My perpetual motion machine!!!!!!!
Im gona post it for you guys be nice :(
Ok nevermind the link failure
http://img9.imagepile.net/img9/82503...ionmachine.bmp
Ok soo what happens is!(my spelling will be terrible)
the tube is a cappilary tube(draws water up it) a magnet floats on top of something that floats, and there is a coiled copper wire outside the tube.
So how do we get the magnet to go up and down and create current or w/e it is called? We put a valve on the bottom of the tube, this stop water from coming in the tube and the water in the tube evaporates and the valve opens and the magnet goes up and bammo we got perpetual motion(or a really horrible failure and a travesty to science)
Re: My perpetual motion machine!!!!!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by ProZachNation
zach i love you.
everybody, here's the link:
http://img9.imagepile.net/img9/82503...ionmachine.bmp
All 3 of those are the same link. Quite amazingly, zach got none of them right. This is unprecedented territory here.
By the way, the part of the last link that looks like a fish is awesome.
Re: My perpetual motion machine!!!!!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by ProZachNation
the tube is a cappilary tube(draws water up it) a magnet floats on top of something that floats, and there is a coiled copper wire outside the tube.
So how do we get the magnet to go up and down and create current or w/e it is called? We put a valve on the bottom of the tube, this stop water from coming in the tube and the water in the tube evaporates and the valve opens and the magnet goes up and bammo we got perpetual motion(or a really horrible failure and a travesty to science)
The weight of the float+magnet would overcome any weak upward force exerted by capillary action.
Re: My perpetual motion machine!!!!!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Warpe
Quote:
Originally Posted by ProZachNation
the tube is a cappilary tube(draws water up it) a magnet floats on top of something that floats, and there is a coiled copper wire outside the tube.
So how do we get the magnet to go up and down and create current or w/e it is called? We put a valve on the bottom of the tube, this stop water from coming in the tube and the water in the tube evaporates and the valve opens and the magnet goes up and bammo we got perpetual motion(or a really horrible failure and a travesty to science)
The weight of the float+magnet would overcome any weak upward force exerted by capillary action.
Not in space!