Re: System and method for electrical power generation utilizing vehicle traffic on roadways US Patent Issued on August 30, 2005



hal@xxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Funny. I guess all these engineers and patent scientists all forgot
to check with a bunch of poser loser assholes on RMA to see that this
stuff doesn't really work.

or perhaps they simply know what I've been trying to explain to you
losers: the downward force on the plates generates more energy than
is lost in the momentum of the vehicle.


Hal

http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/6936932-fulltext.html


You really are stupid, aren't you?

Posting, multiple times, a patent that _does not_ address the criticisms
that have been leveled against this idea, does not lend any validity to your
arguments.

For one thing, the patent doesn't make the claim you are making for it,
which is a good thing, because such a claim would make it a perpetual motion
machine of the first type (first law violation), and the Patent Office has a
policy of not issuing patents on perpetual motion machines.

Don't think it would be a perpetual motion machine? Consider:

You have a circular track consisting of these plates. You have a heavy
car/cart/truck running around the track, driven by an electric motor. The
plates generate power. The power is coupled to the truck to run the motor.
You put it all in an evacuated container to eliminate air drag. You use
highly rigid wheels and magnetic bearings to reduce the rolling resistence.
You increase the weight of the truck to increase the power produced by
passing over the plates (per your contention). You use superfluid helium3
as your hydraulic fluid to avoid fluid dynamic losses.

If your contention is true, then at some point in reducing friction and
other losses, while increasing the power by increasing weight, you will be
producing more power than is required to drive the truck around the track.
Thus, you can siphon off part of that energy to drive the truck while still
having other energy available to do other things.

And that, young padawan, is a perpetual motion machine of the first type.

--
--
David L. Burkhead -- Cold Servings, a webcomic
mailto:dburkhead@xxxxxxx -- http://www.coldservings.com
http://www.cafepress.com/oshaforcriminal <- OSHA for Criminals

"Dum Vivimus Vivamus"
While we live, let us live."


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