By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts
These cookies enable our website and App to remember things such as your region or country, language, accessibility options and your preferences and settings.
Analytic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
To convert it to Nerissa Gliders operated by gravity, we have to stop using water on the top and use it only to bring loads and passengers downward, from the top to the ground.
the concept of Nerissa Gliders is not about gravity, it is about minimisation of energy use and wear and tears.
Yes, I've travelled on it. There's a reason why it travels at about 5mph, despite a steep incline.Lynton and Lynmouth Cliff Railway is a proof that Nerissa Gliders concept works. To prove that we have to convert Lynton and Lynmouth Cliff Railway to Nerissa Gliders.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynton_and_Lynmouth_Cliff_Railway
Yes, I've travelled on it. There's a reason why it travels at about 5mph, despite a steep incline.
Ok, so your system only works if people want to travel downhill? I'm sure I've seen that somewhere else.
It'll only carry loads uphill if there's a greater load wanting to move downhill. The weight of the cable isn't relevant.
Right. So you've now finally accepted that it only works if you want to move a nett weight downhill?
If you've got 100kg at the top, and 50kg a the bottom, it works
If you've got 50kg at the top, and 100kg at the bottom, it doesn't?
For fear of repeating myself
The water that is freely available at the top of the said railway, has potential energy
That potential energy starts with the sun heating it up, evaporation it, turning it into clouds, and making it rain, at which point gravity pulls it downwards into streams and rivers etc... that potential enerrgy is then realised as mechanical kinetic energy
For sake of repeating myself, I pose the same question I asked you over 100 posts ago
If the punters/load needs to be elevated UP to the railway start point, then you are essentially using the potential energy that they have when they/it gets on the train. How do you intend to elevate the load to the train?
There is no such thing as a free lunch when it comes to energy
Even if we forget the wild claims about efficiency, aerodynamics, lack of weight (think safety/crash), reclaiming the energy as the glider moves (think Newtons second law), If you cant get past the above, this is a FAIL
![]()
![]()
Swisaw or whatever, when you understand this diagram and know what COF is come back to the forum with an intellectual discussion based on fact and not ramblings, I don't like being rude but there is a reason you move furniture in a knackered old Luton van. There is a difference between science and science fiction !
52km in 15 minutes would be an AVERAGE of around 130mph.
Now, do you REALLY believe you can have a passenger carrying vehicle which can have <.25m/s/s in drag at 130mph?
If you do and you want money, patent the design and sell it now.
A quick calculation suggests that the acceleration due to gravity in an entirely friction free situation, complete vacuum, etc would be 0.01m/s/s - this is for your Manchester to Liverpool route.
So, after 15 minutes, in this ideal-better-than-reality-situation, you'd be doing around 20mph. Not got very far in that time, I suspect!
This guy has the intelligence of a physics professor spuriously coupled with the naivety of a 10 year old boy.
No-one is ever going to build these gliders anywhere ever. Lots of sane people have told you this. Please go and invent something else.
With respect Swisaw. Do you even know what Nerissa means. In fact Shakesphere invented the name for the serving wrench in a local tavern and went on to describe her as an old hag. That is what it means then
Later the name was adopted by a fiction writer who created a fantasy figure called the wicked Queen Narissa. It is now blatantly obvious that you live in this fantasy world.
Stick to the day job chum and save up for a Logo set to indulge your fantasy theories.
Rob
Please address these points.52km in 15 minutes would be an AVERAGE of around 130mph.
Now, do you REALLY believe you can have a passenger carrying vehicle which can have <.25m/s/s in drag at 130mph?
If you do and you want money, patent the design and sell it now.
A quick calculation suggests that the acceleration due to gravity in an entirely friction free situation, complete vacuum, etc would be 0.01m/s/s - this is for your Manchester to Liverpool route.
So, after 15 minutes, in this ideal-better-than-reality-situation, you'd be doing around 20mph. Not got very far in that time, I suspect!
You hurt me a lot. You don't need to insult a dead person. You welcome to insult me as much as you want. what ever her name means, I wish I was at her place and she she was at my place now.
Haven't a clue what this gibberish is about.
Haven't a clue what this gibberish is about. I do know we can't take anything you say seriously and now you have gone from being a joke to utterly boring.
For that reason. I am gone. Beam me up Sottie. Shove a few more kilos of brussel sprouts down the cows neck and then wrap 9. Whoooooosh.
Sorry, missed this. Your van isn't powered by gravity.My van, when fully loaded, can reach a speed of 60.00Miles/hours very quickly on an even level road. So on an even level road I should be able to travel between Manchester and Liverpool with my van in less than half hour if I don't slow down for any reason.
I think you would get a big round of applause if you were the last.
|
Well. I wish I had a wonder bank account - unfortunately mine is governed by simple principles - you cant take out what isnt there in the first place. If I get a loan it costs me. The laws of physics are very similar, and unfortunately, if you ignore them you end up broke or at least out of energy or resource
I asked some straight forwards questions, questions that are petty much at 'O'level standard and below, and you reply by telling me you have a wonder machine
My car is a wonder machine (if you asked a person from the 1900) HOWEVER, IT STILL NEEDS ENERGY TO MOVE IT. You make some wild assumptions about aerodynamics, friction, weight, mass, acceleration, and recapturing energy. Yet you ignore the most basic of facts. The joke is is that acceleration, friction, weight, mass are pretty much basics
Forget the lot. Dwell on this one question.. To make the device safe, safe enough to withstand a crash at lets say a moderate 40MPH - how heavy does it need to be. Remember, you need to protect what you crash into as well as the contents. There is a reason trains, planes and cars are heavy