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Author Topic: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?  (Read 9375 times)

supermuble

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McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« on: August 07, 2010, 01:20:51 AM »
This is a design I came up with myself. I don't know if it will work, but it makes sense to me. I am open to suggestions. Try to be nice  ;D

See attached picture:

Via leveraging, a straight magnetic attraction force can be converted to circular motion. Due to the camshaft being located close to the center point, and the fulcrums providing a leveraging effect, the "useless" static magnetic force of permanent magnets should be capable of performing work by using attraction alone, or attraction and repulsion.

Magnetic forces are extremely strong when the distances are very close. In this design, the magnetic distance can be controlled for the entire 360 degrees of rotation.

Normally, a magnetic motor design has a sticky point, where it cannot turn. However, most magnetic motor designs have the sticky point near the outer perimeter of the wheel, where the tangential force is highest. In this design, the sticky point is moved to the center of the wheel, where tangential force (leverage) is lowest.

With the strip of iron, two forces should be present, both in the same direction. The first force is the iron being pulled tangentially toward the magnet, as with a normal attraction motor. The second force is not normally harnessed, and that is the conversion of the strong vertical attraction of the magnet to the iron. This energy can be used due to the fulcrums.

The "sticky" point should be overcome by the kinetic energy of the spinning wheel. The magnetic lobe could be a piece of iron, bent into a crescent (half moon) shape. The motive force could be provided by attraction alone. The lobes could be placed on two different wheels hooked on a common shaft, and the performance could be doubled by providing nearly 360 degrees of applied force, (if it even works)  ;D ???

Well that's the idea... Just thought I'd share. Hope I don't get blasted for this. Maybe I'm forgetting something?
« Last Edit: August 07, 2010, 07:46:24 AM by supermuble »

cletushowell

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #1 on: August 07, 2010, 02:42:29 AM »
I let you in on the secrete you can do with it what you want first off magnets are stored radiation
so how you kill radiation is with water charge it to the earth let the rain settle it
so you need to convert your magnets to a rock type material granite is what i use but im not using magnets im using frequency from a antenna but anyways you can skip your sticky point by shorting the magnet at just the second it passes by conducting it to water. so the magnetism is gone for a split second. good luck
im the brains your potter. make the wheel.

supermuble

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #2 on: August 08, 2010, 06:33:34 PM »
Here is a simplified drawing of a more simple layout.

http://img833.imageshack.us/img833/8563/themclappingtonwheel.jpg

Click here for youtube video:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hL0tsD-MVRc


« Last Edit: August 08, 2010, 09:53:34 PM by supermuble »

cletushowell

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #3 on: August 09, 2010, 12:56:41 PM »
Im sorry i should directed you to
my warping a light bulb exleriment
its taking the tesla cathode and creating
magentic feilds a and with no solid state
metal so your creating the feilds of the magnet
with no magenet the video quality sucks and it was one my first video
i did well over 50 bulbs black light is dark energy and you can
actualy move the bulb with frequency
not light i noticed it moved in the shade for a bit my testing area
sucks the weird part was the fed watching me during that testing was involved in my arrest today wtf
its real its direct propulsion using no
propellors only ion transfers think of it as
magnetising a car head theres positive power on each side
of the gap this creates a circle of energy
complets the rainbow ovef the gap so any two sides of a river
has power and the amount of water determines if its
neutralzed stored or not stored
so if your in the water no power if your in the desert no power but if you find the perfect spot endless but what i foubd is the specific structure of my earth battery has a 58 degree spilt in temperature so it creates its own water
so it is essentualy the evergreen tree technology
i figure a way to demostrate antigravity
while in the confinement if my solitary jail cell today
what a joke they were trippen how i reversed the pepper spray if he wasnt a rookie i would let him hit me with the tazer to show him that but then he would use his gun next time he felt threatened
on someone else he was already nervous dont know why new i guess
hey if you ever go to jail the flourescent ballast built good weapons
and im pretty shure you can just plasma your way out
or shock the fuck out them asdholes but i got bigger fish to fry
have gokd day oh the warping the light bulb is on youtube if its not blocked

Charlie_V

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #4 on: August 09, 2010, 07:06:08 PM »
supermuble

I think it could work.  Try it out.

supermuble

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #5 on: August 09, 2010, 10:18:56 PM »
Charlie thanks for the useful response. I can't believe nobody is giving me any feedback on this. It would not be hard to build...

nievesoliveras

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #6 on: August 09, 2010, 10:41:16 PM »

Charlie_V

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #7 on: August 10, 2010, 01:08:19 AM »
Jesus,

None of those are using leverage.

nievesoliveras

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #8 on: August 10, 2010, 04:13:13 AM »
Jesus,

None of those are using leverage.

I meant, They also want someone to build their model in order to see if it works without spending their money experimenting.

Jesus

supermuble

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #9 on: August 10, 2010, 07:40:50 AM »
I built a model already, complete with ball bearings. There is almost no friction. It doesn't work at all. It shows no sign of working. I'll let you know if I get it working ??? ;D

nievesoliveras

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #10 on: August 10, 2010, 02:30:01 PM »
If what you say is true, then, receive my apologies.

Jesus

nievesoliveras

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #11 on: August 10, 2010, 05:11:38 PM »
Have you tried this one?

Jesus

supermuble

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #12 on: August 10, 2010, 09:39:59 PM »
Thanks Jesus. I am going to use that design, with the camshaft being made of an eccentric (half moon) shaped iron, and at the end, I'll use a magnet that repels as shown in the photo you gave me. I'll let you know if it shows any promise whatsoever...

NTesla

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #13 on: August 15, 2010, 06:15:36 AM »
Have you tried this one?

Jesus

I spent this weekend attempting to replicate this design - without success. I had previously looked at this but realized that the shape, size, and properties of the 'flux blocking' device (in addition to the relationship with the stator and rotor magnet strength/size) were crucial to any possible success. The attempt at replication confirmed my theoretical conclusions - that if this design were to work, you would need to either custom cast the iron flux blocker, or have access to many different shapes and sizes of iron shapes that could be experimented with. For the amateur experimenter such as myself this is not possible. My replication used a large ferrite toroid for flux blocking.

I have not seen an actual replication of such a device - only drawings attributed to John Bedini. The attraction of this design to me is its simplicity. It does not rely on any electronic configuration - all you have to do is make sure the flux blocking device is of the correct shape, size, and flux blocking properties (of course assuming the negation of magnetic forces is not equaled by the opposite pole so that reasonable rotation speeds/torque can be achieved).

nievesoliveras

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Re: McLappington Wheel - Will it Work?
« Reply #14 on: August 15, 2010, 08:09:57 AM »
I tried to replicate it too and could not replicate it.

Jesus