Weighted wheel 2nd question

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In summary: The lower moment of inertia affects the total energy input to bring the wheel up to a certain (large) speed by making it easier to accelerate and decelerate the wheel.
  • #1
cameron1
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Good afternoon and thank you all that helped with the other wheel. It did in fact loose energy from the slide as the position once the movement happened, the energy was lost as the leverage was lower once the movemnt happened and therefore not recoverable.

Which leads me to this wheel and question.
As the wheel rotates, very slowly as to have a minimal centrifugal centripetal force affecting it, the weight in the 10 through 2 o clock position will compress the spring, as the wheel rotates further the spring un-compresses and pushes the weight back to the outside of the wheel.
Question - Does this wheel require more energy to turn when compared to the identical wheel moving at the same speed (rpm) with the weights fixed to the outside so they can not move?

My thoughts, no, since the energy (leverage) is lost at the top but stored in the spring and recovered on the other side as it goes back down. I am wondering if there is energy loss due to the compression of the spring, loss of leverage temporarily.
Thanks for any input. I understand these are pretty mundane questions and all revolve around Newtons laws of thermodynamics but some clarity or guidance and confirmation would be great.
 

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  • #2
You do not lose energy to "leverage".

As I wrote in the previous thread, the only discrepancy between the effort required to turn the wheel with a simple mechanism and the effort required to turn the wheel with a complex mechanism must be due to irreversible effects. Friction free slides, ideal springs and rigid levers on ideal bearings do not suffer from irreversible effects. Accordingly, there can be no increase in effort required.

As others wrote in the previous thread, in the real world, no mechanisms are perfect. You will suffer from irreversible losses. In general, the more complicated the mechanism, the worse the losses. But do not look for those losses in leverage. Look for them in friction, vibration, impact and air resistance.
 
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  • #3
Due to conservation of energy, any quality built wheel will require approximately zero energy to turn.
 
  • #4
regardless to what happens inside the wheel? My understanding is the same, almost zero energy to "turn" the wheel once it is up to speed, minus bearings, wind and friction. My focus is on what happens to a weighted wheel, is that still the answer, because it is a wheel and whatever happens on one side must counter act on the other side...
The energy to turn the wheel stays the same regardless to what is happening inside the wheel.
That is my understanding.
 
  • #5
cameron1 said:
regardless to what happens inside the wheel?
It depends on what happens inside the wheel certainly. The hopper on a rotary cement mixer takes energy to turn because the blades and paddles turn the mixture and viscous friction dissipates the input energy. Let the cement harden and it takes no energy to turn (though will be badly unbalanced).

My understanding is the same, almost zero energy to "turn" the wheel once it is up to speed, minus bearings, wind and friction. My focus is on what happens to a weighted wheel, is that still the answer, because it is a wheel and whatever happens on one side must counter act on the other side...
If there are no dissipative losses then mechanical energy is conserved. One need not even consider what happens on one side of the other. Mechanical energy is (except for such losses) conserved regardless.

This is very close to a rules violation on the grounds that you are describing a perpetual motion machine. The fact that you are running it in reverse is the only thing saving you.
 
  • #6
That's interesting that you point that out. Besslers wheels and these "devices" is what I was evaluating. Not that they could ever work, but do they actually require more work to turn because of what was happening inside them.
 
  • #7
cameron1 said:
regardless to what happens inside the wheel? ...

The energy to turn the wheel stays the same regardless to what is happening inside the wheel.
That is my understanding.
Correct*.

*Ignoring friction and other dissipation losses, which seems appropriate here.
 
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  • #8
Strictly speaking, what you've designed here is a wheel with a lower moment of inertia than if the weights were fixed to the outer edge. So you'll actually have an easier time accelerating and decelerating the wheel -- at low speeds. At high speeds, the weights will be pushed out to the edge anyway by centrifugal effects. Interestingly, the same can be said of your previous wheel design: that one would actually dissipate energy, so it would require a constant input to keep moving, but again, that effect disappears at high speeds due to centrifugal forces.

