Neodymium magnet

fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #50, on November 29th, 2012, 11:34 AM »
Quote from Dog-One on November 28th, 2012, 08:16 PM
Quote from FaradayEZ on November 28th, 2012, 02:11 PM
Resisting the temptation to rebuild...its a shame to put it out as serious, next they use computergraphics to trick us in making the false stuff??
There is a guy on UTube by the name of Freddy Wong that does some incredible video editing.  What I like most about his videos are the trailers where he shows you how he did it.
fgunsmoke here.--I tried putting one together with two lids-7 inch plus 1/2inch ball bearing and got lucky--it did  run -not long but just like the video. Then my tape let go and the bearing fell out.  I never put it back together. It had proved its self to me.
I`ll see what I can find out maybe your magnet was to strong? I didn`t use a neodyminum.    My grandfather would take a stick 10'' long and cut notches in a row and whittle a propeller and mount it on the stick with a small pin . Took another stick and rubbed the notches on the stick with the propeller , the propeller would spin.  You had to do it just right to get a good spin.  My point is just a novelty but fun for us kids

Matt Watts

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #51, on November 29th, 2012, 05:02 PM »
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 29th, 2012, 11:34 AM
fgunsmoke here.--I tried putting one together with two lids-7 inch plus 1/2inch ball bearing and got lucky--it did  run -not long but just like the video. Then my tape let go and the bearing fell out.  I never put it back together. It had proved its self to me.
I`ll see what I can find out maybe your magnet was to strong? I didn`t use a neodyminum.    My grandfather would take a stick 10'' long and cut notches in a row and whittle a propeller and mount it on the stick with a small pin . Took another stick and rubbed the notches on the stick with the propeller , the propeller would spin.  You had to do it just right to get a good spin.  My point is just a novelty but fun for us kids
I did use neodymium instead of a strong iron core bar magnet.  If you wouldn't mind going a bit further (to prove it to the rest of us), set things up and take some pictures.  Maybe there is something I missed and by seeing yours, I'll figure it out.

fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #52, on November 29th, 2012, 10:40 PM »
Quote from Dog-One on November 29th, 2012, 05:02 PM
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 29th, 2012, 11:34 AM
fgunsmoke here.--I tried putting one together with two lids-7 inch plus 1/2inch ball bearing and got lucky--it did  run -not long but just like the video. Then my tape let go and the bearing fell out.  I never put it back together. It had proved its self to me.
I`ll see what I can find out maybe your magnet was to strong? I didn`t use a neodyminum.    My grandfather would take a stick 10'' long and cut notches in a row and whittle a propeller and mount it on the stick with a small pin . Took another stick and rubbed the notches on the stick with the propeller , the propeller would spin.  You had to do it just right to get a good spin.  My point is just a novelty but fun for us kids
I did use neodymium instead of a strong iron core bar magnet.  If you wouldn't mind going a bit further (to prove it to the rest of us), set things up and take some pictures.  Maybe there is something I missed and by seeing yours, I'll figure it out.
fgunsmoke here. what I put together was junk and only ran a few turns. The plastic lids were to flimsy but it was all I had at the time and my tape didn`t stiick to the plastic very well. Has anyone tried to get the patent ?  I`ll  see if I can get some heavy plastic lids. I saw one of this type of machine a long time ago but didn`t build a copy then.  I `ll not put to much money or  time in a novelty if I were you.  When the bearing falls off the steep slope to where the magnet grabs the bearing again which gives it friction again gets smaller as it runs a few turns.  I`ll see what I can do to help you.      

