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I built a machine that converts 100% of the motion in any compound wave into energy |
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| May3-09, 11:51 PM | #1 |
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I built a machine that converts 100% of the motion in any compound wave into energy
I don't want to give too much away about the design but i have tested it in real life and it works... The only energy that is lost is lost to friction. The machine converts the chaotic motion (all of it... yes that means up, down etc) of compound waves into the unidirectional rotation of a shaft. The idea is to get it to convert to chaotic motion of water waves because waves are a renewable resource. I'm not an engineer (yet) because I'm still in my last year of high school so your going to just have to take my word on what i claim the machine can do. I built the idea around wanting maximum efficiency and have shown a working model of it to a couple of engineers who say that they "have never seen gears work in that way before" and that "theoretically it should convert 100% of the motion in a wave into energy" so I'm fairly certain that the machine does do what i say it does. What i don't know is what the implications of this are... keep in mind that the machine works whether it is really big or really small. Do people want this kind of technology? I mean i figured that it could be a good alternative source of energy but I would like some insight into what i should do from where i am now and what the demand for this kind of machine would be. Pretty cool idea thou eh :)
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| May4-09, 12:18 AM | #2 |
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| May4-09, 12:29 AM | #3 |
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| May4-09, 04:29 AM | #4 |
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I built a machine that converts 100% of the motion in any compound wave into energy
Gears only really do one thing so it doesnt matter if we've seen it or not. There is not fantastic new way a gear can be used.
Please decribe the machine to us and the principles upon which it works. And photos would be nice. Edit: just for your information nothing can transfer 100% of the energy, entropy says so. and like you said there is friction which is a loss. |
| May4-09, 05:30 AM | #5 |
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If you aren't willing to actually discuss your machine, then all you are doing is trying to pick a fight. Unless we get something we can actually discuss, this thread will be locked.
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| May4-09, 06:36 AM | #6 |
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Sorry. Not buying it. Unless this thing is made out of unobtanium, you are losing more than just to friction.
Pull my other leg. It plays jingle bells. I give this thread about 4 nanoseconds left to live. |
| May4-09, 02:39 PM | #7 |
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Ok fine let me clarify... yea i guess 100% of the motion is a bit of an exaggeration but in my defense i can say that it converts 100% of the motion that you could convert within reason i.e. no the machine doesn't defy the laws of physics that we have all grown so fond of. What i am trying to say is that it converts all of the vectors acting on a body connected to a wave into a unidirectional output so no the output is not equal to the input BUT the output is based on ALL of the inputs so 100% of the energy available is being utilized which is pretty much as good as i think a water wave converter could get. Try to think of what I'm saying as something like a bed sheet floating on top of wavy water.... No we cant say that 100% of the motion in the wave is being transferred to the bed sheet but we can say that all of the forces in the wave are contributing to the motion of the sheet so there is technically a loss of energy but no unnecessary loss of energy. Please note that my machine doesn't use bedsheets lol. I have looked at quite a few ideas for wave converters and one thing they have in common is that they all seem to not utilize ALL of the forces available to them e.g. some of them only convert the upward force of a wave but what about the downward force of a wave? So ok fine please forgive me I'm kinda exited about my machine because its really cool so for future reference: it converts all of the motion available in a wave, not just one component such as upward motion, into unidirectional motion but because of the laws of physics, some energy IS lost in the transfer. happy? i learned my lesson :P
Anyways like I said, i don't want to give too much away about the design because it is not patented yet (it is in the process of being patented fyi). Think of it like this... pick your mouse up off your desk spin it around, bob it up and down, move it forward then backward, in fact move it in any direction then try to imagine all of the complex motion that your mouse just did being converted into one unidirectional motion... I know you guys may be skeptical because this seems like a pretty hard thing to do but i don't think anyone here can say with confidence that its impossible. I'm seriously not trying to pick a fight I'm just a bit worried about someone copying my design before its fully patented so give me a break. I just want to know what the demand for a technology like this is not if it is or isn't possible because I already know that it is because I already have a working prototype. |
| May4-09, 03:02 PM | #8 |
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| May4-09, 03:05 PM | #9 |
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It's pretty tough to determine whether it has a useful application without knowing what it actually does. If you're clever enough to think of something that nobody else has ever thought of, you're clever enough to work out whether it has a useful application.
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| May4-09, 03:20 PM | #10 |
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First, I'm not very fond of the laws of physics, they keep me from doing what I would like to do.
Second, my guess is, you have a computer generated model with something like helical gears that are made of material that will float, and clutch bearings that allow only one direction rotation, as they are pushed up and down by the waves. Third, I'm on thin ice with this forum, my advice is read all the rules about conduct, and stay within the bounds of those rules. If you plan going on to become an engineer this forum is a good help and guide tool that will be a great asset in your future. Good luck, and mind your P's and Q's. Ron |
| May4-09, 03:24 PM | #11 |
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| May4-09, 03:41 PM | #12 |
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I can appreciate that you want to protect your idea. However it is simply very difficult to say if there is any application without knowing exactly what it does and the principles upon which it works.
Existing tidal/wave power is simply the extraction of gpe from the wave rising and the wind giving motion, thats why it only acts in the up/down direction. I'm fairly sketchy on this stuff as i've not done it in quite a while. The broad answer is that if this is simply a better way of extracting motion from a wave then it'll be used in all the ways that tidal and wave power tech is used at the moment. |
| May4-09, 03:56 PM | #13 |
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Keep in mind, just because someone is an engineer doesn't mean they know everything. When I was in HS I had a few CVT designs that I showed some engineers and they said it "blew their minds" even though my designs didn't actually work.
Whether or not your machine is useful, from the sounds of it I would say probably not. If you look at the mechanics of a wave in the ocean you will see that the water really only travels up and down if you subtract the motion of the current (which doesn't oscillate). One more thing, patents are EXPENSIVE so be dam sure this thing work unless your doing it to put something on your resume. |
| May4-09, 04:34 PM | #14 |
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| May4-09, 06:36 PM | #15 |
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Well, good luck. Without details on how it works, we can't really suggest any applications without them being much more than a shot in the dark. Ocean wave power is an example of harnessing wave energy. Could your device utilize it? Dunno.
There isn't really anything to discuss here, so the thread is locked. |
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