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Anonymous No. 16111938

could this work?

Anonymous No. 16111942

>>16111938
[math]\sum F = 0[/math]

Anonymous No. 16111948

>>16111938
Newton's third law says nope.

Anonymous No. 16111951

this one weird trick makes the oil jew seethe

Anonymous No. 16111959

>>16111938
magnet pulls on truck as much as truck pulls on magnet

Anonymous No. 16112228

Yes, over a very short distance, until the magnet and metal come together and the truck stops.

Anonymous No. 16112283

>>16111938
how can people look at this and visualise it going to right?
have you never played with a magnet before?

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Anonymous No. 16112484

Yes, here's a real world example

Anonymous No. 16112493

>>16112484
This unironically works. With a battery of course it's not a perpetuum mobile.

Anonymous No. 16112496

>>16112484
Because the fan is pushing on the air. There is an unbalanced force.

Anonymous No. 16112507

>>16112493
>This unironically works
In reverse or a breeze, maybe.

Anonymous No. 16112537

>>16112507
We could make a spring of the horizontal pipe so that the fan can move backwards while creating predominantly forward movement. Then the fan shuts off for a moment allowing the spring to pull the fan back. Repeat in bursts.

Anonymous No. 16113717

yes

Anonymous No. 16113800

>>16112484
>>16112507
The sail works here sort of like a thrust reverser on a jet engine

Anonymous No. 16113801

For it to work you'd need a world sized machine working to produce an infinity with a magnet set at a degree that would become available then.

Anonymous No. 16113923

>>16111938

> add a powerful and fast hydraulics
> enjoy free movement while it lasts using non-linear traction-speed area