FaradayEZ

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #53, on November 30th, 2012, 12:50 AM »
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 29th, 2012, 10:40 PM
Quote from Dog-One on November 29th, 2012, 05:02 PM
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 29th, 2012, 11:34 AM
fgunsmoke here.--I tried putting one together with two lids-7 inch plus 1/2inch ball bearing and got lucky--it did  run -not long but just like the video. Then my tape let go and the bearing fell out.  I never put it back together. It had proved its self to me.
I`ll see what I can find out maybe your magnet was to strong? I didn`t use a neodyminum.    My grandfather would take a stick 10'' long and cut notches in a row and whittle a propeller and mount it on the stick with a small pin . Took another stick and rubbed the notches on the stick with the propeller , the propeller would spin.  You had to do it just right to get a good spin.  My point is just a novelty but fun for us kids
I did use neodymium instead of a strong iron core bar magnet.  If you wouldn't mind going a bit further (to prove it to the rest of us), set things up and take some pictures.  Maybe there is something I missed and by seeing yours, I'll figure it out.
fgunsmoke here. what I put together was junk and only ran a few turns. The plastic lids were to flimsy but it was all I had at the time and my tape didn`t stiick to the plastic very well. Has anyone tried to get the patent ?  I`ll  see if I can get some heavy plastic lids. I saw one of this type of machine a long time ago but didn`t build a copy then.  I `ll not put to much money or  time in a novelty if I were you.  When the bearing falls off the steep slope to where the magnet grabs the bearing again which gives it friction again gets smaller as it runs a few turns.  I`ll see what I can do to help you.
Well, well :) So my gutt feeling wasn't wrong?

Hmm am trying to figure what more it told me recently...

Nehh... all about food...  thxgiving is bad for science?... ;)




fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #54, on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM »
Quote from FaradayEZ on November 30th, 2012, 12:50 AM
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 29th, 2012, 10:40 PM
Quote from Dog-One on November 29th, 2012, 05:02 PM
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 29th, 2012, 11:34 AM
fgunsmoke here.--I tried putting one together with two lids-7 inch plus 1/2inch ball bearing and got lucky--it did  run -not long but just like the video. Then my tape let go and the bearing fell out.  I never put it back together. It had proved its self to me.
I`ll see what I can find out maybe your magnet was to strong? I didn`t use a neodyminum.    My grandfather would take a stick 10'' long and cut notches in a row and whittle a propeller and mount it on the stick with a small pin . Took another stick and rubbed the notches on the stick with the propeller , the propeller would spin.  You had to do it just right to get a good spin.  My point is just a novelty but fun for us kids
I did use neodymium instead of a strong iron core bar magnet.  If you wouldn't mind going a bit further (to prove it to the rest of us), set things up and take some pictures.  Maybe there is something I missed and by seeing yours, I'll figure it out.
fgunsmoke here. what I put together was junk and only ran a few turns. The plastic lids were to flimsy but it was all I had at the time and my tape didn`t stiick to the plastic very well. Has anyone tried to get the patent ?  I`ll  see if I can get some heavy plastic lids. I saw one of this type of machine a long time ago but didn`t build a copy then.  I `ll not put to much money or  time in a novelty if I were you.  When the bearing falls off the steep slope to where the magnet grabs the bearing again which gives it friction again gets smaller as it runs a few turns.  I`ll see what I can do to help you.
Well, well :) So my gutt feeling wasn't wrong?

Hmm am trying to figure what more it told me recently...

Nehh... all about food...  thxgiving is bad for science?... ;)
fgunsmoke  -- I built the perpetual wheel after I saw it on you-tube.
I threw the lids away after it fell apart. I didn`t think it was going to run because of the smaller size but it did for a few turns .  I didn`t know other people didn`t belive
in this machine at the time. I know now.  GO TO GOOGLE AND TYPE IN (-Perpetual Wheel/1923) or( mechanical appliances and novelties of construction).  My thing now is getting water to burn again for me like it did when I was not trying. Winter is coming and heating bills are high. I know water will burn cause I had to put it out.  If you want to know more about burning water let me know.

Lynx

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #55, on November 30th, 2012, 08:22 AM »Last edited on November 30th, 2012, 08:32 AM by Lynx
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM
If you want to know more about burning water let me know.
I would like to know how to burn water, please share.
Thanks.

Quote from fgunsmoke on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM
fgunsmoke  -- I built the perpetual wheel after I saw it on you-tube.
I threw the lids away after it fell apart. I didn`t think it was going to run because of the smaller size but it did for a few turns .  I didn`t know other people didn`t belive
in this machine at the time. I know now.  GO TO GOOGLE AND TYPE IN (-Perpetual Wheel/1923) or( mechanical appliances and novelties of construction).
I tried Googling like you said here, but that didn't give anything looking like this wheel.
Could you please provide a link instead?
Thanks.

