Your lame flames remind me of the test.
Esteemed "short-tempered, crusty old skeptic", http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.p...08#post1836608 sometimes it seems helpful to let a thread die. Especially when it went nowhere. Twice.
Of course, the easiest way to do this might be to just describe exactly what it is that I've got here. ...a big (6'X6'X2' standing up) box that has a small hole in its side from which a shaft protrudes to which a fan is attached. .... And yes, mine will stop, like a car engine, when it breaks.
I know there's an email address to send questions to. I sent an email asking if two people could sign one application. The reason for my question is that I intend to share the award of the contract with the person that suggested I look at perpetual motion if I can 'accidently' get 'lucky' enough to find a solution that has evaded some of the greatest minds that ever lived.
Gene
The one common theme I've noticed among many PM'ers is paranoia and secrecy... I don't subscribe to that...
If you were expecting for someone to come to a thread on the internet and explain how they've managed to do this you need to expect in one hand and blow your nose in the other ....see which one fills up the fastest. You're off your rocker.
Coming from a guy who came to a thread on the internet and explained how they managed to create a perpetual motion machine, this is just too rich.
Could you post a link where I claimed to have made a perpetual motion machine? I think you're making that up.
What you claimed was that you made a design of a working one.
That was some blarney you added in the middle of a discussion about the idiosyncracies of cad programs. Boy were you irrelevent.Would be true if he was truly pushing the boundaries of science. But he is not. He's trying to make a computer simulation of a person lifting himself up by his own hair and when it succeeds, due to the limitations of the digital approximation, claims that he has discovered something real. He hasn't, he is pushing no boundaries, he is wandering around in the Middle Ages.
The JREF is not accepting applications mainly because the Challenge Coordinator left the JREF recently. Because James Randi is ill, he is not able to choose a new Challenge Coordinator.
Rest assured, it will all happen soon. In the meantime, the million is still safe and sound and waiting to be claimed.
It's a fun concept to daydream about, and educational to discover where we've made false assumptions (or even simple math errors). But before attrcting investors, or envisioning giving interviews on CNN or accepting the Nobel Prize, shouldn't we pony up the goods first?
I'm glad that million dollars is safe and sound. I have my eye on it. There are a lot of ideas in the process of developing a machine that exhibits perpetual motion.
As Brian Jackson put it...
I disagree. Several of the things you mention require a little forethought. Take for instances your idea of 'envisioning giving interviews on cnn'. The point of a news agency recording what's happening isn't a matter of ego; it's simply a matter of creating a permanent record of the events.
One of the steps (besides the obvious one of building something that works) would be to decide on the protocol. I would like to ask
- What law of physics would a perpetual motion machine (pmm) or gravity wheel violate and ....
- What would be an acceptable protocol?
I have to say that so far I can't 'pony up the goods' but I'm still trying. I'm on break.
Gene