Inertia Machine
http://i197.photobucket.com/albums/a...lume/Page1.jpg
http://i197.photobucket.com/albums/a...lume/page2.jpg http://i197.photobucket.com/albums/a...lume/Page3.jpg Rotor Heads, I have been absent from this forum for last four years due to involvement in various projects (Evergreen Supertanker). I have designed a inertia machine with efficiency in the 70% to 80% range and I think it may have vertical lift applications. I have three drawings detailing the theory and I would like to post them on Rotor Heads. Regards Peter Jelf (Jiff) |
Go on then.....
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Heliport,
I could not get it to work, can I send them to you directly? Jiff |
Hope the machine works more successfully than the pics :E
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It could be the free lunch we've all been waiting for!
-- IFMU |
Nice try Jiff, however your predicted vertical efficiency is far too high for application as a helicopter.
You need to be in the 12-16 % efficiency bracket for commercial operations, 1-2% to get a sniff at the military procurement process and much less for NASA. pp |
I have some experience of this type of machine, as demonstrated by the initial propulsion unit in the link below.
http://vivalagames.com/play/hamsters/fullscreen.php |
I know a doctor who uses this types of device.
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The local shop keeper in our north east village some years ago rejoiced that he had invented an anti-gravity machine. He was about to spend his life savings because of the future riches coming his way, a villa in the Bahamas, Lambo in the drive etc etc. It was three angle grinders spaced apart and when turned on gave as he described "anti-gravity properties". Poor lad.
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Jiff,
Have you built a working model of this inertia machine yet? |
Shy Torque
333 top score so far and now have RSI in my index finger! |
Jed A1,
No not yet but will probbably use three offset gears with a constant speed on the centre or one servo motor per reaction weight controlled by a PLC with a servo interface card ie SERCO's. Regards JIFF |
Does it utilize any of Telsa's theories?
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ShyT,
I knew I had seen this propulsion system before. We do in fact have one in our garage, http://i.walmart.com/i/p/00/02/70/84...66_500X500.jpg Simply explained, the cars are put between axis A and Axis B and the resultant force A propels them around the fireball. All for a couple of C cells! Professor Eric Braithwaite is a name that comes to mind with this sort of idea!! |
ShyTorque,
You've discovered the 'Free Launch' that IFMU has been waiting for. :) |
How does this stay in balance with out shaking the crap out of itself / drag ?
HF |
When you get the bugs worked out of this can you make sure the pilots seat is comfortable.
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5 hamsters - 0ft each. But at least no hamsters were harmed otherwise I'd be upset.
Cheers Whirls |
511ft total with single biggest hit at 240ft!
Found it's better to hit the hamsters on the 'up' rather than 'down'. Takes a bit of getting use to but better in the end. By the way does anyone have a life I could borrow? |
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