ozi-rock Posted January 14, 2009 Report Posted January 14, 2009 HII was hoping somebody could explain why the overbalanced wheel does not work. Would there not be a larger moment on one side of the wheel due to the extra radius of gyration? Would this not make the sum of the moments positive in one direction? Quote
Moontanman Posted January 14, 2009 Report Posted January 14, 2009 HII was hoping somebody could explain why the overbalanced wheel does not work. Would there not be a larger moment on one side of the wheel due to the extra radius of gyration? Would this not make the sum of the moments positive in one direction? I think you will find in all cases of perpetual motion that friction is the main player in why they do not work. Quote
TEguy Posted April 17, 2009 Report Posted April 17, 2009 The quick answer would be: count the number of weights on either side of the axis. The longer answer is: you need torque to make the wheel turn an torque is the product of force and distance from the axis. When people look at overbalanced wheels they usually only look at the distance from the axis but never pay attention what the total force (mass) on either side is. Quote
Sir Isaac Einstein Posted October 5, 2009 Report Posted October 5, 2009 This post and replies to it have been moved to 21092, because the strange claim they discuss isn’t up to the standard of an engineering forum thread. After it improved, with the addition of actual sketches of the described machine, new posts were moved to 21152 I agree with TEguy, I myself, have designed an overbalancing wheel that has LESS weightson the 'turning' side than on the 'opposing' side. The difference here being, the TOTALdistance of all weights (added up), is less on the 'opposing' side, than on the turningside ----- this is what causes the imbalance ----- NOT the number of weights!For example; if the total distance, on one side of the hub, equals 50cms for 5 weights,and each weight equals 10kgs, it is the same as placing one (1) weight (at 10kgs), at the 'total distance' of ALL the weights ----- 50cms!If, on the 'turning' side, the total distance is 100cms (even though there may well be lessweights), the wheel WILL overbalance. Sir Isaac Einstein. Quote
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