>This explains why few designs are staged to give a smooth rotation,
>Indeed it seems that it may be the killer of these devices, So while it
>seems that there are probably a number of things that use magnetic
>fields for the FE effect, but I suspect most are inertial.
>
>
>John Berry
I don't think that it's a killer. If we can take magnetic energy and make
it work against gravity then we can achieve over-unity, but the trick is how
we can do it without penalties associated with rotation (centrifugal force)
or linear movement (running out of track. . .)? What kinds of force can we
use to our advantage without suffering the penalties of other forces?
Planes fly because of their drag. Without drag we cannot achieve lift, but
if we didn't have gravity planes would be a lot easier to fly. . . . .
Chris