Perpetual Motion: Hypothetical Machines That Could Run Forever! Part1

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2011
  • When people stop inventing perpetual motion machines, the decline of civilization will come.
    These are 5 working models of Perpetual Motion Machines I made for educational purposes. Not all of them are perfect, but they are still the part of the history of the world engineering. The mankind is looking for free energy for 1000 years resulting of discovery three Laws of Thermodynamics stated that perpetual motion is impossible.
    Please watch the same video in high quality:
    • Perpetuum Mobile Máqu...
    #veproject1
    #perpetualmotionmachine
    Perpetual Motion: Hypothetical Machines That Could Run Forever Movimiento perpetuo
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 26K

  • @NichaelCramer
    @NichaelCramer Před 3 lety +10847

    “The most difficult part of building a Perpetual Motion Machine is figuring out where to hide the batteries.”

    • @mk_pew
      @mk_pew Před 3 lety +138

      LOL😂😂😂

    • @elonmusk1064
      @elonmusk1064 Před 3 lety +56

      True

    • @KB09706
      @KB09706 Před 3 lety +28

      Lol

    • @meme-mx2cz
      @meme-mx2cz Před 3 lety +24

      Lolmao😂🤣

    • @gameguides8438
      @gameguides8438 Před 3 lety +93

      Funny comment but there is no batteries. And I don’t think that you even know what a perpetual motion machine is. The idea about it is that it gives it keeps it’s energy to make more energy to keep it moving (this is the idea behind it it’s not trying to me rude for no reason)

  • @thelemonmishap
    @thelemonmishap Před 4 lety +2343

    To be fair, the description does say that perpetual motion is impossible and this is just what those machines would look like

    • @zacharyrollick6169
      @zacharyrollick6169 Před 3 lety +55

      I like how this guy occasionally trolls the know it alls that go "Haha! Fake! I smart!".

    • @gameguides8438
      @gameguides8438 Před 3 lety +6

      True but that is also the point I was explaining what the meaning behind it

    • @FunkyJeff22
      @FunkyJeff22 Před 3 lety +7

      The description says that the 3 laws stated that perpetual motion is impossible. In another comment the uploader says that the 3 laws aren't proven.

    • @eigenman2571
      @eigenman2571 Před 3 lety +9

      @@hebdabid6260 True, maybe someone will find a way to break the laws of physics but think about it: Landing on the moon, flying, using electricity, it seems impossible but remains in the confinement of the universe. Yes, many physics theories have been proven wrong time and time again but thermodynamics is something so fundamental, it’s probably near impossible to violate. It’s not too similar to a theory or a statement that can be proven wrong, it’s basically what we think the rules of the universe are, it’s how existence works. Think of it this way: Your examples are kinda like saying “there’s no way you can build remote teleportation in vanilla Minecraft”. It seems near impossible but we’ve seen things in the game do that and we know it’s possible, because we’ve seen it before. Eventually, someone manages to create such a thing. Great! The “impossible” became possible. Now, with the thermodynamics, it’s like trying to make vertical slabs in vanilla Minecraft. We never seen anything like that in Minecraft (because it doesn’t exist in the code). You can compromise and make something else or maybe scale your builds up and add more detail but you can never truly make vertical slabs in vanilla Minecraft, as the game engine doesn’t have any code for it. Of course, I’m not saying you shouldn’t try to break the laws of physics and I’m not saying our understanding of the laws of the universe is absolutely correct, things can change and maybe it will, but I’m just giving my opinion on this.

    • @RepostCollection
      @RepostCollection Před 3 lety +1

      ?

  • @Paper_Brain
    @Paper_Brain Před 3 lety +2210

    I love how for all of the "overbalanced wheel" ones you can visibly see that the wheel should be balanced and shouldn't be moving

    • @surgeonr6980
      @surgeonr6980 Před 3 lety +16

      What you mean!

    • @masondougherty7412
      @masondougherty7412 Před 3 lety +59

      I love how they all start stationary and can apparently work if they have a little help from the start

    • @FlashDrive356
      @FlashDrive356 Před 3 lety +75

      @@masondougherty7412 yeah, it just stretches out the use on the energy to keep it in motion until a combo of friction and gravity stops it. (Unless it doesn't stop because of a motor powering it)

    • @someguy5035
      @someguy5035 Před 3 lety +4

      Hence...."over" (beyond) balanced.

