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Overunity Machines Forum



Working Magnetic Motor on you tube??

Started by Craigy, January 04, 2008, 04:11:39 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 15 Guests are viewing this topic.

gwhy!

Quote from: FunkyJive on May 24, 2008, 12:00:49 PM


Incidentally... Gwhy!  -  Do you have any further progress or supporting observations to report from your experiments to-date?



I have not managed to set anything up yet to try and see what is going on. What I would like to do is messure the speed of the rotor as well as the speed of the stator at the same time. My theory is at some point in the rotation the rotor and stator hits a sweet spot that causes the rotor to speed up but the stator to slow down and this is why the rotor only appears to speed up once per manual spin and it is also not consistant ( one spin it will and another it wont ) . The idea of messuring the stator at the same time will hopefully show me. If the stator remains on a constant rundown speed when the rotor speeds up then bingo !.... ( I think  :P )  it will be all about the phase. The best results I was getting was with 4 HDD mags stuck onto a disk ( rotor ) with a smaller dia stator with 6 small neo mags stuck to it all pointing outwards. I will try to set something up again and take some pictures or video. 

sdanielmsev

  To omnibus:
   From House Painter:
  Glad to see someone that doesn't suffer fools gladly. This reminds me of the the post "I am not one to get excited" or some such, Where he had 18 volts on his meter, on a9v battery, when in reality he had a bad meter. I have to agree with you that OU doesn't exist; at least as the way it is being proposed here. I am not, nor will I ever, be an expert on these OU motors, but I can see a scam like this a mile away.
  This is not to degade anyone who reads or posts here. However I would like to see more rational discussions on the subject. I realise I am no more than a newbie, whatever that means. However, there is an old saying I am reminded of; " anybody can teach anybody, but not many can learn from nobody."
  A quote from a guy at Nasa "Rocket science is easy, carpentry is hard,"

sdanielmsev

  To: niente;
   Nice to another Baldur's Gate fan.

scottmweaver

Sorry if these questions have been answered, but my mind has been on fire about this technology for a few years now and I thought I'd ask you fine people-

1. Why is it (realistically, aside from the gov conspiracies) that almost none of these demonstrations ever show the overunity being converted into any sort of useful power (like charging a battery)?
2. Why is it that this motor can't be hooked up to any sort of lightweight gearing system that ensures super precise timing on each turn? I realize this introduces unwanted friction, but if it is truly over-unity it seems possible that the net energy gain would make it worthwhile. One guess is that the imperfection is what allows this particular motor to work.
3. Why is it so impossible to find blue prints for this thing? If they're in this forum somewhere, forgive this question, but I've yet to find them. I would build this TODAY if I had the blue prints.
4. What is the size-to-power-output ratio? Has anyone tested this? Does it even depend on size?
5. Is this scalable? I mean, can I build a 10' diameter version and have it still work or is there a limit?
6. Does this thing stop working when you apply motion to it? I mean, if I were hypothetically driving my battery-powered car and had this thing running to re-charge the batteries (assuming it ever had enough power to be useful in this manner), would it stop working if I were to make sudden turns, speed up suddenly or stop abruptly?
7. Given that the answer to the above question is 'no', would it then pose a serious threat to the oil industry?
8. If this thing really does break a law of thermodynamics -- does that mean we just make the minor adjustment to the laws or does it change everything?
9. Has anyone given thought to the gyroscopic implications (benefits and caveats)?
10. How long does this thing run before dying out on its own?

I'll continue reading to see if I can answer any of these questions but if anyone can answer, please do. I'd be very interested to see what you have to say.

Scott

utilitarian

Quote from: scottmweaver on June 16, 2008, 03:33:03 PM
Sorry if these questions have been answered, but my mind has been on fire about this technology for a few years now and I thought I'd ask you fine people-

1. Why is it (realistically, aside from the gov conspiracies) that almost none of these demonstrations ever show the overunity being converted into any sort of useful power (like charging a battery)?
2. Why is it that this motor can't be hooked up to any sort of lightweight gearing system that ensures super precise timing on each turn? I realize this introduces unwanted friction, but if it is truly over-unity it seems possible that the net energy gain would make it worthwhile. One guess is that the imperfection is what allows this particular motor to work.
3. Why is it so impossible to find blue prints for this thing? If they're in this forum somewhere, forgive this question, but I've yet to find them. I would build this TODAY if I had the blue prints.
4. What is the size-to-power-output ratio? Has anyone tested this? Does it even depend on size?
5. Is this scalable? I mean, can I build a 10' diameter version and have it still work or is there a limit?
6. Does this thing stop working when you apply motion to it? I mean, if I were hypothetically driving my battery-powered car and had this thing running to re-charge the batteries (assuming it ever had enough power to be useful in this manner), would it stop working if I were to make sudden turns, speed up suddenly or stop abruptly?
7. Given that the answer to the above question is 'no', would it then pose a serious threat to the oil industry?
8. If this thing really does break a law of thermodynamics -- does that mean we just make the minor adjustment to the laws or does it change everything?
9. Has anyone given thought to the gyroscopic implications (benefits and caveats)?
10. How long does this thing run before dying out on its own?

I'll continue reading to see if I can answer any of these questions but if anyone can answer, please do. I'd be very interested to see what you have to say.

Scott

The answer to 1 and 2 is that the motor is not overunity.  Given that, do you even care about the rest?