Beefbisquit
Well-Known Member
Why the rabbit love (then hate)? lolI'd never drive one of those pieces of shit.
Why the rabbit love (then hate)? lolI'd never drive one of those pieces of shit.
Wow u truly are an idiot... Reread that quote...a fly wheel has a magnet on it and a base point that is stationary... Thus creating power as they pass one another...like a generator. You dumb fuck. I love how all u fags sit behind your computer...all day. All night. And act like u actually kno shit. Fuck you and your monarch like, "proper" English on a pot forum...and I'll stick wit the broken Midwest slang...u crumpet eating fuck.
ohh so stupid.With my erection.
Or a better answer is with centripetal force, once you get it going, which could be done easily with a simple flick of a wrist, you have continuous power. Ya know... like a watch. That little thing you were on your wrist.
Just because you are not able to understand how something can work does not mean it can't.
and it was RETARDED
Or, you could pull into a charging terminal every six miles.
The concept of a flywheel-powered bus was developed and brought to fruition during the 1940s by Oerlikon (of Switzerland), with the intention of creating an alternative to battery-electric buses for quieter, lower-frequency routes, where full overhead-wire electrification could not be justified.
Rather than carrying an internal combustion engine or batteries, or connecting to overhead powerlines, a gyrobus carries a large flywheel that is spun at up to 3,000 RPM by a "squirrel cage" motor.[SUP][1][/SUP] Power for charging the flywheel was sourced by means of three booms mounted on the vehicle's roof, which contacted charging points located as required or where appropriate (at passenger stops en route, or at terminals, for instance). To obtain tractive power, capacitors would excite the flywheel's charging motor so that it became a generator, in this way transforming the energy stored in the flywheel back into electricity. Vehicle braking was electric, and some of the energy was recycled back into the flywheel, thereby extending its range.
I wouldn't suggest using the same flywheel tech they had back then. After all it is antiquated technology; but it shows it's possible.and it was RETARDED
you have to stop regularly at a power station and spin up the flywheel, and if you run our of gravy, starting that fucker up again takes massive amounts of juice.
they handled like shit and couldnt turn (lol gyro) or stop (lol inertia). you waste a shitload of power lugging that giant flywheel around, and it is constantly losing juice to friction (lol science).
when the bearings fail, everybody dies, crushed under the Wile E. Coyote flywheel juggernaut, and in the end the whole idea was a rube goldberg failure.
ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!I wouldn't suggest using the same flywheel tech they had back then. After all it is antiquated technology; but it shows it's possible.
Imagine having one of NASA's G2 flywheels in a car.... no bearings, magnetic levitation in a vacuum, so no air resistance either.
If there was no future in flywheel tech as a power source, at least a partial one; why would F1 cars and some of the other most technologically advanced cars in the world, Ferrari La Ferrari, Porsche 918, McLaren P1, etc., etc., all use flywheels to aid in the power, often giving up to a couple hundred hp with their KERS systems?
It's collecting energy that would normally be lost. I never said it was power generation, you need stored energy to speed up the flywheel. So, another power source is obviously necessary. That other source could be anything....ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!
catching some energy during braking to use again in acceleration is NOT "generating power".
Electric motors deliver the flattest torque curve, and the most torque at the lowest RPM.winding your engine up to 1500 rpm and dropping the clutch has the same effect as using one of your magic flywheels (the inertia of the fast moving engine and it's parts delivers a larger thrust impulse when the clutch engages)
but combustion engines deliver smooth efficient power at steady throttle cruise which electric motors or the Acme Magic Flywheel(tm) do not.
Yeah pretty much. Electric motors WORK too (not sure why we're capitalizing work but o.k.) , but you are correct about the efficiency of electric motors at high speed.combustion engines WORK, while electic motors only have good torgue and power at acceleration, and suck donkeyballs at cruising speed.
