Roxaway59 wrote:Yes Fletcher exploring all the possibilities is a good thing.
You are exploring the possibility that the pendulums are related to how the wheel worked and you should follow that.
If I can think of anything I will certainly post it too.
The logic line is fairly simple and linear Graham .. paraphrased, B. said his wheels were gravity and weight wheels ( .. all mass has inherent inertia .. ), that could not find a balance of forces position after being put into a position of initial imbalance - thus, once started they gained that position of imbalance, and thereafter accelerated the wheel, and this internal choreography of the weights was continuously reset to cause an enduring imbalance and directional torque i.e. reoccurring sustained imbalance ( conceptually simple right ? ) .. but only half the story ..
Feet-on-the-ground moment - thousands have tried, for thousands of years, with zero success - ergo, we have a
very wrong perspective to solving the mechanical problem of initiating the reoccurring reset - we know we must manipulate internal geography ( that's a given ) - we scheme long and hard into the night about weight positions where things "passively" gravitate to where they are supposed to be, in the fullness of time, under their own steam ( it's not like no-one else has schemed just as hard, for as long ) - except, we like them, fail like champions because the imbalance is only temporary and it fades away to a wheel that is stationary and balanced ..
B. tells us he also employed a "prime mover" ( re the subject of your topic title ), which logically assisted the reorganization of the interior weights into that reoccurring imbalance regime - and by deduction, that "assist" was
not a passive one, else we, someone, somewhere, would have discovered it eons ago .. passive is so yesterday, an aggressive masculine prime mover muscling the weights to where they need to be to auto-reset is in, imo ;7) ..
Roxaway59 wrote:Here's a question for you.
I've been thinking about the impacts on Besslers wheel.
Is there any advantage that you can think of in physics where an impact or sudden sharp shock can move a weight into position better than a prolonged gradual placement?
I know it isn't suppose to make any difference but I wondered if there had ever been anything advantageous said about it.
Graham
Graham, in the context of your question .. all I can tell you is that over 20 odd years ( most of those with sim experiments to help ) I have never-ever-ever found any difference in either impact or impulse
in solving the "free" reset conundrum we seek - B. even tells us in MT52 "no wheel is moved by heavy blows" which are more likely to destroy it .. we are handcuffed by the Conservation Laws - both energy and momentum at the classical physics and mechanics level - if you have an impact ( soft or hard, fast or slow ) then there is always a leakage of available energy from the system due to elasticity, deformation of surfaces in contact, heat, and sound etc - so no, there is nothing advantageous to be said about the "contacting" method of "passive" placement, imo - we do however seek a positive net torque, by whatever means 'possible' that doesn't deeply offend Newton and his Laws ..
Here's a thought experiment for you, but word-of-warning, there is no real contact/impact forces involved, but perhaps there is some analogy to a sharp sudden shock .. have you ever dangled a 4 or 6 inch bolt out in front of you - held lightly by two finger tips so it hangs down vertically at your mid-chest height - then you rapidly moved your hand horizontally across your chest to your arms full extent of travel ? - you try it slow and careful, and you repeat the thought experiment with a muscular hard and fast movement - in both cases your hand is accelerated and then decelerated with vastly different amounts of forcefulness - what do you think would happen to the bolt ?
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