    • @peltimies2469
      @peltimies2469 Před 3 lety +13

      Yeah, because perpetual motion is impossible, this video is just showing how they would work.

  • @Melovi
    @Melovi Před 3 lety +522

    if energy was free, I would take it to school any day.

    • @omarpikm2101
      @omarpikm2101 Před 3 lety +1

      if energy was free, i'd have money

    • @tony-pc4kd
      @tony-pc4kd Před 3 lety +1

      Sun : am I joke to u?

    • @santiagoperez2094
      @santiagoperez2094 Před 3 lety +7

      @@tony-pc4kd sun its a nuclear reactor and will run out of fuel some day, not free.

    • @alextheghost3574
      @alextheghost3574 Před 3 lety

      Too bad only stress

    • @XPForever
      @XPForever Před 2 lety +1

      @@tony-pc4kd just like other starts it will end up collapsing on its own mass, or just go extinct because it doesnt have any more hydrogen to keep making fusion

  • @sylpheeddashstep488
    @sylpheeddashstep488 Před 3 lety +627

    My favorite part about these kinds of machines is that you can see the motor struggle to keep up a perpetual motion in a smooth manner

  • @PlanetRockJesus
    @PlanetRockJesus Před 8 lety +569

    In the first example, the green liquid in the tube would NEVER go up farther than the level of the liquid in the vessel, except for momentarily from the pressure of pouring.

    • @thebogangamer1
      @thebogangamer1 Před 8 lety +16

      PlanetRockJesus it will if the pressure from the weight of the water is great enough how do you think a siphon works and it is an accepted part of science, the experiment has been seen and is true.

    • @gxzxyx294
      @gxzxyx294 Před 8 lety +76

      thebogangamer PlanetRockJesus is correct. This is not a siphon. Clearly, you do not know how a siphon works. Look it up. (At least you spelled 'accepted' right this time.)

    • @Smithy0013
      @Smithy0013 Před 8 lety +21

      PlanetRockJesus minor correction, it's not from the pressure of pouring, it's from the momentum of the water. There is no net force felt at the equilibrium point and so the water (which has mass and velocity and therefore momentum) continue traveling up where it feels the downward force of gravity and will eventually accelerate down into equilibrium.

    • @PlanetRockJesus
      @PlanetRockJesus Před 8 lety +53

      Smithy0013 This cannot work, and it does not work. It's a trick. There is a pump built into the machine, or, water is being added from another hidden tube. Build one yourself. It does not work.

    • @Smithy0013
      @Smithy0013 Před 8 lety +8

      PlanetRockJesus No yeah I realize it doesn't work. I was just correcting you when you said "except for momentarily from the pressure of pouring" It goes up momentarily because of momentum, not the pressure of pouring.

  • @gabrielmejia6230
    @gabrielmejia6230 Před 3 lety +722

    some people out here thinking they’re real smart calling out this video for being fake, yet they dont have the 2nd grade reading level to notice that it was mentioned that these would not realistically work (as far as we know) they are just to demonstrate how they would look like if these PMM did what they were first intended for them to do

    • @veproject1
      @veproject1  Před 3 lety +98

      Thanks for reading the section "Channel about"

    • @AitkrapooYT
      @AitkrapooYT Před 3 lety +15

      @@veproject1 you should pin this

    • @zhorary
      @zhorary Před 3 lety +4

      pin it

    • @drcrusty5517
      @drcrusty5517 Před 3 lety +5

      If anyone had the audacity to read his youtube description and/or channel information they would surely know it was just a demonstration of how it would operate functionally if the idea worked as intended to, but no one gives a shit about that. At the introduction of the video, it questions whether PPMs are impossible or not and talks about constructing these building designs to test if it is or not. This may inform the audience that this is a new video for experiments tested by someone who is interested in this subject and activity. At the end, it questions if you are impressed and whether you believe it or not. Again, this may inform the audience that the experiment for each test was successful and proven to be possible and informs them that the creator predicts there will be two sides of the project, real or fake, but he says not to say PPMs cannot be achieved because it cannot be functional. To not trick people into thinking this is a legitimate video, please inform the viewers that this is only a demonstration of the ideas if they would functional operate, in the forms of followed build designs, and that none of this can be realistically achieved in the video. Also "as far as we know" is incorrect, it's as we for sure know they're not fucking possible.

