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Overunity Machines Forum



The Lee-Tseung Lead Out Theory

Started by ltseung888, July 20, 2007, 02:43:44 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 26 Guests are viewing this topic.

Koen1

@gaby: Do you mean to say you take any of Tseungs stuff seriously?
Then perhaps you can explain in proper English and in a way that actually makes any sense,
how the "Tseung" UFO propulsion is supposed to work? Tseung himself seems unwilling or
unable to do any proper explaining, he just shouts a lot about how great he is.
Surely you see the flaws in his "spinning the bottle" non-experiment?

gaby de wilde

Quote from: Koen1 on February 14, 2008, 04:21:37 AM
@gaby: Do you mean to say you take any of Tseungs stuff seriously?

oh, yes very seriously.

QuoteThen perhaps you can explain in proper English and in a way that actually makes any sense,
how the "Tseung" UFO propulsion is supposed to work? Tseung himself seems unwilling or
unable to do any proper explaining, he just shouts a lot about how great he is.

Oh sure.

If you have a desk chair with wheels you can wave your arms in the air and make it roll forwards. This is the main principal of inertial propulsion. Exactly half way John Searl's old/long video he explains his version. You can find my explanation / implementation here.

http://gabydewilde.googlepages.com/gdewilde-anti-gravity
gabydewilde - gde wilde anti gravity

The lifter technology is doing just about the same thing only on nano-scale.

QuoteSurely you see the flaws in his "spinning the bottle" non-experiment?

No, I'm afraid it is exactly as simple as you think it is.

So, either Tseung is a genius or the rest of the planet is just dumb.

In practice it doesn't really matter what the answer is.

It does work.

http://www.google.com/search?q=inertial+propulsion

see? ;)
blog  | papers | tech | inventors  | video

shruggedatlas

Quote from: gaby de wilde on February 14, 2008, 01:58:25 PM

If you have a desk chair with wheels you can wave your arms in the air and make it roll forwards. This is the main principal of inertial propulsion.

Finally, an experiment I can perform to completion without even getting my butt out of the chair!

I tried this, and my arms were not enough, though I noticed that I can make the chair move forward by doing a forward thrust with the lower half of my body.  It is more effective if I bring my legs up in an Indian position and just shove my butt forward quickly.

However, the flaw with this method is that it works due to friction.  I am able to overcome friction by quickly thrusting forward.  If I then return my body gently to the starting pose, that movement does not overcome friction, so the chair stays in the forward position.  I can then repeat my quick thrust followed by a gentle return to starting form, and thereby travel accross the room as far as I desire.

In space or even in Earth's atmosphere, there is not sufficient friction to allow this to happen.  So a flying saucer cannot use this principle.  Do you have an example that actually works without the use of friction?

Also, I have to say that from an energy standpoint, that type of movement is grossly inefficient.  It takes barely any energy at all for me to inch my chair forward by using my feet.  However, it took quite a bit of energy to do the pelvic thrust.

gaby de wilde

Quote from: hansvonlieven on February 14, 2008, 03:03:44 AMI didn't know they celebrated Valentine's day in China, or in Holland for that matter.

There are lots of things you don't know Hans.

Like

John Ernst Worrell Keely -> Henry Ford -> Edward Leedskalnin

When officials destroyed the door of corral castle they found Ed's Ford T1 flywheel under it. They claim it was made of unknown material.  I don't know of any unknown materials on the periodic table. Do you?

That skinny little man moved 1000 tons worth of monolithic blocks. It's pretty safe to assume there wasn't anyone there to enforce the laws of thermodynamics on him.
blog  | papers | tech | inventors  | video

chrisC

Quote from: shruggedatlas on February 14, 2008, 02:20:29 PM
Quote from: gaby de wilde on February 14, 2008, 01:58:25 PM

If you have a desk chair with wheels you can wave your arms in the air and make it roll forwards. This is the main principal of inertial propulsion.

Finally, an experiment I can perform to completion without even getting my butt out of the chair!

I tried this, and my arms were not enough, though I noticed that I can make the chair move forward by doing a forward thrust with the lower half of my body.  It is more effective if I bring my legs up in an Indian position and just shove my butt forward quickly.

However, the flaw with this method is that it works due to friction.  I am able to overcome friction by quickly thrusting forward.  If I then return my body gently to the starting pose, that movement does not overcome friction, so the chair stays in the forward position.  I can then repeat my quick thrust followed by a gentle return to starting form, and thereby travel accross the room as far as I desire.

In space or even in Earth's atmosphere, there is not sufficient friction to allow this to happen.  So a flying saucer cannot use this principle.  Do you have an example that actually works without the use of friction?

Also, I have to say that from an energy standpoint, that type of movement is grossly inefficient.  It takes barely any energy at all for me to inch my chair forward by using my feet.  However, it took quite a bit of energy to do the pelvic thrust.

@shruggedatlas

Have you considered waxing your Butt? That might help. Otherwise, I guess some snake oil from old Tseung's medicine box can come in handy?

cheers
chrisC