momentum is accumulated this way
This is because KE is only meaningful as relative to the external, 'ground' reference frame - and it squares with velocity!
Thus input and output workloads are in alternative FoR's, and their energies - the energy cost, and value of the motor workloads - scale differently with regards to velocity and time.
So the intention was to investigate whether this inherently-OU interaction could be decoupled from the GPE cost of sustaining the effective N3 violation in the first place - such as by varying the axial-to-orbital MoI ratio, spin-up and braking speeds etc., to look for any cracks in the wallpaper..
..because gravity is a time-constant rate of change of momentum, whereas the amount of counter-momentum we might sink to it per unit time may perchance be amenable to some degree of manipulation, which this series of measurements should be able to ascertain..
But only if we can get it to spit out reliable control runs first! Just a stable margin of error would be something - happy to drop down to three zeros displayed.. ATM tho it's near-zero here then 9 J there... forget about a signal above noise; the 'signal' is the noise...
We'll get there eventually..