    • @karrotizhealthy
      @karrotizhealthy Před 3 lety

      @@veproject1 pin it you brat

  • @thenefariousbrawler
    @thenefariousbrawler Před 3 lety +48

    The legends say that it is still running to this day...
    until the motor burns out

  • @petermokry8020
    @petermokry8020 Před 6 lety +103

    What caught my attention is when the flask was first filled. Instead of having the tube bellow filled instantly along with the flask (as one would expect), it took a second or two longer at which point the fluid suddenly comes out the bottom. There is clearly a pump like mechanism positioned just bellow the flask that has to be primed before it starts to function; thus the brief delay in the flow down to the tube below.

    • @ba_ng_1879
      @ba_ng_1879 Před 11 měsíci

      Ikr thats what im talking about

    • @jesusvera7941
      @jesusvera7941 Před 11 měsíci +2

      i was thinking, thats not how hydraulics work

    • @prepare8286
      @prepare8286 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Uh, yeah, you do realize that this video is just “hypothetical” right? You know what that word means, right??

    • @jesusvera7941
      @jesusvera7941 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@prepare8286 "you have to realize" is a requirement, not a disclaimer in the beggining of the video, many know perpetual movement is impossible but others will get confuse and think this video is possible.

    • @Chris.robo143
      @Chris.robo143 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@prepare8286 r/wooooosh

  • @Ramiromasters
    @Ramiromasters Před 9 lety +177

    If this was real, then the machines would tend to accelerate.

  • @siouxm2117
    @siouxm2117 Před rokem +21

    I love these ideas and even though they're impossible the models are things of real beauty. Also thanks for the sciency comments explaining what would really happen- also beautiful 😍

  • @h.1327
    @h.1327 Před 3 lety +200

    永久機関じゃなくてもいいから、こういう動き続けるオブジェクトを家に置きたい

  • @Kevin-yh8ol
    @Kevin-yh8ol Před 8 lety +1666

    There's a book called "Physics for entertainment" by Y.E Perelman. In this book Perelman extensively talks about perpetual motion machines. He gives mathematical and scientific proof to debunk these machines that you've just shown.
    And none of the machines you've shown will work. You're using motors to run these contraptions.
    Anyway, I suggest everyone who hasn't read it to get the digital copy, it's really an amazing book.

    • @veproject1
      @veproject1  Před 8 lety +123

      +Kevin Arnold I have red all books of Mr. Perelman. And I even published one video based on his article. I'd like to correct you. Laws of Thermodynamics are not proven mathematically. They are result of observation. In other words, they are considered to be true because nobody has invented PMM for 300 years. Y. Perelman just talking about the friction and the amount of weights on left and right sides of the wheel

    • @OkamiRaoki
      @OkamiRaoki Před 8 lety +201

      +veproject1 And I'd like to correct you. If you managed to sit through a lecture of thermodynamics you'll get the mathematical proof. It's not that hard actually. And even if these machines in your video would really go on and on for ever they aren't perpetuum mobiles. A perpetuum mobile would produce energy. If you could manage to lift a weight with the wheels you'll have a real perpetuum mobile. But these machines just use the little energy you put in to it's best. And to be honest. I'm pretty sure after some years they would stop.

    • @Dadolaurenovic
      @Dadolaurenovic Před 8 lety +143

      +veproject1 Sorry, You're wrong. Stop getting your education from Buzzfeed.

