kookbreaker
Evil Fokker
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2001
- Messages
- 15,959
Comment: The original post is now in 'another forum' however, I cannot seem to access that forum.
I'll blame Frances.
I'll blame Frances.
Opps. That'd be my fault. It should be fixed now.kookbreaker said:Comment: The original post is now in 'another forum' however, I cannot seem to access that forum.
I'll blame Frances.![]()
Ashles said:He's got everyone on his side!
In fact I might need to check that I'm not actually working for him.
Then the machine going for 120 days would lose 10^-4 grams.davefoc said:
So at the end of one day the device has lost 8.6 x 10^6 / 10^13 grams or 8.6 x 10^-7 grams. I am not sure what the limit of mass measurement is in terms of smallest absolute quantities but 8.6 x 10^-7 may be detectable.
davefoc said:
Even if it were the experiment would still require extraordinary controls because there are other effects that could be causing mass gains and losses in that range. For instance dust, outgassing, and oxidation probably are effecting the mass by a greater amount than that.
davefoc said:A small comment on the suggestions relating to E=MC^2:
I think when energy is produced in a chemical reaction there is in fact an infinitesimal reduction in the mass of the reactants.
davefoc said:Ladewig,
I read Aerich's post. I thought he was right for practical purposes but wrong on theoretical grounds.
The mass reduction as the result of a chemical reaction that produces heat or electrical energy is infinitesimal and I suspect undetectable, there is nonetheless a theoretical reduction as per Einstein's equation.
Aaaaand the company that is paying for his patenting never bothered to mention that even this would be unnacceptable? Well, until after you threw him by agreeing to the NDA.As, if I were to have the internal working made public knowledge it would defeat the purpose of the prize money because It would no longer be able to have a international pattent.. So, can we have the testors sign a NDA and keep the internal workings under wraps, at least for 2 years??
What is so unique about that? I've got one in my car.The reason I ask is I have a motor that works on another form of power that is not gravity..
He probably sent it to NASA. One of my dream jobs would be reading and answering their mail. I'd do it for free. That's what they get for researching anti-gravity machines.I wonder if this shadowy and benevolent company exists in the same mythical realm as Kirk's lawyer and the devices themselves.
Kopji said:He probably sent it to NASA. One of my dream jobs would be reading and answering their mail. I'd do it for free. That's what they get for researching anti-gravity machines.
Aerich said:OK. Would you mind elucidating precisely where in theory it says that an exothermic chemical reaction's net positive heat energy comes from mass conversion, rather than the rearrangement of chemical bonds from high energy to low energy states? Because that seems to be a part of chemistry theory that I missed.
Aerich said:Egg on face time: please disregard my previous post, because I was wrong. Apologies to davefoc. I was correctly remembering that chemists act as if mass is conserved during chemical reactions, but after following up on what Carn said I've discovered that this is an approximation to reality, not reality.
A good link: http://www2.slac.stanford.edu/vvc/faqs/faq1.html
The plus side is that though I may be embarrassed, I learned something new, and also learned where my past education may have been deficient.![]()
Donn said:Just my two cents, and I am prob being dumb in some way, but couldn't one leave his motor running for a few months?
By that time any secret gas or battery would be kaput, no?