Jeff Nading

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #56, on November 30th, 2012, 09:01 AM »
Quote from Lynx on November 30th, 2012, 08:22 AM
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM
If you want to know more about burning water let me know.
I would like to know how to burn water, please share.
Thanks.

Quote from fgunsmoke on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM
fgunsmoke  -- I built the perpetual wheel after I saw it on you-tube.
I threw the lids away after it fell apart. I didn`t think it was going to run because of the smaller size but it did for a few turns .  I didn`t know other people didn`t belive
in this machine at the time. I know now.  GO TO GOOGLE AND TYPE IN (-Perpetual Wheel/1923) or( mechanical appliances and novelties of construction).
I tried Googling like you said here, but that didn't give anything looking like this wheel.
Could you please provide a link instead?
Thanks.
You know, I think you have something there fgunsmoke. The reason I say this is because many years back, I remember a fire that happened in a VW plant, the fire was so hot the entire building burnt to the ground :angel:. The fire department tried to extinguish the fire with water, they could not understand why the fire was not going out, but got much hotter :huh:. Well you might ask where I'm going with this, I'll tell you :D. The metal they used in building the engine cases was magnesium, they were burning, once magnesium catches on fire or burns, you better not put water on it, for it will explode. It burns so hot that it literally separates water into it's basic elements, hydrogen and oxygen. So we know that heat and a high voltage spark will do this, hence the need for the plasma spark plug.:cool::D:P

Matt Watts

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #57, on November 30th, 2012, 04:03 PM »
Quote from Jeff Nading on November 30th, 2012, 09:01 AM
So we know that heat and a high voltage spark will do this, hence the need for the plasma spark plug.:cool::D:P
And that is my next project folks, HHO, water mist and a plasma jet ignition.  I just procured some high voltage diodes this afternoon as well as a nice variac; next up are the CDI ignition module, HHO cell and the piezoelectric humidifier element.  I have an engine sitting here waiting to be run with nothing but water.  If I can manage to get it running, then I'll attach an alternator and see if I can get this whole mess closed looped.

Don't know how you all feel about "Future Viewing", but I listened to a program last night with Clif High of Half Past Human and it would appear we may be running out of time.  If he is at all accurate in his predictions, people need to get their priorities in order ricky tick.  OpenSource Energy needs to show some serious progress very soon--I'm talking stuff we can use to survive with.  Clif also mentioned it would be a good idea to find high ground as well.

FaradayEZ

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #58, on November 30th, 2012, 04:34 PM »Last edited on November 30th, 2012, 04:35 PM by FaradayEZ
Quote from Dog-One on November 30th, 2012, 04:03 PM
Quote from Jeff Nading on November 30th, 2012, 09:01 AM
So we know that heat and a high voltage spark will do this, hence the need for the plasma spark plug.:cool::D:P
And that is my next project folks, HHO, water mist and a plasma jet ignition.  I just procured some high voltage diodes this afternoon as well as a nice variac; next up are the CDI ignition module, HHO cell and the piezoelectric humidifier element.  I have an engine sitting here waiting to be run with nothing but water.  If I can manage to get it running, then I'll attach an alternator and see if I can get this whole mess closed looped.

Don't know how you all feel about "Future Viewing", but I listened to a program last night with Clif High of Half Past Human and it would appear we may be running out of time.  If he is at all accurate in his predictions, people need to get their priorities in order ricky tick.  OpenSource Energy needs to show some serious progress very soon--I'm talking stuff we can use to survive with.  Clif also mentioned it would be a good idea to find high ground as well.
If you're in the neighborhood then maybe use the steam to go through some voltage plates also? To gain (extra) HHO like in project 1?
http://open-source-energy.org/?tid=784&pid=9028#pid9028




Jeff Nading

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #59, on November 30th, 2012, 04:36 PM »
Quote from Dog-One on November 30th, 2012, 04:03 PM
Quote from Jeff Nading on November 30th, 2012, 09:01 AM
So we know that heat and a high voltage spark will do this, hence the need for the plasma spark plug.:cool::D:P
And that is my next project folks, HHO, water mist and a plasma jet ignition.  I just procured some high voltage diodes this afternoon as well as a nice variac; next up are the CDI ignition module, HHO cell and the piezoelectric humidifier element.  I have an engine sitting here waiting to be run with nothing but water.  If I can manage to get it running, then I'll attach an alternator and see if I can get this whole mess closed looped.

