๐งต Using Inertia-based Optimizations to Improve the Performance of a Generator
Anonymous at Wed, 12 Feb 2025 18:27:26 UTC No. 16583850
Let's say we have an electric motor being used to power an electric generator. Now think about this: is it possible for the generator to produce enough electricity to power the electric motor?
The answer is no. Anyone who has so much as looked in the general direction of a physics book will tell you that this is impossible. No matter how much you optimize the motor to use as little electricity as possible, and no matter how much you optimize the generator to produce as much electricity as possible, the amount of electricity produced by the generator will invariably be less than the amount of electricity required by the motor. And there's nothing you can do about that.
However, that's wrong. Here's a way to get a generator to produce more electricity than what is needed by the motor powering it:
https://artiesays8.wordpress.com/20
Anonymous at Wed, 12 Feb 2025 18:36:29 UTC No. 16583857
>>16583850
Build one faggot
Anonymous at Wed, 12 Feb 2025 19:08:37 UTC No. 16583886
>>16583850
Got into the free power thing on Upwork with some schizo. He had a few undergrads do some math and thinks he just needs a couple tens of millions to build the first prototype but he really needs Elon to fund it. I tell him he needs to spend his money on a demo unit instead, he threatens to have me killed. The free power people might not all be schizophrenic but it sure attracts them.
Seek help in Thermodynamics.
>>16583857
This.
Anonymous at Wed, 12 Feb 2025 19:25:33 UTC No. 16583897
>>16583857
/thread
and hide