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Overunity Machines Forum



Magnet motor idea hopefully solved

Started by Low-Q, June 14, 2019, 10:59:32 AM

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Low-Q

This is a continuation from this thread: https://overunity.com/18164/a-new-magnetmotor-idea-for-you-to-evaluate/


I have done some thinking about ways to swap magnetic polarity without doing work to do so.
An electric DC motor is doing this polarity swap due to the commutators. However, it has been a puzzle finding ways to do this with permanentmagnets without applying energy.


My idea how to solve this puzzle is based on the animation further down the thread I linked to, but the two rotors can be rotating in parallell.
This animation shows the non parallell rotors:
https://youtu.be/d-6vbiLksys


If you look at that youtube animation. Imagine that magnets is placed in a row along the thin thread around the pulleys. One half of the magnets points N outwards. The other half have S pointing outwards.
Two stator magnets surrounds the rotormagnets.


The chain of magnets that is placed up and down around the rotors pulleys is kept stationary on the very top and very bottom. So when the rotors turns around, the pulleys will just roll along this chain. In this way the magnetic polarity of the rotor magnets will not move, but the wave shape will move around. Each vertical part of the chain is attracting or repelling the statormagnet.
Since the polarity swap is stationary, and the magnetic fields from the rotormagnets is moving around, in spite of a physically stationary rotormagnet, the cost of polarity swap should be zero.


What do you think?


I will post some photos later, but I am quite busy today.


Vidar

Low-Q


Low-Q

The picture describes how my idea is supposed to work, but the magnetic poles swaps as describen in the youtube video above.
Like this 12-pole DC motor, the magnetic polarity change from N to S on the top and S to N on the bottom. This is exactly what happens with my design.
Link to 12-pole DC motor animation:
https://static.wixstatic.com/media/4cfbb9_ce054af8296d43039951c035fb4f5912.gif


It remains to see how my design works in real life. I have no explanation on how it wont work.




Vidar

telecom

Quote from: Low-Q on June 14, 2019, 05:29:43 PM
I made a video that explains how the motor works
https://youtu.be/ykYH4OjaorU


Vidar

You will need a thrust bearing at the bottom to illuminate friction as much as possible.

Low-Q

Quote from: telecom on June 19, 2019, 11:58:14 AM
You will need a thrust bearing at the bottom to illuminate friction as much as possible.
Yes. The illustration I did, had a tight flexible plastic filament as "magnets". Ofcourse this has lots of friction.
I need some kind of a conveoyr belt. Tried to print small links, but the printer isn't accurate enough to make a smooth chain/conveyor belt. So it must be scaled up a lot.


Vidar