Mark Fraser said:
Just out of interest is it possible to create a cart with a suitable gearbox to convert a push from the front into "forward" drive. In other words can I create a device that, when pushed from the front, with (say) a 10n force will harness that force and move in the direction of it's energy source. I had thought not but given the windmill cart/boat maybe that's wrong.
If you think in terms of Newton III alone, action/equal and opposite reaction, you would come to the conclusion it wouldn't work.
But, the actual operative principle behind this device is that of the first class lever: any force applied over sufficient distance can move any mass, but the distance moved will be proportionately less than distance through which the 'long' end of the lever was moved. And the motion will be in the opposite direction of the applied force.
The propeller is just a more complex version: wind force on the propeller is converted to force at right angles to the original. From there, it can be mechanically converted to any direction. If you understand how easily the first class lever produces force in the opposite direction to the applied force, it de-mystifies that apparent paradox.
In my propeller on the carriage bolt experiment I observed that for every revolution of the prop its mass was levered forward (into the wind) the distance of one twentieth of an inch (1/4 - 20 carriage bolt: 1 revolution = 1/20th inch = .05 inches). The prop diameter is 9 inches, meaning we have two levers of 4 1/2 inches being pushed by the wind through a distance at the tips of (9 times 3.1416) 28.27 inches for each 1/20th inch advance
into the wind. That's force applied over 28.27 inches to get a mere .05 inches of advance. Not so miraculous.
You can see that, if you wanted to move a one ton stone into the wind you could set up a lever and fulcrum and then unfurl a sail at the end of the lever. The sail might have to be pushed 10 yards to move the stone one inch, but you have moved your mass
into the wind by force of the wind.