[youtube]9NhBxrijKpo[/youtube]but combustion engines deliver smooth efficient power at steady throttle cruise which electric motors or the Acme Magic Flywheel(tm) do not.
Cool skateboard. lol[youtube]9NhBxrijKpo[/youtube]
Cool skateboard. lol
The faster you go, the more air resistance you encounter, and the more power it takes to overcome that force to accelerate. When you get up to 100kph and faster, it takes too much energy for electric motors to sustain that speed efficiently.
Transmissions are great. lol
Except that very heavy equipment, like earth movers - oh and the latest ships tend to use them, for long periods of time at constant speeds.ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!
catching some energy during braking to use again in acceleration is NOT "generating power".
winding your engine up to 1500 rpm and dropping the clutch has the same effect as using one of your magic flywheels (the inertia of the fast moving engine and it's parts delivers a larger thrust impulse when the clutch engages)
but combustion engines deliver smooth efficient power at steady throttle cruise which electric motors or the Acme Magic Flywheel(tm) do not.
combustion engines WORK, while electic motors only have good torgue and power at acceleration, and suck donkeyballs at cruising speed.
meanwhile, flywheels are always getting slower. they cannot gain power they only lose it, and they lose it constantly whether you are using them or not.
Well versed on that....did you know current sport bike fairing configurations were designed to actually raise drag?
Point of the vid was really to demonstrate initial acceleration, reckon my fault for being vague.
I'm not buying into the electric being the way of the future....not that it doesn't make sense, especially if you live near nuclear power but because of the politics.......it most certainly is a thing of the past......it should be a thing of the present....seem like I remember....fuuuuck dude I want to say Joan Rivers but that's not right....some lady that used to do cameo's on scooby-doo.....I will googles that momentarily but she, in an interview remembered having an electric car....in the 20's....I remember going to the wharf and taking a tour of a really old submarine....it was electric.
imho the electric car has been dangled in front of the public like a carrot on a stick and could only be the future if the energy costs are low.....that is if charges are cheap on a cost vs mileage analysis vs whatever other fuel source.....skateboard gets 15 miles on a charge.
here in the USA we use Alternating Current, which means you have a voltage regulator and a silicon rectifier to charge your battery (the mysterious black box that is always warm when it's plugged in to the wall).Actually, it is likely that the electric car will be what comes next. As our grid goes green we will need methods of storing power, wind is intermitent, so is solar, the best way to store that energy is in the batteries of cars plugged into the grid. Most cars spend the majority of their time in a a garage anyway so it's a great way to have a mass of batteries at the ready. It also helps with transmission distances.
ships use them but ships are not busses street cars or passenger vehicles.Except that very heavy equipment, like earth movers - oh and the latest ships tend to use them, for long periods of time at constant speeds.
and electric cars never took off because they are a BAD solution.I'm high as fuck.....it was Phyllis Diller I think but I can't remember or find a clip of the interview...............
Detroit Electric.......1915.
It is already being tried - and the meter rolls backwards when it does.here in the USA we use Alternating Current, which means you have a voltage regulator and a silicon rectifier to charge your battery (the mysterious black box that is always warm when it's plugged in to the wall).
this means that the battery is hooked up with a ONE WAY gate, letting juice in, but not letting it out.
otherwise plugging your cell phone (or electric pansy-mobile) into the charger would do nothing.
the electrical grid cannot draw juice out of your battery when it wants it, nor would you want it to.
see when i plug up a battery for charging, i am PAYING for that electricity, if they could simply snatch it back whenever the wanted PG&E would have long ago figured out how to do so.
because they are cockbags.
and electric cars never took off because they are a BAD solution.
electric motors get up and go from a stop very well, but once you hit your chosen cruising speed they still draw just as much juice from your battery as they do coming up from a dead stop.
conversely, combustion engines do not deliver as much torque from a dead stop, but once they hit a cruising speed they are FAR more efficient than electric motors, and you dont have to drag around 400 pounds of battery in the trunk.