News4 mins ago
Free Energy
Some years ago whilst sat in a physics lesson I was told 'you can't make energy from energy'.
My reply was (as I always have an answer for everything), what if you have an electrically powered car and attached 4 dynos to it (one on each wheel) which then recharged the battery and hence....you get energy from energy. Why wouldn't this work?? You'd never have to pay to charge the battery and as long as you use the car it'll just keep on charging.
I'm going to patent this in a second!!
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No best answer has yet been selected by crgb14. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What is meant is that no system is 100% efficient so putting in energy E in whatever form will always produce less than E in output in most cases considerably less. That is why purpetual motion is impossible as the initial energy that is input is used up in the workings of the system that uses it. To take your example your electric car presumably starts with charged batteries and the dynamo's on each wheel put some energy back into the batteries viola perpetual motion! Doh! no I'm afraid that some of the initial energy is used in driving the wheels which do indeed put some back but the energy to move is taken out as it goes, result? Smaller amounts at a negatively exponential rate. Your car stops quickly! In fact you'd get a lot further without the dynamos as the batteries would have less weight to push a 4 less things to turn. Back to the drawing board with you!
Theoretically some energy could be returned to this system when the vehicle is going down hill but we need to realize that a generator of electrical power resists turning forces in proportion to the amount of power it generates. Even if you could make a perfectly efficient generator the power output will never exceed the input power.
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