Mechanical free energy devices > mechanic

Friedrich Luling Magnet Motor

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Thaelin:
I be curious here.  File may be too big in case HJ-split  or non supported file type.  zip and split with 7zip if nothing else.

thay

MasterPlaster:

--- Quote from: idegen on July 07, 2015, 12:10:56 AM ---There is no secret.
There is no magnetic field cancellation.
Yin and Yang.
balance
In any case.

Sorry.
this is the reality. :)

--- End quote ---

Watch the video. You may learn something.

MagnaProp:
Looks like it might have some electrical cables connected to it? Perhaps a starter motor or it's able to generate just enough electricity to pull the magnets back from the sticky spot along with help from the spring and flux canceling methods?

Thanks for the translation hartiberlin. On your translated video at (00:05:37) the last word in that segment, does he say aluminum?

DaKrampus:
I know this is old but just wanted to add my 2 cents..

--- Quote from: MagnaProp on July 08, 2015, 07:31:19 AM ---Thanks for the translation hartiberlin. On your translated video at (00:05:37) the last word in that segment, does he say aluminum?

--- End quote ---
no he just talks about the usage.. he says: allen gebieten (this could sound a little like aluminum) but it meens usage in all domains...

as to the shielding i was wondering.. because I do not at all see the positions of the magnets like the graphic in the first  post..

for me the rotating flywheel is iron/steel only. no magnet.. the magnet is in the rotating pipe (the one with the cutout.) the magnet attracts the iron moving part, and when it comes to the point where the magnet wants to hold on to the iron in the rotor ( the sort of sticky point if it were 2 magnets), the spring rotates the pipe so the magnet gets shielded and there is no more attraction.
the magnet then tries to attract the next piece of steel (rotates a little bit pulling the spring) an falling back again..

Alas if i think it may work, i also think that it will not produce as much power as shown in the video. (because i think in the 60ties there were no neodym magnets and the attraction was much much less.) than it could today.

Luciano

MagnaProp:

--- Quote from: DaKrampus on January 12, 2016, 04:29:41 PM ---...he says: allen gebieten (this could sound a little like aluminum) but it meens usage in all domains...
--- End quote ---
Thanks for the info and your thoughts on the device are interesting.

Hope I didn't turn people off from investigating this device by pointing out the parts that look electric. TinMan and others have already shown that magnets can do useful work. If this device found a way to only sip electricity while being powered by mainly permanent magnets, it would be a steep in the right direction indeed.

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