Hi everyone,
I worked for many years on wheel design & building and ceased around the time the earthquakes arrived here in Christchurch.
Thoughts on paper continued for a couple of years afterwards, though the building has ceased permanently now.
I spent some extremely difficult times searching for a way to lift any weight within a wheel to no avail.
It was after the building ceased, that the first weight-lifter design came to me.
It's design is important. No other design has even looked like turning up in my head.
As the years do not allow me to build any more these days, I decided a short while back, to give it away to all.
This way, my work may be expanded on & not wasted.
The lifter is very irksome to erect on bearings I'm afraid
Here is the site. overbalanced wheel theory . nz
Interesting idea. I have been working with a very similar concept and have a couple builds in different stages of not working. I only posted here because I believe our ideas are quite similar. I have a four foot wheel that I try out designs on whenever I get the chance. Sorry for the crude representation. I am going to have to come up with a cad program one day really soon. Perhaps my "curved" mechanism is not the best design, and I have a couple of others on paper, including a simple "L" shape with a weight on each end and a pivot point, but the idea is to use two small falling weights and LEVERAGE to move a large weight out TO the rim and another large weight in FROM the rim. There would be eight such mechanisms within the hollow wheel which would have no axle through the center of it.
Quote from: Giro on November 23, 2015, 02:44:09 PM
Hi everyone,
I worked for many years on wheel design & building and ceased around the time the earthquakes arrived here in Christchurch.
Thoughts on paper continued for a couple of years afterwards, though the building has ceased permanently now.
I spent some extremely difficult times searching for a way to lift any weight within a wheel to no avail.
It was after the building ceased, that the first weight-lifter design came to me.
It's design is important. No other design has even looked like turning up in my head.
As the years do not allow me to build any more these days, I decided a short while back, to give it away to all.
This way, my work may be expanded on & not wasted.
The lifter is very irksome to erect on bearings I'm afraid
Here is the site. overbalanced wheel theory . nz
Greetings Giro
Very insetting variation of this approach. I will reed and explore more this evening. I have had some fair success with the concept of slide weights, and I have a new one to finish shortly. The how to shift is interesting. I think I at about 60 something now days on this approach alone.
Dbowling
Nice to see more work in this direction. The control slots may give you a bit of trouble just a I couldn't get a cam to work so far as well.
Alan
Alan,
That drawing was more to show the idea. Two small weights. Top one drops TO center and the bottom one drops down FROM center. Their movement pushes or pulls a weight in from one side while pushing or pulling a weight out to the other side. I have tried several mechanisms, including the curves with slots, which do not work, but show the idea in the simplest form.
The idea is to use the force of gravity that acts upon the falling weights, plus leverage to move LARGER weights from side to side. One out to the rim and one in from the rim to create the overbalance necessary for rotation. Right now I am working with pulleys and wire to achieve the same concept.The problem is, the pulleys don't develop the leverage I want to move the large amount of weight I want to move. I need more leverage, which implies a different kind of system. But researching is half the fun of this.
Quote from: Dbowling on November 24, 2015, 01:37:56 PM
Alan,
That drawing was more to show the idea. Two small weights. Top one drops TO center and the bottom one drops down FROM center. Their movement pushes or pulls a weight in from one side while pushing or pulling a weight out to the other side. I have tried several mechanisms, including the curves with slots, which do not work, but show the idea in the simplest form.
The idea is to use the force of gravity that acts upon the falling weights, plus leverage to move LARGER weights from side to side. One out to the rim and one in from the rim to create the overbalance necessary for rotation. Right now I am working with pulleys and wire to achieve the same concept.The problem is, the pulleys don't develop the leverage I want to move the large amount of weight I want to move. I need more leverage, which implies a different kind of system. But researching is half the fun of this.
Dbowling
Your up and down will have a much grater advantage to your side to side but it is a good direction to consider to explore further. In mine I use 2 direct slides that cross each other. What interest me the most in Giro is the mechanism in the middle. I have my own that are under construction but they are nothing like his. IMHO I believe Giro is a creditable inventor of the quest as well as ourselves. How is your construction coming along on this project? If you find problems? You should look at Bessler's MT drawings for parts you can use. Here is a link.
http://www.besslerwheel.com/wiki/index.php?title=Portal:MT
Alan
Took the liberty of placing a working link to Giro's work here
http://overbalancedwheeltheory.nz/
http://overbalancedwheeltheory.nz/page-3/
wonderful that You share your work Giro.
Thx
Chet
You all are most welcome to use whatever you can. I just hope someone gets there before someone with a very negative lifestyle drops that 1st H-bomb!