Two-Stage Mechanical Oscillator - A Mechanical Amplifier

FaradayEZ

RE: Two-Stage Mechanical Oscillator - A Mechanical Amplifier
« Reply #1, on December 7th, 2012, 10:15 AM »Last edited on December 7th, 2012, 10:16 AM by FaradayEZ
Quote from geenee on December 4th, 2012, 09:11 AM
Blessing all works will success.Alternative energy is real.

thanks
geenee
Hmm to really know if it hammers down with a force of 25 kilograms, he should use a weightscale under the hammer.

I think it is balanced and the amount of force can't be more then 1 G ?

Like a kid on a swing shifting weight, pushing itself to go higher.



geenee

RE: Two-Stage Mechanical Oscillator - A Mechanical Amplifier
« Reply #2, on December 10th, 2012, 10:44 PM »
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 7th, 2012, 10:15 AM
Quote from geenee on December 4th, 2012, 09:11 AM
Blessing all works will success.Alternative energy is real.

thanks
geenee
Hmm to really know if it hammers down with a force of 25 kilograms, he should use a weightscale under the hammer.

I think it is balanced and the amount of force can't be more then 1 G ?

Like a kid on a swing shifting weight, pushing itself to go higher.
Jeff,Resonant and Gravity easy like that.this's alternative energy.but why resonant of water is very hard???

thanks
geenee

Matt Watts

RE: Two-Stage Mechanical Oscillator - A Mechanical Amplifier
« Reply #3, on December 11th, 2012, 11:52 AM »
Quote from geenee on December 10th, 2012, 10:44 PM
Jeff,Resonant and Gravity easy like that.this's alternative energy.but why resonant of water is very hard???

thanks
geenee
Another terrific find geenee,

That is simply ingenious and it would appear with a little more ingenuity, one could build a closed-loop mechanism to show how this can harvest energy.  I may have to draft something up that uses a solenoid or motor to swing the pendulum and then collects electricity from the other end.  Unless I'm missing something, it sure would appear there are some serious energy gains to be had.

Jeff Nading

RE: Two-Stage Mechanical Oscillator - A Mechanical Amplifier
« Reply #4, on December 11th, 2012, 02:31 PM »
Yes, in the video, it looks to me as a pendulum and the weights, an old clock would use, same principle.  But with water, were talking such a different kind of energy. Water is one of the most unusual substances on the face of the earth. It changes state with slight differences in temperature and pressure, the most natural being a liquid. There are still secrets only a few people have unlocked the doors to when talking about water, We see water being used all around us by all kinds of life. I think we have to be keenly observant to this to unlock the secrets of water. There is something we're overlooking and it's right there in front of us, it's like not being able to see the forest for all the trees being in the way.  

FaradayEZ

RE: Two-Stage Mechanical Oscillator - A Mechanical Amplifier
« Reply #5, on December 12th, 2012, 01:40 AM »
Quote from geenee on December 10th, 2012, 10:44 PM
Quote from FaradayEZ on December 7th, 2012, 10:15 AM
Quote from geenee on December 4th, 2012, 09:11 AM
Blessing all works will success.Alternative energy is real.

thanks
geenee
Hmm to really know if it hammers down with a force of 25 kilograms, he should use a weightscale under the hammer.

I think it is balanced and the amount of force can't be more then 1 G ?

Like a kid on a swing shifting weight, pushing itself to go higher.
Jeff,Resonant and Gravity easy like that.this's alternative energy.but why resonant of water is very hard???

thanks
geenee
To resonate water isn't hard. But if you want to resonate to get HHO, then you have to know the ownfrequency of the atomic bindings. It can be calculated, or is known by academics in fysics. But that's a high Hz number and can be found among people doing hydrolyses of water. But sometimes they resonate the cell, wich is something different.


In the pendulum device you showed us, i think that the speed of the pendulum give's an extra push when it crosses the lowest point. Force is mass times excelleration? Although the pendulum has a steady declining speed, the momentum through the deepest point, and changing direction there, seems to bring the pulling force just over the edge of an otherwise balanced system.

One who knows his mechanical laws better, could proof that nothing out of the ordinary is going on, i think.

But then again.. we have been surprised more times.