Is the Clem Conical Pump Engine Actually a Functional Machine?

AI Thread Summary
The Clem Conical Pump Engine is discussed as potentially being a self-sustaining hydraulic engine, with claims of running for nine days on vegetable oil. However, skepticism is prevalent, as it is argued that no engine can operate without an energy input, dismissing the concept of "over unity" as unrealistic. Critics highlight that the engine's design appears flawed, with a turbine that ceases to function when the pump is turned off. References to historical inventions, like Hero's steam engine, emphasize that the technology relies on external energy sources. Overall, the consensus is that the Clem Conical Pump Engine is impractical and likely a scam.
avemt1
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I have found a few sites that contains plans for a hydraulic engine that could run itself for a total of nine days.
http://www.rexresearch.com/clemengn/clemengn.htm"
http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clemindex.htm"
Would it be practical to use this as an engine.
 
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Looks like a load of bobbins to me. No engine will produce work without putting energy in.
 
Two words..."over unity."
 
Oh hang on, the second link seems to show a car powered by vegetable oil. That's a far cry from the "over unity" cobblers perpertated by the first link, or did I just see various crackpot soundbites and close it down too quickly?

"I don't put any fuel in, just this vegetable oil every now and then". Idiot, that might be why you don't need to put any gasoline in. You don't need to put gasoline in a Diesel car either, what am I missing? I could put 8 gallons of vegetable oil into an engine and get it to run for 9 days, but that has nothing to do with over-unity or an engine which doesn't need fuel.
 
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There's no way that I'm going to waste time going through that whole link. From what I did read, a few pages, it's a total crock. The nearest thing to reality in there is the tip-jet function, which is used in some helicopters. That entirely relies upon a supply of high-pressure gas or fluid, which energy is required to produce, and was in fact invented in ancient Greece.
 
"tip-jet function","invented in ancient Greece"
Hero's steam engine?
 
That's the one.
 
avemt1 said:
Would it be practical to use this as an engine.
Uh, no. It's a scam. The diagram 2/3 of the way down on the first link shows a device that does absolutely nothing. It's a turbine spun by a pump - and when you shut off the pump, the tubine stops spinning.
 
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