• Looking at quintillions, over the centuries

    From Arindam Banerjee@21:1/5 to Peter Moylan on Wed Sep 27 02:34:08 2023
    On Wednesday, 27 September 2023 at 17:48:46 UTC+10, Peter Moylan wrote:
    On 27/09/23 15:52, Hibou wrote:
    Le 27/09/2023 à 02:02, Arindam Banerjee a écrit :

    Note: The above calculations are very rough, back on envelope type.
    But if indeed the wheel works as shown in several youtube videos,

    It doesn't.

    You're away with the fairies.
    As somebody (I forget who) once said, trying to break one law of physics
    is like trying to eat one peanut.

    So break all of them, from inertia, conservation of momentum, conservation of energy, conservation of mass and energy...
    With my rail gun experiments, that is done easily.
    "Laws" are just esteemed theories, proven up to a point.
    New ideas, new methods and products, new inventions do come up, they cannot be suppressed for ever by the parasites: professors, politicians, physicists, pimps, and presstitutes.
    So from supercapacitors of 3000F, a great product, we have a new invention - the low voltage heavy armature rail gun.
    And from that the discovery that the Lorenz force does not have an equal and opposite reaction.
    Which will lead to the invention of the Internal Force Engines.
    Which taking humanity to outer space, will cause the finding of more discoveries.

    A perpetual motion machine has interesting consequences. Once you get
    even one watt of free power, you can use that to bootstrap your way up
    to bigger and better things. Properly handled, you can get to the point
    where you're powering a national grid using nothing but the back of an envelope.

    Predictibly asinine statement from Moylan, above.

    Any pmm like any engineering product has its limits.
    A 10KW motor based on magnets sells for $10000 from Alibaba.
    Which is $1000 per KW.
    Not cheap. Permanent magnets are made from expensive rare earths. They will last for ever, but you could get cheaper engines, run them on not free fuel.
    The polished Bhaskara wheel should give $500 per KW.
    DIY could be around $200 or less per KW, if you use a pulley, plastic, etc.
    So it is a viable alternative to magnetic free energy generators.

    Should replace huge wind turbines, must be cheaper than them. Good riddance then to such ugly horrors. Have Bhaskaracharya wheel farms instead, in any old building, basements, anywhere near the grid.
    No more nuclear plants needed, and that is good. No more Fukushimas (sp?) or Chernobyls.

    When I proposed the HTN some wiseguy Uncle Al said it could not work as it would violate the law of conservation of physics, as it would be a pmm.
    Somehow, that is a taboo concept for rational physicists!

    NO power is free as such, you need labour and materials to get access.
    Like you need to plow fields, plant seeds, put water to get the free sunlight to work for you to create energy from plants.

    Gravity is free, but that is it. You need to buy bearings, bicycle wheels, a motor, proper bottles with lead and oil, clamps, gears, shaft, welding....
    It costs money to get free energy.
    Like you have to buy solar panels to get free energy from the sun.

    Anyway, energy is for bunny-ahs.

    As a hobbyist, dabbling around in various fields, from acting to writing to cooking also including basic physics, energy is just a scalar commodity.

    Force is the key word as mass * acceleration
    and Torque = Force * distance
    and Power = Torque * angular momentum
    and Energy = Power * time.

    In the case of B's wheel:
    with mass and gravity
    and force acting outwards providing extra distance
    there is extra torque
    as Force * (difference of distances)
    causing rotation
    providing angular velocity
    thus power
    or energy over time..

    Now, will that penetrate the fat heads of pretentious professors? I gravely doubt that, alas; they are so thoroughly stewed in their petty biases and self-interests.

    By then the entire bag of peanuts is gone, of course, but that's nothing
    to worry about. By then you're also a billionaire, and can afford to buy
    an entire nut house.

    Looking at quintillions, over the centuries - who cares for billions.

    Cheers,
    Arindam Banerjee

    --
    Peter Moylan http://www.pmoylan.org
    Newcastle, NSW

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