Fletcher wrote:MrVibrating wrote:
By all accounts, Bessler's wheels were OU well before they'd completed a single cycle - the most compelling evidence of which is the claim that it began to accelerate as an internal weight was heard to begin falling - so it wasn't adding RKE by resting against or thus overbalancing the wheel, and there was no stator for it to lever torque against. Yet somehow, the gain was immediate...
All that has been written above is the truth, and has been acknowledged by signatures in our own hand without any reservations... signed at Merseberg, 31st October, year 1715.
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This was a group signing of a document of authenticity.
That's called "peer pressure".
Is it known who wrote the original text? My guess is by Bessler himself, while the rest just thought: 'It don't know what I saw, so it must be something like that'.
The machine was started by a very light push with just two fingers and accelerated as one of the weights, hidden inside, began to fall.
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I suggest that often (when presented with the unknown) our rational minds default to the familiar i.e. the weight falls and impacts, the wheel accelerates, and not the other way around.
I agree with the rationality of mind.
All we know is that cause and effect are simply paired; sometimes we just don't know which is which.
But the needed push (either some required velocity or acceleration) doesn't explain the self-starting capability of the first two wheels; perhaps explained by stored potential but pushing the main restore method further away.
When two mirrored mechanisms want to "self-start" in each their direction, they'll simply be balanced; this makes the bi-directional variants a less appealing study-object I think.
What are the chances that Bessler found an overbalancing configuration that lead to more positive torque per sector than negative torque (which are always equal unless mass is given further height and GPE from an external source) ? Non existent I'd say.
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We all know that any 'wheel system' of moving weights will never continually overbalance so there is a surplus of RKE and momentum after transitions. It is possible that Bessler thought he found a way with one configuration that he attributed to a 'working' OOB system (Gravity Only), yet was not !
I would totally agree with you, and almost gave up on this whole thing, if not for the occasional "Huh!"-moment.
With some introspection I detect some interesting tendencies of the "rationality of mind" (ah well, at least mine).
When exhausting all creative possibilities and almost none are left, then rationality starts to generalize into (let's shorten it up:) current physics. Perhaps a small gap of hope remains.
When there is suddenly another "huh"-mechanism it could mean two things (or some variant):
1. The highest probability being a poor, misapplied or incomplete understanding of physics, resulting in this new thing failing miserably but is yet unknown.
2. And (I agree) an almost negligible probability of finding something that might do the 'trick': but also yet unknown;
With a lurking (2b) where this thing is just messed up by over-complicating the mechanism because of the same poor. misapplied or incomplete understanding of the real gem.
I think an interesting mechanism of the mind - whatever it does.