Don't know how you all feel about "Future Viewing", but I listened to a program last night with Clif High of Half Past Human and it would appear we may be running out of time.  If he is at all accurate in his predictions, people need to get their priorities in order ricky tick.  OpenSource Energy needs to show some serious progress very soon--I'm talking stuff we can use to survive with.  Clif also mentioned it would be a good idea to find high ground as well.
Can't wait to see your experiment dog-one, I think it's going to work :cool::D. It is true, tough time ahead.:huh:

fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #60, on November 30th, 2012, 05:52 PM »
Quote from Jeff Nading on November 30th, 2012, 09:01 AM
Quote from Lynx on November 30th, 2012, 08:22 AM
Quote from fgunsmoke on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM
If you want to know more about burning water let me know.
I would like to know how to burn water, please share.
Thanks.

Quote from fgunsmoke on November 30th, 2012, 08:18 AM
fgunsmoke  -- I built the perpetual wheel after I saw it on you-tube.
I threw the lids away after it fell apart. I didn`t think it was going to run because of the smaller size but it did for a few turns .  I didn`t know other people didn`t belive
in this machine at the time. I know now.  GO TO GOOGLE AND TYPE IN (-Perpetual Wheel/1923) or( mechanical appliances and novelties of construction).
I tried Googling like you said here, but that didn't give anything looking like this wheel.
Could you please provide a link instead?
Thanks.
You know, I think you have something there fgunsmoke. The reason I say this is because many years back, I remember a fire that happened in a VW plant, the fire was so hot the entire building burnt to the ground :angel:. The fire department tried to extinguish the fire with water, they could not understand why the fire was not going out, but got much hotter :huh:. Well you might ask where I'm going with this, I'll tell you :D. The metal they used in building the engine cases was magnesium, they were burning, once magnesium catches on fire or burns, you better not put water on it, for it will explode. It burns so hot that it literally separates water into it's basic elements, hydrogen and oxygen. So we know that heat and a high voltage spark will do this, hence the need for the plasma spark plug.:cool::D:P
HI lynx --fgunsmoke here-- I`ll check about a link. overunitydot.com has some stuff about the wheel. Now about burning Water.  I had made a small  HHO maker and was lighting bubbles in a tin-(cat food tin) -and getting some good bangs per. bubbles. Did this for maybe 10 min. as I went for another bang -the water became a fire and no bang. About 10 inch flame. The thing got me off-guard and I was only thinking is how to put the fire out. I slid a lid over tin-fire is out.  The water was city water it may of had a drop or two of dish water soap. The HHO maker had distilled water with baking soda .I was using a small plastic  hose from maker to tin.
 I`ve tried to repeat this and get fire with out the bang but no go. Wife does not like the bangs and getting to cold outside.  I use the hho maker to fill balloon for small torch or to send a balloon up or to make bangs with pipe cannon.

FaradayEZ

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #61, on December 1st, 2012, 12:53 AM »Last edited on December 1st, 2012, 01:11 AM by FaradayEZ
Throwing water on burning magnesium:


Ye' old gunpowder cracker...(stays funny)


Burning tapwater (gas in it)


Burning all tapwater, invention?



fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #62, on December 1st, 2012, 10:30 AM »Last edited on December 2nd, 2012, 10:32 AM by fgunsmoke
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 1st, 2012, 12:53 AM
Throwing water on burning magnesium:


Ye' old gunpowder cracker...(stays funny)


Burning tapwater (gas in it)


Burning all tapwater, invention?
fgunsmoke here..
old gunpowder cracker was one of the best. Every time I watch that I think to my self -go easy on the powder.  Maybe  I`ll put some powder of magnesium on top of water and light it to get the water to burn.  
To get back to a Neodymium magnet - question--I`ve got a neodymium stuck to a over head  cold air duct-and a 1lb .9oz. brass billit   hanging by a string attach to the magnet. question --is it doing work? --if it is doing work-  what kind of  energy is doing it? - -is it perptual or what?  the over head duct is tin.

fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #63, on December 1st, 2012, 11:45 AM »
Quote from Dog-One on November 27th, 2012, 11:06 PM
Quote from FaradayEZ on November 27th, 2012, 10:36 PM
Ok, if your ball has the same friction..and your wheel is turning effortlessly..then i also have no idea anymore what is keeping it from working.

