Hi Michael - a good question deserves a good answer. I've been interested in free energy ideas since the late 1980's - and i've long believed that physics as taught is not quite right, and very possibly there has been some suppression of some technologies that probably quite rightly should belong to the military.Michael wrote:Greendoor you said you've given a lot of bad ideas on the forum before but won't do this again. Was this on purpose or were you learning? I ask because I am also struggling to understand a bit of where you are coming from. You say you believe in gravity power but don't believe in the typical ways ( overbalanced, speed, etc. ) that people often consider.
But then you say things like this;The rising weights certainly have to move faster - otherwise this overbalanced situation would not remain for very long. This reminds me of the classic spinning ice skater example used to demonstrate the conservation of angular momentum (pull your hands in to your chest, and your speed of rotation increases). However, somebody recently pointed out that the human skater example is hopelessly flawed, because muscle power is exerted to bring the arms in towards the body against the (imaginary) centrifugal force.
AFAIK - even Bessler needed an energy input to accelerate those rising weights. That's what we need to look for first..... And I still think that somewhere in the mechanism Impact or Collision is involved. If not in the Stamper box, then elsewhere
I stumbled across this Bessler site - from memory - about 2 years ago, and became very interested in gravity wheels. This is largely because I am convinced of the validity of the Bessler story, and it seemed like a project a crude engineer with ordinary materials might be able to build.
I went through a steep learning curve, and many forum members here have helped me see the folly of some of my ideas. If you bothered to look up all my posts (which I don't recommend) you will see a lot of rubbish. If I could delete them, I would.
Fairly recently, I came across a theory from somebody who has posted here, and in other forums, with some maths that made me see this problem from a completely different perspective. The viewpoints of this person seem to be univesally dismissed and ignored - I can only see this as some sort of wilful ignorance or blindness. Doing research, I have found other people with essentially the same idea (that there are flaws with some of the basic kinematic assumptions and the concept of Energy). It takes a bit of faith to consider that we have been misled for centuries - but the logic is compelling very for me.
On pondering this viewpoint and comparing it with all the Bessler clues available, i've come to my own theory of the basic principle that Bessler used. I could be completely wrong, but I don't think i'm completely stupid, and i've explored every other option I can think of. I've written some software to model my basic idea, and the numbers look good. All that remains is to build an experiment that proves the energy gain - and i'm slowing working on this as time & money permits.
I'm sorry, i've come from a position of sharing any & all ideas that enter my head, to one of those horrible people who won't share until I see some physical evidence. This is for several reasons:
1 - there are some very harsh critics who will never believe even if they are hit over the head with a working Bessler wheel. Much time & resources could be wasted in pointless debate with such people - and they tend to be the vocal majority.
2 - i've seen other people try to defend theories here - it's just pointless.
3 - I have genuine concerns about greed. The major contributors here are a great bunch of clever people - but there are thousands of guests and viewers, and we don't know who they are or what they are here for.
It's not my intention to mislead anyone - i've said far too much already. But anything I do say, it's because I believe it to be true (at that point in time anyway).