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magnumblackburn (September 12, 2007 at 11:05 am)
To put this on a large scale you need a lot of energy they have already invented this and have already applied this to some trains around the world.
Zi80 (September 12, 2007 at 5:48 am)
Magnets spend energy and so it would eventualy stop, i had an idea sometime ago, a eletric car that uses eolic (wind) energy to replenish the bateries, in high speeds it would use almost no energy, having good autonomy, if you could combine in a car a magnetic motor, bateries and a windmill for harnessing eolic energy, the bateries would replenish the magnets, and the windmill would replenish the bateries, if the magnets dont need constant energy the car could have a huge autonomy.
pipoxyz (September 11, 2007 at 9:53 am)
I didnt include inertia. I guess if you could make the power of inertia constant and bigger then +1, it would work. Another way to make perpetuem motion work, is to have a nonmagnetic magnet shielding. You can put it in between the magnets at the point the fields seperate, or at the point it enters a repulsive field.
pipoxyz (September 11, 2007 at 9:52 am)
Nop..this doesnt work..it is actually a very basic concept of perpetuem motion.At the points the vertical rotor magnets enter the field of the horizontal rotor, first they will attract eachother with +1 +1, then the motion continues and the vertical magnet breaks the magnetic field with -1 -1. Then it has to enter the opposit field with -1 -1 and gets repelled from it +1 +1. =0 force.
tommm3000 (September 11, 2007 at 3:51 am)
This is well thought out and should work exactly as shown.
Alpha9n (September 11, 2007 at 3:13 am)
Ok why are you asking before you even watch video to the end or at least read the description?THIS IS A NON-WORKING FICTITIOUS INVENTION.
KbApimp007 (September 11, 2007 at 1:39 am)
nice invention but how does the middle one keep spining?
bexiang67 (September 10, 2007 at 10:37 pm)
like one comment below, I have also noticed a similar effect of hard-drive magnets, one side does not seem to be very magnetic. I heard the metal bismuth is very diagmagnetic, but im not sure if that means it's like aluminum or nickel, or perhaps it repels magnetism?
Alpha9n (September 1, 2007 at 8:29 pm)
This 'effect' have already been proven pretty much useless.However, maybe you'll find some use for it if you experiment with it enough. Have fun.
eyethesuicide (September 1, 2007 at 7:37 pm)
Supposedly it's impossible to block a magnetic field right? Well, my brother took apart an old hard drive (serial number: 286391-001 do a google search) and inside this hard drive there were to superpowerfull magnets mounted on some strange alloy of metal, face to face I can hardly pull them apart, but back to back they barely even hold together! A very strange reaction indeed! (a blockable magnetic field would mean these magnetic motors can be made to work super efficiently) |