How does the lower moment of inertia affect the total energy input to bring the wheel up to a certain (large) speed? At low speeds the moment of inertia is lower, and at high speeds it's the same as in the fixed-weight case; since it's never greater, it seems as though the total energy input might be lower. But my mathematical intuition is that it should turn out the same either way; after all, the end product looks the same. Still not sure how to justify or refute that without some calculations.
 
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  • #9
skatche said:
But my mathematical intuition is that it should turn out the same either way; after all, the end product looks the same. Still not sure how to justify or refute that without some calculations.
One of the useful bits about energy conservation is that it allows you to skip right past the messy calculations to the result that you already know must be true.
 
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  • #10
cameron1 said:
The energy to turn the wheel stays the same regardless to what is happening inside the wheel.
What is "energy to turn the wheel"? Even if the inner stuff is lossless, kinetic energy of the weights might build up over time, and that energy needs to be provided from outside.
 
  • #11
yes, when I say energy to turn the wheel, it could be generic, a motor, wind, rolling down a hill... some sort of energy is needed to turn it.
skatche- regarding the centrifugal effects. yes once rpm is up a bit, no movement would occur as the weights or anything that can move will move to the outer edge.
But I am observing the effects of what happens at the specific rpm where cf is not high enough to keep the weights stuck to the outside, slow enough to have gravity have a moment to move the weights, if a little. I am trying to evaluate if at that specific rpm when compared to the wheel where the weights would not move, is the energy required to move it different at all.
I make the same evaluation, when we keep the rpm at that level and the weights have a moment to move, the wheel may in fact turn slightly easier that compared to if the weights were fixed. I am guessing that it would be somewhere between the two values if one measured with the weights fixed to the outside and fixed the weights to the inner most position. But I don't want to confuse acceleration here, just the input to keep it moving.
 
  • #12
jbriggs444 said:
One of the useful bits about energy conservation is that it allows you to skip right past the messy calculations to the result that you already know must be true.

Right, but I mean, already I'm having second thoughts. It seems at low angular speeds the system has a lower moment of inertia -- I didn't check it carefully, it was a bit of fudging on geometric observations. However, for the energy input to be the same in both cases, there would need to be speeds at which the system has greater moment of inertia than the fixed-weights case (it might even depend on the configuration of the springs at each moment). I wonder if that might have to do with the fact that the springs will resonate at a certain frequency, or if my initial assumption is even correct.
 
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  • #13
Cameron, with the exception of negligible effects due to small differences in aerodynamics, I think it would be just as easy to keep your system running at a given speed as it would to keep the fixed-weight wheel running. The question is, "how much energy is lost to air resistance?" and that depends only on the shape of the object. There's also friction at the axle, etc., but that'll be the same in both cases. The only real difference would be due to friction in the weight-shafts, so lube those babies up.
 
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  • #14
A.T. said:
What is "energy to turn the wheel"? Even if the inner stuff is lossless, kinetic energy of the weights might build up over time, and that energy needs to be provided from outside.

Careful -- kinetic energy is measured relative to a stationary reference frame, not the spinning frame of the wheel. At low speeds, the weights with springs will have much lower kinetic energy than the fixed weights, which you can see by the fact that they're traversing a tighter circle.

(I hope multiple-posting isn't frowned on here.)
 
  • #15
cameron1 said:
yes, when I say energy to turn the wheel, it could be generic, a motor, wind, rolling down a hill... some sort of energy is needed to turn it.
No. Energy is required to accelerate it, but not to turn it at constant speed. Newton's first law tells us that the force/energy required to keep an object in a state of constant motion (including rotation) is zero.

Again: if there are no friction or other such losses, the energy required to turn the wheel is zero.
 
  • #16
skatche said:
Careful -- kinetic energy is measured relative to a stationary reference frame, not the spinning frame of the wheel. At low speeds, the weights with springs will have much lower kinetic energy than the fixed weights, which you can see by the fact that they're traversing a tighter circle.
The moving weights aren't traversing circles relative to the stationary reference frame you insist on.
 
