Do you see a Whitworth Quick Return Mechanism
<http://iel.ucdavis.edu/projects/mechanism/quickreturn/>  in there?  Any
magnets?

 

Some technical papers from Steorn show energy anomalies from asymmetric
paths towards permanent magnets,

especially with ferrites as part of the magnetic path.

 

Also .John A. M. Rice
<http://steorn.com/orbo/papers/jm-rice-report-28april-2008.pdf>  has his PE
reputation on the line verifying that.  ( There was also a video interview
with him on line about

that, but I can't find it now -- he was very emphatic that there was
strangeness happening.)

 

Hoyt

 

From: ucar [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2014 10:33 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]:New RAR photos

 

>From the design, I see horizontal mass movements are not relevant. What is
left is vertical movement. I don't think any sinusodial movement lead to
energy production this way, otherwise we should notice such anomalies from
innumerable industrial devices. Therefore we should examine the waveform of
the masses. Second or higher orders of harmonics?

 

My favorite is the second because it make the waveform asymmetric. Asymmetry
is interesting becuse lot of intereting things based on asymmetry like
diodes, pumps, mechanism capturing energy from waves.

 

For example suppose gravitational pull down is sensitive to velocity. On a
symmetric movement (sinusoidal) net gain is zero but not on asymmetric ones.


 

Now are there common machines around us involving heavy parts to asymmetric
movements? Not yet found one.

So let design one of them. Could it resemble to RAR?

 


 



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