Has anyone seen this on you tube, i came across it and thought it was cool.
Coud this actually work in perpetual operation. What would run out eventually? the residual magnetism in the magnets?
Ive also been thinking about a way of raising ball bearings up a distance of about 50 cm very quickly and came across a thing called a gauss gun whick also uses magnets but to fling ball bearings. has any one ever used them. will any neodyium magnets be used to make one?
My drink came out my nose when he said, "Everything runs in 3D."
If the creator had put his mechanical skills to work on a martini mixer machine, instead of a perpetual motion machine, he would probably have something useful. Neat paperweight.
I looked at the patent; it uses permanent magnets and the motion is very irregular. I didn't see it operate in person.
I also heard about a box that has weight that is measured on a scale, but if you plug the box into an outlet, the measured weight drops to zero (but it never lifts off).
My drink came out my nose when he said, "Everything runs in 3D."
If the creator had put his mechanical skills to work on a martini mixer machine, instead of a perpetual motion machine, he would probably have something useful. Neat paperweight.
If that were true, I don't see how it would be relevant to us. I wonder what would happen if a Newtonian universe subject to the laws of thermodynamics (ours) in one dimension intersected or interfaced with a universe not subject to those laws in another dimension.
At any rate, there aren't any theories about how we might open such a portal to another dimension which give us a way to do it with current or foreseeable technology, so we kind of have to stick with what's possible in this universe.
If he wanted to be a real genius, he could copy what was done on Mythbusters some time ago. The "experiment" could be expanded to become a low-frequency, high-powered oscillator that could safely(?) bring down a bridge, once a resonant frequency is determined.