    • @XRunner2628
      @XRunner2628 Před 8 lety +44

      +veproject1 i did a 20 second search and managed to find 3 different mathematical statements and one addressing infinitesimal processes in closed, homogeneuos systems
      must be magic then

    • @xBADNEWS88x
      @xBADNEWS88x Před 8 lety +29

      Funny how many doubters there are. Sure we might be smart as humans but we have not gotten to the point where we understand 100% of all physics in the universe. Just because its someones "theory" that energy cannot be created nor destroyed, does not mean its 100% correct. There could be an infinite amount of energy that we have not discovered. Yeah I'm sure cavemen thought they were smart too, because they could outsmart an animal and turn it into his next meal, but he would have never understood the world we live in today. Just as we will not understand the world of technology 500 years from now. What if we could harness the energy of a black hole? What if we can harness the energy of dark matter? Ideas that seem crazy now could be a part of everyday life thousands of years from now. All you doubtful minded people are just limiting the capability of innovative ideas. We will never know if perpetual motion exists until we have tried every possible way of attempting it...

  • @wyldeman0O7
    @wyldeman0O7 Před 8 lety +1323

    You can clearly see the motor start at 4:17

    • @lettuceplay7480
      @lettuceplay7480 Před 8 lety +15

      +wyldeman0O7 Wanna see my motor start?

    • @DamagedF0X
      @DamagedF0X Před 8 lety +78

      +wyldeman0O7 They're all fake. There's been no proof of any form of true perpetual motion. It's impossible.

    • @lettuceplay7480
      @lettuceplay7480 Před 8 lety +16

      I HAVE to agree with you. They give no true explanation of their own experiments and that leaves us to simply wonder. But, personally, I want to believe its real. I think it is real, but believing isn't enough. We NEED proof. But I still feel strongly about perpetual motion, so fuck YOU, and any other fucker nut who thinks its fake. (I love you.)

    • @DamagedF0X
      @DamagedF0X Před 8 lety +8

      LETTUCE PLAY If you need explanation, then clearly you don't understand what they're trying to do here how they're trying to imply the way it's done, and why it's impossible. It fools simpletons. But if you can see the grand picture of each machine, you don't even need a professor to tell you why it's impossible. You clearly can't see the grand picture, or else you wouldn't need detail explanations on these machines. Make yourself understand why they think these machines would work and then understand why it can't. Also, all of these were done by motor. You can see the inconsistency in their RPM, because the weak electric motors don't have the firm torque to maintain a smooth roll. FAKE

    • @wyldeman0O7
      @wyldeman0O7 Před 8 lety +14

      +LETTUCE PLAY water doesn't flow up hill does it? Spacecraft can orbit freely for a really long time, but eventually slow down due to minute friction from air molecules. There is no scenario that you get "free energy" from.

  • @Danimal1177
    @Danimal1177 Před 3 lety +78

    "Lisa! In this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!" -Homer

    • @Atamastra
      @Atamastra Před 3 lety +5

      "And this perpetual motion machine she built is a JOKE! It just keeps going faster and faster!"

  • @gesuto3404
    @gesuto3404 Před 5 lety +276

    多くの研究者が永久機関に挑み、成功せず消えていった永久機関の模型たち

    • @user-ot9nr5jb5x
      @user-ot9nr5jb5x Před 3 lety +17

      これどれも永久機関にならなかったよね?

    • @otinpo_ikuiku
      @otinpo_ikuiku Před 3 lety +70

      なりませんでした
      どっかのコメントで
      [永久機関を作るために研究して分かった事は、永久機関は作れないということ]って書いてあってすごい皮肉だなぁと思いました(小並感

    • @user-vr4wr9ek5f
      @user-vr4wr9ek5f Před 3 lety +2

      大体老朽化かなんかなんだっけ

    • @marcnt9850
      @marcnt9850 Před 3 lety +2

      Quisiera hablar taka taka :(

    • @user-my6jm3ll6z
      @user-my6jm3ll6z Před 3 lety +33

      @@user-vr4wr9ek5f
      老朽化以前にできてない...

  • @griffinmackenzie
    @griffinmackenzie Před 9 lety +170

    Wouldn't they stop eventually due to friction?

    • @chrism6904
      @chrism6904 Před 9 lety +49

      Griffin Mackenzie Yes

    • @gxzxyx294
      @gxzxyx294 Před 9 lety +261

      Chris M No, they stop when the concealed motor is unplugged.

