Pressure, weight, density perpetual motion?

In summary, the wheel has two sides with different buoyant forces, and the plunger on one side of the wheel balances the water/air boxes on the other side. If the plunger on one side of the wheel is too heavy, it will push the water boxes out of balance and the wheel will not turn.
  • #1
cala
194
0
Hello.

I've come up with an idea that I need to check:

There is a wheel, filled up with air, inmersed on a tank of water.

Attached to that wheel there is a number of boxes, that has two windows on opposite sides that can communicate with the water on the tank, or with the air inside the wheel.

Inside these boxes, there is a heavy plunger that keeps the water and air appart, and falls down to the bottom of the box due to gravity.

When it opens the window to the water, closes the air window, and viceversa.

So all the plungers on one side of the wheel closes the air window, and the plungers on the other side closes the water one.

So on one side of the wheel all the boxes are filled up with water, and on the other side all the boxes are filled up with air.

This represents a difference on forces, because the boxes filled up with air have a quantity of thrust, and the boxes with water have an adittional weight that the other boxes does not.

So you can see that the wheel have different forces on each side, due to the plungers falling down to the bottom of the boxes by their own weight, and letting the boxes on one side fill with air, and the other side of the wheel fill with water, as the wheel rotates... and you can see that this imbalance is always there (it doesn't matter that the wheel is spinning), and in fact, is this imbalance what is causing the rotation of the wheel...

So where is the error here?

I post an animation to clarify how it is supposed to work...
 

Attachments

  • perpetual motion.gif
    perpetual motion.gif
    48.7 KB · Views: 1,547
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Also, I'm not saying that the air boxes floats on the water and rise up... I'm just telling that the resultant on one side is less than on the other, so it doesn't matter if all the boxes shrink or float... the only thing that matters is that the two sides of the wheel are not in balance.
 
  • #3
Hi, Cala.
Even in an ideal situation, with no friction or viscosity losses, the best that you could possibly do is break even. The instant that you try to extract any useful energy from the system, such as by attaching a pulley to run something, you lose.
 
  • #4
Well, this setup has no other intention that try to run continuosly. If it can not do other work, I conform myself with this thing being running forever... :tongue:
 
  • #5
I posted this thing also because I'm not able to find where is the mistake (...but hoping nowhere!).

I post a picture of the forces as I see them, and the (more or less) resultant force, and imbalance on the torque.

There are only two things that I see could go against the movement:

- When the bottom box pass from be filled with water to be filled with air... Can the plunger (taking into account that is much heavier than the water) move the water outside the box? I think it is, but maybe I'm wrong...

- The other moment that could avoid the wheel from spinning is when two boxes are on top and bottom of the wheel. In this situation, the two plungers of this boxes are on one side of the wheel... Could this extra weight compensate the imabalance?. I think that they can't, because there are a lot of other weights opposing (so maybe in this case, the imbalance is less than on other positions, but still it works).

I would appreciate if you explain this better, or have other ideas on what could stop the device turning forever.
 

Attachments

  • forces.jpg
    forces.jpg
    14.7 KB · Views: 552
  • #6
If the plunger can push water outside the box, then it can also push air outside the box- where it escapes. So the next time the plunger pushes the water out of the box, where does the air to fill it come from?
 
  • #7
cala said:
There is a wheel, filled up with air, inmersed on a tank of water.
Hi cala, yes, the submerged wheel filled with air is an ever-popular source of failed perpetual motion ideas. The fundamental error of all such designs is ignoring the work done on the fluid in each cycle. Here is a good link on the subject: http://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/museum/themes/buoyant.htm
 
  • #8
Nice link DaleSpam, it's exactly the same thing I'm talking here...

Ok, maybe (for sure) it doesn't work, But still there is something i don't understand:

They say that, in order to get it working, the bottom box plunger has to rise water to the top box, doing the same amount of work than the buoyant forces do to turn the wheel.

But if the plunger weights enough, this still could be done, right? I mean, a very heavy plunger (or dense material, think on the weight or density you want or need to do that) could expulse the water when the box is at the bottom of the cycle... Yes or no?

If the answer is yes, then what is the problem? Gravity of the plunger will do the work of rising-up the water to let the wheel spinning, isn't it? We don't introduce work in any place...
 
  • #9
Cala, in the 5 years since you first came here pitching your buoyancy motor and other crackpot perpetual motion ideas, you could have put your mental energy toward something useful and earned yourself a college degree in physics or mechanical engineering. Instead, you are still searching for something that doesn't exist. As I told you 5 years ago, people have been foolish enough to look for perpetual motion - buyoancy motors in particular - for centuries. Don't be that guy. Learn some real science instead. With your passion, you just might be able to invent something useful if you focus it properly.

The website already linked has what you need to know to figure out why this doesn't work, but you want it completely spoon-fed to you (the link comes pretty close to spoon-feeding it). This isn't a debunk-my-crackpot-claims-for-me site. Clearly, it isn't helpful to do that because 5 years later, you are still at it and you've gotten nowhere. We're in a loop here that we shouldn't be in. Indulging your claims is the wrong message to send to you and other budding perpetual motion crackpots. It's the wrong direction for you to be going and we shouldn't be going there with you. Thread locked.
 

1. What is pressure?

Pressure is the force applied per unit area. It is defined as the amount of force exerted on a surface divided by the area of that surface. In scientific terms, the SI unit for pressure is the Pascal (Pa), but other units such as atmospheres (atm) and pounds per square inch (psi) are also commonly used.

2. How does weight relate to pressure?

Weight is a measure of the force of gravity acting on an object's mass. When an object is placed on a surface, it exerts a force which is equal to its weight. Therefore, the weight of an object is directly related to the pressure it exerts on a surface.

3. What is density?

Density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume of a substance. It is often represented by the Greek letter rho (ρ) and is typically measured in units of kilograms per cubic meter (kg/m3) in the SI system. In simple terms, density is a measure of how tightly packed the particles of a substance are.

4. Can perpetual motion exist?

No, perpetual motion is not possible. This is because it violates the laws of thermodynamics, which state that energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or converted. In order for perpetual motion to exist, energy would have to be created from nothing, which is not possible.

5. How do pressure, weight, and density affect each other?

Pressure, weight, and density are all interrelated. As pressure increases, weight and density also increase. This is because pressure is directly proportional to weight and inversely proportional to volume, which means that as pressure increases, the volume of a substance decreases, causing the density to increase. Additionally, weight is directly proportional to density, so as density increases, so does weight.

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
740
Replies
40
Views
2K
Replies
27
Views
2K
Replies
7
Views
4K
Replies
11
Views
1K
  • Mechanics
Replies
8
Views
1K
Replies
9
Views
2K
  • DIY Projects
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • Classical Physics
Replies
29
Views
1K
Replies
2
Views
1K
Back
Top