Friday 2 October 2009

Construction, composition and update

This is a brief update, because I have so many things going on at the moment.

I have been unable to do much work on my reconstruction recently, although things are looking more promising next week. Hopefully I can get some way towards finishing it. I have had numerous emails asking for clues about the principle behind my wheel and I have not revealed anything yet, however some people may be interested in having some of the details about the construction itself, now that it is nearing completion.

It is built with 40 moving parts, plus several swivel posts and stops all mounted on an MDF backplate or disk, which is only two feet in diameter. The axle is a threaded rod, held in place by two heavy nuts and washers and the whole thing rests in two plastic cup-shaped bearings which were originally designed to hold central-heating pipes to the walls. There is a little friction but not enough to stop the wheel turnng easily, and anyway the wheel is designed to do work so a little friction should not be a problem for the proof-of-principle demo. I've used two kinds of material for the parts, mostly mild steel but some GRP.

I acquired an old set of meccano parts but I have found that they are proving awkward to accomodate in the design, partly because this model is so small (my fault!) and partly because they are old, bent and buckled, (sounds like me) and the fiddly nuts and bolts are too small for my large and arthritic fingers! I am using alternatives that seem to be ok.

40 moving parts may seem like a lot but when you consider the number of parts composing a number of mechanisms and weights it's not so much. The basic principle which, I believe, lies behind the successful operation of the wheel is simple but it is something I have never heard or seen described. The only clue about its operation which I can give is to quote Bessler himself who said something along the lines of, 'I found it where everyone else had looked'.

I have a deadline of three weeks for completion.

JC

7 comments:

  1. It seems to me the psychological factor is bigger than the things getting in your way. I'm starting to believe you are deliberately avoiding the built because you are afraid of the results.

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  2. Yes I have wondered that myself, but then sanity returns and I know that there are excellent reasons for the delay. I have said it before and I'll say it again, as soon as this demo model is built - win or lose -I shall publish the results and my ideas on the concept. I have given myself three weeks to finish it -no problem.

    JC

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  3. Hi John and thanks for your dedication!

    Bessler was most likely limited to a purely mechanical design in his days.

    Anyone knowing the principle today will probably have other design options available to him.

    Any thoughts on this?

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  4. Yes I think there will be other designs available once the principle is recognised, MC. The basic mechanics are really rather simple, in my opinion, and finding alternative ways of inducing actions which follow the same principle should follow as a matter of course.

    JC

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  5. Greetings from Finland.

    Working or not but where is the book ?

    Ps: Good luck whit wheel (or is it a wheel ?) . :D

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  6. Hey John.....Thank You for your good works to bring the light to Bessler and this event We have read your many detailed accounts and believe you have found the one solution for our energy needs. We believe that your work is of such importance we cannot express it clearly enough. We believe We believe in you

    Signed a Believer

    ReplyDelete
  7. You gave yourself an interesting deadline. That time period will potentially hold a lot of turmoil both financially and politically. Let's wait and see.

    ReplyDelete

The True Story of Bessler’s Perpetual Motion Machine.

On  6th June, 1712, in Germany, Johann Bessler (also known by his pseudonym, Orffyreus) announced that after many years of failure, he had s...