I'm an uneducated retard but i had an interesting idea and would like to know how feasible it could be and so im going to make a thread and shit up this board.
Perpetual motion machine or "infinite" (yes i know shut the fuck up fagget) energy source.
It works like this:
>huge ass fuck ramp that goes downwards
>the floor is a smooth descent and as frictionless as possible to enable maximum acceleration
>block of ice at top of ramp
>at the bottom of the ramp is a mechanical turbine or something that when the ice block collides with it generates electricity
>after the ice block slides down the ramp and collides with the mechanical generator it melts and turns into water that then drains into a resevoir
>the water is then either pumped or some other bullshit way sent back up the ramp
>after arriving at the top it is then refrozen into a block of ice
>this loop repeats ad infinitum.
before you talk shit i'd like to remind you that you can create a vacuum in a container by merely using a mercury drip? or whatever.
so the questions that need answering are whether or not we currently have the capability to generate enough electricity from the impact to pump the water back up, actually couldnt you use magnets? a block of steel or steel dust that continually falls on a waterwheel turbine pushing down and then use electromagnets to draw and move the steel powder back up and then drop it again?
Perpetual motion machine or "infinite" (yes i know shut the fuck up fagget) energy source.
It works like this:
>huge ass fuck ramp that goes downwards
>the floor is a smooth descent and as frictionless as possible to enable maximum acceleration
>block of ice at top of ramp
>at the bottom of the ramp is a mechanical turbine or something that when the ice block collides with it generates electricity
>after the ice block slides down the ramp and collides with the mechanical generator it melts and turns into water that then drains into a resevoir
>the water is then either pumped or some other bullshit way sent back up the ramp
>after arriving at the top it is then refrozen into a block of ice
>this loop repeats ad infinitum.
before you talk shit i'd like to remind you that you can create a vacuum in a container by merely using a mercury drip? or whatever.
so the questions that need answering are whether or not we currently have the capability to generate enough electricity from the impact to pump the water back up, actually couldnt you use magnets? a block of steel or steel dust that continually falls on a waterwheel turbine pushing down and then use electromagnets to draw and move the steel powder back up and then drop it again?