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Down wind faster than the wind

What you said was this:



You didn't say anything about "rectified". The dots will both trace trochoids, not sine waves. There as absolutely no doubt about this. Do you agree, or not?

#1164 "Rectification of that waveform would not change the argument.."

You should consider only the difference between the gears. The wave form is not so important as the fact that they average to zero.
You are thinking of the contact point of a wheel moving forward. Well, of course, that does not "go backwards" at any time.
 
Shame this thread has turned in to petty arguing rather than scientific testing and discussion.

Have just tested my cart on a treadmill again up to 18mph and still can’t get the thrust of the propeller to be greater then the rolling resistance. There is a problem getting suitable parts where I live (propellers in particular). The largest slow air prop I can get is a 12 x 6 and I’m using two on the same shaft. The drive wheels are 2.5 inch diameter and the bearings have been washed of grease and spin with little friction.

SPORK - If you wish to give me a quote for your cart kit (including air freight to New Zealand) it might be easier to simply purchase one from you. Then there can be no argument that I have a cart that is claimed to work.
 
Humber:


Humber:


Please, show us the "typo".

Change the spelling of a word, change a point of punctuation or invert a pair of letters that will take the meaning of that sentence and make it correct.

Please, PLEASE do. I double dog dare you.

JB

"and not gain an increase in velocity". He would have to falsify F= ma.
Dumbass
 
Today I made my own version of a moving machine where output is in the same direction as input and faster than input. The machine itself is nothing more than an empty cotton reel: the motive force comes from the movement of a strip of paper over a flat surface.

I call it the ATPFTTP machine because it goes Along The Paper Faster Than The Paper.

Here it is on YouTube:



I will gladly send detailed plans to anyone who wishes to make one ;)
Obviously positive gearing increases speed and I don’t think anyone is arguing against that simple and well understood principle. The relevant question is - Can the energy/thrust/torque at he output of the gearing ever be greater than the energy/thrust/torque provided at the input?
 
Shame this thread has turned in to petty arguing rather than scientific testing and discussion.

To have a "scientific" discussion with humber would stretch the definition beyond rational belief.

Have just tested my cart on a treadmill again up to 18mph

My goodness, that's a freakin' AWESOME treadmill you have there.

There is a problem getting suitable parts where I live (propellers in particular). The largest slow air prop I can get is a 12 x 6 and I’m using two on the same shaft. The drive wheels are 2.5 inch diameter and the bearings have been washed of grease and spin with little friction.

What are you using as the gearbox and what's its ratio (my apologies if you already told us).

Also, can you snap a pic and post it somewhere, or even better a video? I'd sure like to help you get yours working rather than you needing to get another one.

JB
 
Obviously positive gearing increases speed and I don’t think anyone is arguing against that simple and well understood principle. The relevant question is - Can the energy/thrust/torque at he output of the gearing ever be greater than the energy/thrust/torque provided at the input?

No it isn't.

First, the energy produced by the output can never be greater than that provided by the input.

Second, it is certainly possible to produce machines that increase thrust or torque, but at the cost of a decrease in speed.

Third, the direct downwind cart does not pretend to produce more thrust than that provided by the input: it trades an increase in velocity with a decrease in force. It's clear that it can't pull a big load, but this isn't what it's built for.

I think the best analysis of this was presented by Thabiguy early on in this thread. Have a look.
 
#1164 "Rectification of that waveform would not change the argument.."

You should consider only the difference between the gears. The wave form is not so important as the fact that they average to zero.
You are thinking of the contact point of a wheel moving forward. Well, of course, that does not "go backwards" at any time.

Rectifying a trochoid curve does not produce a sine wave. Whatever: you first asserted that the dots on the wheels would trace sine waves as the cart advanced. The dots on the wheels will both trace trochoids, not sine waves. There is absolutely no doubt about this. Do you agree, or not?
 
To have a "scientific" discussion with humber would stretch the definition beyond rational belief.



My goodness, that's a freakin' AWESOME treadmill you have there.



What are you using as the gearbox and what's its ratio (my apologies if you already told us).

Also, can you snap a pic and post it somewhere, or even better a video? I'd sure like to help you get yours working rather than you needing to get another one.

JB
I am using a brand new top of the line treadmill in a retail outlet. Sorry I made a mistake that should be 18kph. Top speed of the treadmill is 20kph.

The gear ratio is 1:1. I have also tried using crown and pinion gears from an angle grinder with a 2.75:1 ratio but they are helical cut metal gears with sharp edges and only work efficiently when absolutely perfectly aligned. This wasn’t possible to guarantee on my cart. Finding good gears is also a problem where I live.

I realise the importance of removing as much friction as possible and have a completely new design that I will try to see if it does this better than the old. Will also scale down the overall size to make it more compatible with the prop size.

Spork has offered to sell cart kits and using his cart that he claims works would remove any argument that I was using a cart that didn‘t work.
 