Maybe what you say as..the ball is incapsuled by the magnet..maybe the ball of the original is bigger and does not get captured by the magnetic lines?

Otherwise..i don't know..and still i think this original setup must be a workable thing.

Maybe it has to do with that aluminum reacts weird to magnetisme..don't see how that could influence things but that was the last squeezed out  thought..;)

P.s. After the last thought..how about finding the videomaker and mailing him..let him check this thread and give input?
[/quot  
I'm certainly not trying to clobber your enthusiasm--wish I could keep my own up on this project because at a distance it really does seem workable.

Tell you what, just get you a small plastic or glass jar, put a steel ball in it and drag it around with a magnet.  Tell me if you don't recognize that "feel" where the magnet either has a hold of the ball or it doesn't.  And when it has a hold of the ball, notice how the ball "feels" almost like its position is locked in space.  I can't really describe it well enough in writing, I just encourage you to try it and let it imprint in your mind what it is.  This really has me baffled, especially the rolling part of it.  It would seem like the ball would still roll just fine, but it doesn't.  It's almost like the magnet focuses is force on one specific spot on the metal ball and holds it there.  I don't have any vocabulary for what that phenomena is, but if you try my simple experiment, you will recognize it when you see it.  It is this very effect that seems to clobber my machine from doing what one would think it is capable of.

P.S.  If the maker of that video did "fake" the experiment, it would seem to me he would do it by putting a battery and pulsing circuit in that magnet base, then use an electromagnet with contacts on the bottom that look like a typical bar magnet.  By pushing down the electromagnet, it begins pulsing.  With pulsing, the off-time would allow the ball to roll and bobble as the video shows.  Also, the frequency of the pulsing would in effect set a maximum speed the wheel would accelerate to.  Think about it, if a permanent magnet pulled on the steel ball and the ball could still roll, the maximum speed of the wheel would only be limited by the friction in the device which could be quite high.  In the video, the speed seemed to stabilize at a fairly low RPM, though the wheel bearings appeared to be pretty low friction.  Just something to think about.
fgunsmoke here. I have tried some test with a steel ball on a plastic incline couldn`t
get any pulsing.  I was using a plastic lid just like the lids when the lids turned like a wheel.   I`m at a lost as to what else to try. I`m not sure about which magnet I was using when it turned and I was holding the magnet in my hand.

Jeff Nading

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #64, on December 1st, 2012, 01:03 PM »Last edited on December 1st, 2012, 01:14 PM by Jeff Nading
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 1st, 2012, 12:53 AM
Throwing water on burning magnesium:


Ye' old gunpowder cracker...(stays funny)


Burning tapwater (gas in it)


Burning all tapwater, invention?
That's what I'm talking about, see how the water causes an explosion, there is much power there.To much powder in the next one, I know he won't do that again. :cool::D:P

Matt Watts

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #65, on December 1st, 2012, 05:05 PM »Last edited on December 1st, 2012, 05:09 PM by Matt Watts
Quote from Jeff Nading on December 1st, 2012, 01:03 PM

That's what I'm talking about, see how the water causes an explosion, there is much power there.
The Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) in the Navy to deal with a Magnesium fire is to dump it overboard.  There's really very few things on ship you could use to put it out--some of the foams they use will slow it down a little.

So Jeff, how did we get talking about this?  Seems a pretty good stretch from Neodymium magnets.  :P
Quote from fgunsmoke on December 1st, 2012, 11:45 AM
fgunsmoke here. I have tried some test with a steel ball on a plastic incline couldn`t
get any pulsing.  I was using a plastic lid just like the lids when the lids turned like a wheel.   I`m at a lost as to what else to try. I`m not sure about which magnet I was using when it turned and I was holding the magnet in my hand.
Did you at least see the effect where the ball when held by the magnet refuses to roll anymore?