  • #17
russ_watters said:
Energy is required to accelerate it, but not to turn it at constant speed.
If the moment of inertia changes, due to the weight movement, maintaining a constant speed might require energy input / or release energy.
 
  • #18
A.T. said:
The moving weights aren't traversing circles relative to the stationary reference frame you insist on.
You may be right -- it may be an ellipse or some complicated curve. But the basic point is the loop they traverse is shorter than the loop they'd traverse if they were fixed to the inner edge of the wheel.
 
  • #19
skatche said:
You may be right -- it may be an ellipse or some complicated curve. But the basic point is the loop they traverse is shorter than the loop they'd traverse if they were fixed to the inner edge of the wheel.
There is no reason to assume that the complicated curve will always be shorter than the circle which fixed weights would traverse.
 
  • #20
A.T. said:
There is no reason to assume that the complicated curve will always be shorter than the circle which fixed weights would traverse.
I can see how this may explain the unusually high moment of inertia at certain speeds -- mainly at resonance, I'd wager -- but at low speeds it's plainly obvious how the weights will travel.
 
  • #21
skatche said:
but at low speeds it's plainly obvious how the weights will travel.
Your intuition is based on the lossy real world. But if one assumes no friction and perfectly elastic collisions, the kinetic energy of the weights can build up quite quickly, even at low rotation speeds.
 
  • #22
A.T. said:
Your intuition is based on the lossy real world. But if one assumes no friction and perfectly elastic collisions, the kinetic energy of the weights can build up quite quickly, even at low rotation speeds.
That's simply not the case -- in the idealised, frictionless case the wheel can spin in perpetuity without any energy input whatsoever, hence no increase in the kinetic energy of the weights. At low enough speeds -- lower than resonance -- the weights will travel a nice gentle circle within the larger circle of the wheel.
 
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  • #23
Unless the wheel is unbalanced from the very beginning and at all time, if not any balanced wheel will eventually came to a stop by friction.
 
  • #24
This thread has correctly concluded that conservation of energy is alive and well. I think we can arrive at the same answer another way.. After one revolution the system is back where it started even if the masses have moved on some complicated path in the meantime. However gravity is a conservative field so work done is independent of the path.

https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&s...3PwIoJtLz6TUnrQ4g&sig2=gFpH6kjoZclTbZINkGAXSQ

So no matter how complicated the path if it ever returns to the starting position the work done will be zero.

The same approach can be applied understand similar magnet based machines (yes I know magnetic fields aren't really conservative or non-conservative) that try to use "shields".
 
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  • #25
CWatters said:
After one revolution the system is back where it started
If that's the case, the answer is indeed trivial. But it's not obvious why the above should be true, when you spin a lossless mass-spring system.
 
  • #26
After one revolution the system is back where it started
No need for one revolution, just one quarter revolution and the system will look the same
 
  • #27
The point is that if it ever returns to an equivalent position at that point the net work is zero. As that's effectively the definition of a conservative field.

If it never returns then fine but I think it would be hard to build a practical machine that did. For example you can't keep accelerating a flywheel indefinitely.
 

1. What is a weighted wheel and how does it work?

A weighted wheel is a device used for random selection, where each option has a different probability of being selected. It works by assigning weights or values to each option, which determines the likelihood of it being chosen.

2. What is the purpose of using a weighted wheel?

A weighted wheel is commonly used in experiments and studies to ensure that each option has a fair chance of being selected. It can also be used for games of chance or random selection in decision-making processes.

3. How is the weight or value determined for each option on the wheel?

The weight or value assigned to each option on the wheel is typically determined by the researcher or individual creating the wheel. It can be based on factors such as the importance of the option or its likelihood of occurring.

4. Can the weight or value of an option on the wheel be changed?

Yes, the weight or value of an option can be changed at any time by the person in control of the wheel. This allows for flexibility in the selection process and can be adjusted as needed.

5. Are there any limitations to using a weighted wheel?

While a weighted wheel can provide a fair and random selection process, it is important to remember that it is still subject to chance. The outcome may not always reflect the expected probabilities, and there may be external factors that could influence the results.

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