Hey folks, this is my first visit and post on these forums. I hope no one minds that I dig up this old thread. I found it while doing some searches on fake Cavendish experiment videos. I've seen several videos on Youtube including the ones here that show dramatic visual displacements in a short amount of time. I was skeptical, as most seem to be here. I decided to do some experimenting of my own, and I whipped up a crude torsion balance using fishing line, a wooden dowel, large lead sinkers (just guessing they are about 1/4 kg) on the end of the dowel and weights (15 pounders) from my weight bench. I hung the balance from my ceiling in the hallway so the balance was just above the floor.
It took about an hour for the system to settle, apparently the fishing line had some twists in it. I did not use any dampener (water brake). When I positioned the large masses near the balance, I got about 1 cm of displacement in about 1 minute. I was shocked! I thought that surely this was due to some static charges. However, my experience with pith balls in electrostatics tells me that when contact was made, there should be some repulsion, but that didn't happen, the small and large masses remained in contact. I could then easily reverse the system and again got about 1 cm of displacement in about 1 minute time (should happen twice as fast right, but I wasn't timing anything). Maybe the use of a really long fishing line, from my ceiling to my floor, means that there is very little torque needed in twisting the fishing line? What do you folks think about that?
Oh, by the way, I'm a high school physics/mathematics teacher.