Jeff Nading

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #66, on December 1st, 2012, 09:31 PM »
Quote from Dog-One on December 1st, 2012, 05:05 PM
Quote from Jeff Nading on December 1st, 2012, 01:03 PM

That's what I'm talking about, see how the water causes an explosion, there is much power there.
The Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) in the Navy to deal with a Magnesium fire is to dump it overboard.  There's really very few things on ship you could use to put it out--some of the foams they use will slow it down a little.

So Jeff, how did we get talking about this?  Seems a pretty good stretch from Neodymium magnets.  :P
Quote from fgunsmoke on December 1st, 2012, 11:45 AM
fgunsmoke here. I have tried some test with a steel ball on a plastic incline couldn`t
get any pulsing.  I was using a plastic lid just like the lids when the lids turned like a wheel.   I`m at a lost as to what else to try. I`m not sure about which magnet I was using when it turned and I was holding the magnet in my hand.
Did you at least see the effect where the ball when held by the magnet refuses to roll anymore?
I don't even remember now, the mind is going :angel:, sorry.

FaradayEZ

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #67, on December 2nd, 2012, 02:45 AM »Last edited on December 2nd, 2012, 03:05 AM by FaradayEZ
Quote from Jeff Nading on December 1st, 2012, 01:03 PM
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 1st, 2012, 12:53 AM
Throwing water on burning magnesium:


Ye' old gunpowder cracker...(stays funny)


Burning tapwater (gas in it)


Burning all tapwater, invention?
That's what I'm talking about, see how the water causes an explosion, there is much power there.To much powder in the next one, I know he won't do that again. :cool::D:P
I specially like it that he apologizes to the public... :) so he must be a good man, a decent fellow. Don't want to see him hurt by this.




Would be nice to do a build-off with perpetual moving devices. No electricity?, just magnets or gravity etc?

Whatever device turns the longest wins. (initial start not more then 1 joule?)

First prize 10 reputation points?

Closing date of entry; end of januari 2013?

lol






fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #68, on December 2nd, 2012, 09:10 AM »
Quote from Jeff Nading on December 1st, 2012, 09:31 PM
Quote from Dog-One on December 1st, 2012, 05:05 PM
Quote from Jeff Nading on December 1st, 2012, 01:03 PM

That's what I'm talking about, see how the water causes an explosion, there is much power there.
The Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) in the Navy to deal with a Magnesium fire is to dump it overboard.  There's really very few things on ship you could use to put it out--some of the foams they use will slow it down a little.

So Jeff, how did we get talking about this?  Seems a pretty good stretch from Neodymium magnets.  :P
Quote from fgunsmoke on December 1st, 2012, 11:45 AM
fgunsmoke here. I have tried some test with a steel ball on a plastic incline couldn`t
get any pulsing.  I was using a plastic lid just like the lids when the lids turned like a wheel.   I`m at a lost as to what else to try. I`m not sure about which magnet I was using when it turned and I was holding the magnet in my hand.
Did you at least see the effect where the ball when held by the magnet refuses to roll anymore?
I don't even remember now, the mind is going :angel:, sorry.
fgunsmoke here. The two lids spread apart and ball dropped out. the two lids were just to flimsy. There was a gap between lids to where I could see the ball but the tape which I put across the gap every 3 inch or so to take some of the flimsy part out let go. When I said a few turns it ran  -was like no more than 4 but it turned on its own.


fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #70, on December 2nd, 2012, 09:15 PM »Last edited on December 2nd, 2012, 10:16 PM by fgunsmoke
fgunsmoke here. --The stirling engine with bellows  that work in and out was on u-tube.
awhile back.  the one I watched run they told how it worked. I forget  what the heat source but I think hot water. I`ll go see if I can find the clip. see you later.    fgunsmoke here.   Couldn`t  find the one that showed how it worked .  The stirling engine -low temp difference  will work- just the heat of your hand or a ice cube. Try Google - Stirling low temp difference engine.

