H'ethetheth
fishy rocket scientist
Volgens mij kunnen de meesten hier dat niet lezen.Volgens mij, niet.
Volgens mij kunnen de meesten hier dat niet lezen.Volgens mij, niet.
Volgens mij kunnen de meesten hier dat niet lezen.
Ok, I'm game -- give me some "other explanations" for:
A: a device that will run indefinitely on a treadmill at *exactly* the speed of the wind while climbing a ~4.5degree incline.
B: Will run indefintely on a level treadmill at *exactly* the speed of the wind while generating enough thrust to tensioning a string held from behind.
C: Can be dragged down to below windspeed and will speed itself up to above windspeed as many times as one cares to drag it down.
I'm not talking about people who don't know physics here -- I'm asking for physics explanations/hyposthesis that fit what we DO know about the cart and it behaviors which could lead to our results, but not DDWFTTW.
I'm not trying to be pissy -- it truly would be a fun conversation to have. Certainly a lot more fun than what humber has presented lately.
Fire away.
JB
I do have one question. You mentioned that you have been discussing this on the physics forums. Do the actual physicists, rather than the armchair variety like myself, agree that these treadmill tests provide proof of your model?
Okay, you seem to understand frames of reference. But I don't get why you think that an observer standing on the ground beside the treadmill is analogous to a person observing an outside test. It has been pointed out numerous times just on this page that you would have to be standing on the belt, which is movng relative to the cart. The other part of your post, credit, debts, books, ect. makes no sense. Frames are frames, history and nature are irrelevant.OK. Let's get this old saw out of the way. Are you aware of how many devices from the late 19th century claimed for this effect? Even Tesla had a go, but he was not so honest, anyway. The idea dead and buried. It's a dinosaur. Now apart from that, it would be of no consequence in this case.
Your car may have huge KE from orbiting the sun. Try an insurance claim upon the basis. Now if Dan_O wants to pay extra cover for this, please do, because premiums are increasing, so that helps everybody else. A fool and his money etc.
Now to answer the question. Two cars in the street, both wizzing around the sun. The only thing that matters, is not that, but the difference between them, which is zero. There, solved.
A cart on treadmill has virtually no difference in velocity between one sitting on the nearby ground. Conclusion. No difference. No need to measure the sun. That has all been taken care of, because all things are equally affected, AND they share a common history. Nature keeps pretty tight books, so we can be sure that all credit and debts have long been paid. Everything is the same. All views are the same. Get over it.
Yes.
Okay, one more question: Are you going to publish these results in a peer reviewed journal, or perhaps just a general interest magazine, like Scientific American?
Escrow.They will never test this device under scrutiny.
Troll. Not even an interesting or witty troll.FYI.
That long drive shaft acts as a torsion spring. When the propeller is turned by the wind from the front, some energy is lost as it retards the vehicle, but some is stored in that spring and returned. Not a lot but everything counts. Add to that the momentum of the propeller, and you have a nice little energy pump going. Perhaps it may even resonate.
It does sound unlikely.I don't think there's much hope here, but...
Mr. Humber, consider
Welcome to our little forum jj. Have you figured out the "trick" with the cart on the treadmill yet?
JJ is a hang gliding buddy who has been onboard forever.
Volgens mij kunnen de meesten hier dat niet lezen.
Oh dear,
Here I was thinking I'd joined a group of skeptics and crtiical thinkers.
You are correct when you say Work = fxd, but Power = WorkxTime.
Your cart will need the same amount of power to get it to 2V as a 1/1 cart.
However, the force is halved and the 'velocity' doubled, so it will take 4 times as long to get there. What takes 1s, for a 1/1 cart, will take 4s for a -1/2cart.
So they are the same, I am afraid. Overall efficiency is likely to be lower than a 1/1.
How do you keep the cart's velocity constant? An incremental change of the conveyer will always produce twice that at the cart. In practice, friction will determine the terminal velocity of the cart, and so that of the conveyer.
Anyway, it appears that the only simple option is to let the cart run a little faster than wanted, and then let it coast a little below that, and then repeat. The average will be the desired speed. How do you do that? Apply a force, stop, and repeat.
This is why I remarked about the fingers of the operator in the video of the skateboard device. That is what he is doing.
Your device would end up being driven for quite a while on the momentum of the rotating mass of the wheels (which also reduce the acceleration). Just like Goodman's cart, though it is the wind, the propeller and the wheels, that determine when to store, and when it is better to trade for velocity.
If you mean, jjcote, that the cart is towed of pushed so that it is the same speed as the tailwind, then, yes. I have suggested that, but in a controlled air flow.I don't think there's much hope here, but...
Mr. Humber, consider:
Would you agree that the test is valid if it consists of a board track, with a 10 mph tailwind, on which the cart is quickly pushed up to 10 mph, and is then allowed to accelerate? The claim that I'll make is that the cart will accelerate smoothly (so that the chassis has a net headwind) for the length of the track, but that I might be able to arrange for only 85 feet of track.
Just as a start I have to accept that all physical effects are a linear function of velocity. No, on that one, I am afraid.If that's okay, then do you see any difference if we look up from the experiment and see that there is nearby scenery moving in arbitrary directions? Trees sliding along this way or that way, or what have you? There would be a steady 10 mph breeze blowing along the track, and the cart will be moving at 12 mph or so along the track, with a 2 mph headwind. As long as that's the case, do you agree that the experiment is valid?
Not equivalent, but a possible test, yes.And if so, is it okay to do this experiment on a dead calm day, by putting the board track on a railroad flatcar moving at 10 mph, starting the cart at the front of the car and having it run toward where the caboose would typically be?
The cart is stationary, so the forces are in balance, whether you like it or not.