Hi Warren,
Very nice quality work.
I know how it is to get an idea stuck in your head and become obsessed by it, happens to me all the time. It happened to me once I built a Milkovic two stage oscillator. I had to know where the excess energy was coming from. This eventually led me to the study of orbits.
If you look into the shape of sustainable orbits, such as the Earth's orbit around the Sun, you find that they are all non circular. They are instead elliptical. What does this mean?
It means that an elliptical orbit "gains" extra energy by virtue of its shape. The property of this asymmetrical orbit is that it alternately contains a centrifugal and a centripetal component, and it is also in resonance.
Nature continually seeks to balance an inherently unbalanced universe. An elliptical orbit is unbalanced. Therefore, Nature has to add energy to the system to maintain balance, which is why the Earth, electrons and the rest of the heavenly bodies don't all spiral into their primaries.
This is also why Milkovic's two stage oscillator, as well as Peters wheel, produce more mechanical energy than is originally added by an external source.
The centrifugal force of a pendulum is used in both cases to add energy to the device. If you study the work Milkovic did, beside his two stage oscillator, he conclusively proves that centrifugal force will produce more energy than is added by the operator.
Veljko built a small "car" that has two pendulums which swing horizontally towards the front of the car. By manually swinging these pendulums in front of him, Milkovic was able to propel the car forward. This conclusively proves that there is a net physical force in the direction of the apogee of the pendulum's arc. If the system was balanced, as modern physics will tell you it must be, there would be no forward movement of the car.
This same principal can be used in designing "gravity" wheels. As Peter has done, employing the force of the pendulum on the downward side of the wheel will add torque to the wheels rotation. Then tucking the weight as close to the axis of rotation as possible for the trip back up allows the use of leverage to lift the load.
Victor Schauberger was an early proponent of the egg shaped orbit. He discovered that extra energy is added to any rotating mass utilizing this type of orbit. His work was primarily with water, and the study of it's physical movement and properties. He designed spiral pipes that would actually add linear force to the water that was flowing through them. This was accomplished because the water would rotate through both a centripetal and a centrifugal component during each cycle. A circular pipe cannot facilitate this type of orbit.
I could go on and on citing examples of centrifugal force adding extra energy to a rotating system (think of an unbalanced wheel, or the slingshot effect), but the point is that this is the force to be utilized. Find a way to incorporate this force into any rotating system and it can easily become self sustaining.
,
Ted
Very nice quality work.
I know how it is to get an idea stuck in your head and become obsessed by it, happens to me all the time. It happened to me once I built a Milkovic two stage oscillator. I had to know where the excess energy was coming from. This eventually led me to the study of orbits.
If you look into the shape of sustainable orbits, such as the Earth's orbit around the Sun, you find that they are all non circular. They are instead elliptical. What does this mean?
It means that an elliptical orbit "gains" extra energy by virtue of its shape. The property of this asymmetrical orbit is that it alternately contains a centrifugal and a centripetal component, and it is also in resonance.
Nature continually seeks to balance an inherently unbalanced universe. An elliptical orbit is unbalanced. Therefore, Nature has to add energy to the system to maintain balance, which is why the Earth, electrons and the rest of the heavenly bodies don't all spiral into their primaries.
This is also why Milkovic's two stage oscillator, as well as Peters wheel, produce more mechanical energy than is originally added by an external source.
The centrifugal force of a pendulum is used in both cases to add energy to the device. If you study the work Milkovic did, beside his two stage oscillator, he conclusively proves that centrifugal force will produce more energy than is added by the operator.
Veljko built a small "car" that has two pendulums which swing horizontally towards the front of the car. By manually swinging these pendulums in front of him, Milkovic was able to propel the car forward. This conclusively proves that there is a net physical force in the direction of the apogee of the pendulum's arc. If the system was balanced, as modern physics will tell you it must be, there would be no forward movement of the car.
This same principal can be used in designing "gravity" wheels. As Peter has done, employing the force of the pendulum on the downward side of the wheel will add torque to the wheels rotation. Then tucking the weight as close to the axis of rotation as possible for the trip back up allows the use of leverage to lift the load.
Victor Schauberger was an early proponent of the egg shaped orbit. He discovered that extra energy is added to any rotating mass utilizing this type of orbit. His work was primarily with water, and the study of it's physical movement and properties. He designed spiral pipes that would actually add linear force to the water that was flowing through them. This was accomplished because the water would rotate through both a centripetal and a centrifugal component during each cycle. A circular pipe cannot facilitate this type of orbit.
I could go on and on citing examples of centrifugal force adding extra energy to a rotating system (think of an unbalanced wheel, or the slingshot effect), but the point is that this is the force to be utilized. Find a way to incorporate this force into any rotating system and it can easily become self sustaining.
,
Ted
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