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ROFLAO!! We'll have to remember this:

Just claim "typo" and add the word "not" anytime anyone says something silly.

"Not" is the magical word.

JB

It makes it in accord with the context.
Why go out of your way to make yourself look silly?
 
I am using a brand new top of the line treadmill in a retail outlet. Sorry I made a mistake that should be 18kph. Top speed of the treadmill is 20kph.

Thanks for the update -- I was wondering if you were in kph.

The gear ratio is 1:1.

Well, that puts you right in the same range prop pitch to wheels that I am on the one you see in the vids.

I have used a 12" prop on my cart before (it wasn't as good, but it definitely worked).

It could be a traction problem (don't know what sort of wheels you are using). You can tell if it is by pressing down in the nose of the cart with the treadmill running -- if the prop speeds up as you press down, then you know it's slipping.

My guess is it's simple a friction problem in the drive train. You have to get it down really smooth. We have had to tweak all three of ours just a little bit to get them free running before they worked.

JB
 
Rectifying a trochoid curve does not produce a sine wave. Whatever: you first asserted that the dots on the wheels would trace sine waves as the cart advanced. The dots on the wheels will both trace trochoids, not sine waves. There is absolutely no doubt about this. Do you agree, or not?

What!. It was your assumption that I was referring to the wheel contact I had not. The trochoid is "rectified" in that the average will non-zero, which is not true of a unrectified sine.

The dots are on the gears. The charts are their motion in time.
Big Gear. Small gear, think I referred to them. It is the difference of the gears. The gain is effectively that of that smaller gear. If that is zero, what does that imply? No gain.
But it does have gain. Why? Because and ever-changing forward velocity (acceleration) maintains sufficient difference, that would otherwise be zero.

Why do you care?
 
It makes it in accord with the context.

You have to understand that since I have a device that repeatedly does *precisely* what you say is impossible, sitting right here on my desk, nothing you say makes any sense -- in or out of any context.

JB
 
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I just did, and then showed you that all of the other components of the van are dispensable while preserving the dynamics of this system.
I'm not sure why you say this, but it is in fact true.

What I am saying is the the reasoning that is used to conclude "zero differential velocity" is windspeed can also be used to conclude that the cart is motionless in still air.
I see nothing to distinguish the two. You say that the belt makes the difference, I say not. The belt is in no way the equivalent of wind.

A couple of things: The first syllogism, though indeed invalid, has nothing to do with the equivalence of treadmill and cart at windspeed.
The specified case is not an example of the abstracted syllogism; It's imprecisely formulated, and still has nothing to do with the matter at hand.
For instance, the second premise is just a special case of the first, namely for windspeed equals zero.
This makes the syllogism valid and the conclusion true, though trivial, since it is just a reformulation of the one premise.

I say it relies upon both. The only characteristic that you have used is to equate apparent velocities.
Also, "no differential wind at wind speed" has not been demonstrated for the cart. The treadmill says nothing about the cart's ability to get there.
Also, swapping symbols or objects to undermine my syllogisms, just invites me to modify them in response.
ETA:
What I do find odd, is that if it does work when still, how could moving it around add any new information?
It seems to be only symbolic. The treadmill should have handles, so it can be carried around like the Ark of the Covenant.

What we should actually be interested in, however, are the relative speeds between the air, the cart, and the surface. Do these relative speeds differ between the treadmill and a cart moving over a road at windspeed? Let's see:

Outside:

Vcart - Vair = Vwind - Vwind = 0
Vcart - Vroad = Vwind - 0 = Vwind
Vair - Vroad = Vwind - 0 = Vwind

Inside:

Vcart - Vair = 0 - 0 = 0
Vcart - Vroad = 0 - Vtreadmill = - Vtreadmill
Vair - Vroad = 0 - Vtreadmill = - Vtreadmill

This means that for any Vtreadmill = - Vwind , the two situations are identical. That is, for every wind speed, we can set a treadmill speed that results in equivalent dynamics.
Like I said before, this ignores differences in the boundary layer flows, but does not affect the working principle of the cart. Both the treadmill and the road develop a similar boundary layer flow, and the bigger the treadmill, the more alike the two will become.

Of course. Arithmetic subtraction of vectors. Perhaps you are unaware that is what is thought to be my "problem". I can't get my head around such an everyday occurrence. This sort of abstraction is done every time you model something in your mind and turn it around. There is no need to consider that point any further.

But equivalence guarantees "no difference", of course. It all boils down to solely how good your model is. No equivalence necessary. It is redundant.

Most use wind tunnels to model the wind, but you say a belt is enough.
I say not even close.

This is the problem:
It ignores the momentum exchange that accompanies real air travel.
The cart (clearly) does not pick up enough momentum to allow it to remain in the 'still' air. Even allowing for a special case, the reaction to being pushed backwards should generate a significant force. It does not.

