2012年9月18日星期二

Generatiing electricity from raised weights

I have started my own company to start building and selling electrical generation systems that use raised weights to generate electricity (up to 10 Kw) for a home power supply (D3 Gold). It uses a grid tied inverter and can put power on the grid as well.

I previously started a thread on this topic where I attempted to actually discuss this idea with "scientific" thinkers but I was disappointed in their openness to the idea and their critical thinking skills (names withheld to encourage re-encounters of the better kind) ...

Please read this link and investigate both of these - viable and efficient energy generation ideas using raised weights. Then, if you are interested, we can discuss my own idea on this topic.

My idea is not a mega-watt municipal power supply plant - but, rather, an efficient personal power system for powering your home that is low cost and efficient

The Huygens Chain mechanism uses a the clockwork going, even while the weight is being raised, by using a compound pulley system that suspends the weight and output subsystem from a loop dropping from another set of pulleys (or gears, or chain, etc, etc.) which allows the suspended parts to be raised (D3 Gold), even while the weight continues to fall (from the point of view of the weight suspension and drive components).

(Sorry for the somewhat murky wording, just look at one of the diagrams on the web and it will instantly become clear).

So, in a sense, the weight is always falling, but only within its local frame of reference (weight suspension and drive components). However, that entire frame of reference is able to be raised up by rewinding the clock, so the clock never stops. It DOES require periodic rewinding however.

Where he goes off in the weeds is in his apparent failure to understand how LITTLE energy a good clockwork system requires to keep running. His "10 KW continuous" output is pure fantasy from the size weights he is claiming. 

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