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Overunity Machines Forum



Question in probably the wrong forum, but...

Started by beedees, June 27, 2007, 12:37:18 PM

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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

beedees

If I have a shaft with 4 arms attached to it at 90 degree spacing each 1 foot long and a force of 10 pounds is applied to the end of each arm, how much force is being applied to the shaft? 10 pounds, 40 0r somewhere in between? I'm thinking 10. ???

IronHead

you have 0 foot pounds of torque , because you have balance . If you have one 12" lever with 10 pounds at the end ,you have  10 foot pounds of torque.

beedees

Quote from: IronHead on June 27, 2007, 12:46:35 PM
you have 0 foot pounds of torque , because you have balance . If you have one 12" lever with 10 pounds at the end ,you have  10 foot pounds of torque.
Why do wind turbines, etc. have more than one  blade, then...or two at most? What I didn't put in first post is that all the force is applied in the same dirction like a turbine .

innovation_station

will the torque not increase with the speed of what ever you are turning ?


is
To understand the action of the local condenser E in fig.2 let a single discharge be first considered. the discharge has 2 paths offered~~ one to the condenser E the other through the part L of the working circuit C. The part L  however  by virtue of its self induction  offers a strong opposition to such a sudden discharge  wile the condenser on the other hand offers no such opposition ......TESLA..

THE !STORE IS UP AND RUNNING ...  WE ARE TAKEING ORDERS ..  NOW ..   ISTEAM.CA   AND WE CAN AND WILL BUILD CUSTOM COILS ...  OF   LARGER  OUTPUT ...

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IronHead

I see, then it is attached to an applied force. Now you getting into inertia and centrifugal force . I can't really answer this one . One of the math guys around here might answer this.