Without that, it cannot be said to be a model of dynamic system in any useful sense. Move the treadmill 1m to the right. Attach a 1m drive shaft to the motor and use an idler wheel to turn the cart wheels. Wind now? Cover the treadmill with a cardboard box, allowing an small port for the drive shaft. In the wind now? It is no model.

This is not what we are saying. In similarly short wording I would say:
Air moves over road
Velocity is relative.
Road moving in still air is the same as air moving over road.

And the modelling consists of:
Belt moving in still air is equivalent to road moving in still air.
I will tell you no such thing. In fact, I'm trying to tell you that they are all equivalent.
You can't, that is what equivalence means. I'm still not sure what your problem is.

What provides the energy is, as sol invictus pointed out, the difference in speed between the surface and the air. In the treadmill this difference is maintained by the treadmill motor; outside, this difference is maintained by the wind.

Taking a mathematical perspective, which is all that is being done, is not the same as creating an environment viewed from that perspective.
A system of inquiry should be useful. If I sit on the missile, or on the deck of the battleship, your view says that I can't know if I am traveling or stationary in either case. Great "I can't know" . I'll take two.
Something that vague is not likely to be useful.

Equivalency, says that I cannot expect to gain any advantage by changing my viewpoint because all things are equivalent from that view. Therefore abstraction is redundant.

One thing that it does allow is to argue for a belt being a road, on the basis of equivalent velocity alone.
Is this a valid simplification of the principle of equivalence? The lack of torque in the cart indicates not. That is an outright failure of the model.

Adequate power cannot come from the motor, because there no return path to couple it to the propeller. There must be a suitable path to carry the force.

There is no momentum carrier, that is the equivalent of the wind.
The cart runs on "leakage momentum" to ground, which it why is is so feeble. This is not a model of a cart in wind, of any sort

.
 

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You have to understand that since I have a device that repeatedly does *precisely* what you say is impossible, sitting right here on my desk, nothing you say makes any sense -- in or out of any context.

JB

JB, if that where the case, we would not be having this discussion.

I rule out, for reasons I gave given, that the treadmill is a valid tool.
That the cart runs up or down the belt, is a matter of simple engineering.
It can be done without wheels if needed, and still remain very simple.

Brian-M's cart, is a separate issue. It has nothing to do with the windspeed cart, except to support a claim that has not been validated.
It can be analysed. I do not say that it cannot run at twice speed. Why not? But that this will have consequences that seem not to have been considered. It is interesting to consider how it works, that is all.

It is the wind tests that are the problem. Show me solid evidence, and you win.
 
Today I made my own version of a moving machine where output is in the same direction as input and faster than input.

That is a spectacular demo. Thanks for making it and thanks for posting it as a response to our video. That is so clear that anybody (but humber) should get it immediately.
 
SPORK - If you wish to give me a quote for your cart kit (including air freight to New Zealand) it might be easier to simply purchase one from you. Then there can be no argument that I have a cart that is claimed to work.

Will do. I plan to simply pass them along at our cost. I have the key parts for the simpler/cheaper design, and should be able to have it built and tested this weekend.
 
Thanks for the update -- I was wondering if you were in kph.



Well, that puts you right in the same range prop pitch to wheels that I am on the one you see in the vids.

I have used a 12" prop on my cart before (it wasn't as good, but it definitely worked).

It could be a traction problem (don't know what sort of wheels you are using). You can tell if it is by pressing down in the nose of the cart with the treadmill running -- if the prop speeds up as you press down, then you know it's slipping.

My guess is it's simple a friction problem in the drive train. You have to get it down really smooth. We have had to tweak all three of ours just a little bit to get them free running before they worked.

JB
The wheels are wooden discs with rubber stretched around the running surface. Yes I tried holding the wheels down firmly with no noticeable increase in prop speed. The treadmill I’m using allows the speed to be built up in 1kph increments so acceleration can be built up very smoothly. As I said I’m using two 12” props offset a quarter of a turn on the same shaft.

Have you tried adding some more weight to your cart to see if it works as well? Other than added a very minimal amount of extra friction to the bearings I don’t see that extra weight should effect the performance other than to make your cart more stable against possible “phantom” effects (a decent fart would move your cart ;-).
 
Shame this thread has turned in to petty arguing rather than scientific testing and discussion.

Have just tested my cart on a treadmill again up to 18mph and still can’t get the thrust of the propeller to be greater then the rolling resistance. There is a problem getting suitable parts where I live (propellers in particular). The largest slow air prop I can get is a 12 x 6 and I’m using two on the same shaft. The drive wheels are 2.5 inch diameter and the bearings have been washed of grease and spin with little friction.

Have you measured the properties of your prop at various speeds? If you drive the prop with a small DC motor you could easily measure the thrust it generates and the amount of drag that translates to torque applied by the motor.
 

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