FaradayEZ

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #71, on December 3rd, 2012, 01:42 AM »Last edited on December 5th, 2012, 09:34 AM by FaradayEZ
Quote from fgunsmoke on December 2nd, 2012, 09:15 PM
Quote from Dog-One on December 2nd, 2012, 06:26 PM
Here's some more to make me and FaradayEZ crazy:
fgunsmoke here. --The stirling engine with bellows  that work in and out was on u-tube.
awhile back.  the one I watched run they told how it worked. I forget  what the heat source but I think hot water. I`ll go see if I can find the clip. see you later.    fgunsmoke here.   Couldn`t  find the one that showed how it worked .  The stirling engine -low temp difference  will work- just the heat of your hand or a ice cube. Try Google - Stirling low temp difference engine.
Yes, stirling doesn't make me mad...that works..even Russ made one. And a bunch of instructional video's on it out there..
(i also like the puffpuff engine..:)

Nahh its the permanent magnet rotation stuff that creeps me.. think its time we can undermine fgunsmoke's stability..lol.
As he is now the only one claiming it worked...for 4 strokes...maybe the ball got caught on a sticky tape he used every 3 inches...or was he drinking that night and saw more things spin around?
Hmm...well...not?



(only for Dog-one..: pssstt...lets tickle him a little so he reproduces it working..)

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THIS POST HAS BEEN REPOSTED LATER, SO MAYBE IT WONT GET NOTICED ANYMORE.
AND ALSO DUE TO ITS CARACTER WILL BE DISCUSSED AT THE ROUND TABLE, WHERE WE AWAIT YOUR INPUT ;)
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Lynx

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #72, on December 3rd, 2012, 04:53 AM »Last edited on December 3rd, 2012, 05:30 AM by Lynx
I've seen these really simple basic Stirling engines before, I have no doubt that they
work as advertised.
The Sterling cycle is well known, proven to work, so it's very doable.
All you need is a difference in temperature and the engine will work it's magic :cool:

fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #73, on December 3rd, 2012, 03:14 PM »
Quote from Lynx on December 3rd, 2012, 04:53 AM
I've seen these really simple basic Stirling engines before, I have no doubt that they
work as advertised.
The Sterling cycle is well known, proven to work, so it's very doable.
All you need is a difference in temperature and the engine will work it's magic :cool:
fgunsmoke here. Right on ..lack of torque hurt it with no raw h.p..  question - have you read about the David Hamel that was trying to build a space machine? Now there was a beliver to the end.  I built the Hamel spinner but found  a better way with two magnets and a spoon. Let me know . see you later.

fgunsmoke

RE: Neodymium magnet
« Reply #74, on December 3rd, 2012, 09:25 PM »
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 2nd, 2012, 02:45 AM
Quote from Jeff Nading on December 1st, 2012, 01:03 PM
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 1st, 2012, 12:53 AM
Throwing water on burning magnesium:


Ye' old gunpowder cracker...(stays funny)


Burning tapwater (gas in it)


Burning all tapwater, invention?
That's what I'm talking about, see how the water causes an explosion, there is much power there.To much powder in the next one, I know he won't do that again. :cool::D:P
I specially like it that he apologizes to the public... :) so he must be a good man, a decent fellow. Don't want to see him hurt by this.





Would be nice to do a build-off with perpetual moving devices. No electricity?, just magnets or gravity etc?

Whatever device turns the longest wins. (initial start not more then 1 joule?)

First prize 10 reputation points?

Closing date of entry; end of januari 2013?

lol
I thought a magnet was a perpetual engine. It will work for you - the magnetic lines do  move in a closed loop - will lock onto metal that has iron in it--just like it does in the earth and we call it Gravity--that magnet will out live any of us.-The magnet or gravity lines move on the out side of the magnet  but we just do not see them. pick up a 2lb weight and hold it straight out to your side who is doing the most work . You or gravity? -we know who is going to win.  Can I enter my magnet as my entry? -I`ll even take a picture of it working if I can pry the durn thing off my frig.  Just a thought-have fun  Fgunsmoke