    • @Novagunner
      @Novagunner Před 8 lety +2

      44sharpshooter ha! And sacrifice their own profits for efficiency? Unlikely. Unfortunately with the way the world works there are many great inventions that would rock at us forward technologically up to 50 years but the unfortunate part with that is sometimes it's just not profitable and nobody wants to make it

    • @44sharshooter
      @44sharshooter Před 8 lety +2

      travis williams Really, at least in the world of astronomy, they are always looking for new energy sources as we know what we have will soon run out. These things just do not work. Build some of them and try them out. Anyone can do it and word gets out it has been done and the inventor makes billions. They are not out there trying to hush hush these things up. if a factory got their hands on a perpetual motion energy they would use it for sure and make HUGE profits.

    • @ProjectVRD
      @ProjectVRD Před 8 lety

      +44sharpshooter There is no money in perpetual motion energy generators because once a design is out the supplier of raw materials (who no doubt has shares in the energy companies and a senator on a puppet string) will have no business.

  • @ryansmith3448
    @ryansmith3448 Před 9 lety +107

    Machine 1: If you look closely you can see clear water being pumped in before the dye.
    Machine 2: Watch the center of the cone relative to the green line. It constantly moves downward. It will have to lift it back up to restore its potential energy
    All of the others will stop eventually due to friction.
    If you really have a design that violates the first and second laws of thermodynamics go ahead. Make it. You'll be filthily rich. According to this video it should be easy.

    • @porksausageninja
      @porksausageninja Před 9 lety +6

      Yeah I think I saw clear water injected into the thin tube before the green water reached it but wasn't so sure, but obviously without pumping in water to give the fluids some initial thrust, the green water in the thin tube can only stay at the same height as the portion of it in the flask when it reaches equilibrium. This video is seriously cancer.

    • @Glyff3083
      @Glyff3083 Před 9 lety +1

      No that's the actual water. The trick is that there are actually two sections of tube that connect at the wooden piece. Where it covers the tubes there is an impeller that forces the water to move, creating suction on the bottom and pressure on the top, cycling the fluid. That's why it bubbles so violently when liquid first hits the impeller. That's also why the parts holding up the tube are made of wood, to hide the wires that power the impeller.

    • @gabrielclark3108
      @gabrielclark3108 Před 9 lety +2

      umm, technically in the overbalanced wheel examples more than the friction the real catch is that there is actually one balance point that the wheel will eventually reach again. It is just really efficient but that is about it. For example in the one at 4:50, it is true that the weigths on the right are further from the center, so they apply more torque. However, ue to the angle and desing the weights at 12 and 1(as in clock positions) are "pulling" to the other side.
      Either way, all these examples have been overly discussed, explained etc.....still pretty interesting imo.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před 9 lety

      James Alderman
      No. There's no impeller at the connection you're referring to. And, no, the wood sections are not to hide wires. The wood sections are to hide the tubing to the electric pump in the base.

    • @Glyff3083
      @Glyff3083 Před 9 lety

      I guess that works too

  • @tylermitchell2970
    @tylermitchell2970 Před 3 lety +16

    You should do a video about which "perpetual" motion machine shown here can go the longest before losing its energy to an outside system.

    • @hallucinati
      @hallucinati Před 8 měsíci

      Every single one of them would imstantly stop. It would be an all-around tie.

  • @sailorquestion3229
    @sailorquestion3229 Před 3 lety +22

    I sometimes question how hard it is to read a description. Specially before commenting.

  • @skarmoryfly
    @skarmoryfly Před 7 lety +197

    Thank you for reporting this glitch. It will be patched in the next update of Life.

  • @LouLope
    @LouLope Před 7 lety +281

    #1 Self flowing flask. In reality, the liquid both in the flask and the tube would come to the exact same height and stay there. The bottom of the flask and wood holder obviously have a hidden pump. You can see that the fluid as it poured in does not flow into the tube immediately as it should if it was only an open tube.

    • @mcchickennug
      @mcchickennug Před 6 lety +7

      I was about to type that. Thx you help me know there are other people who aren't dumb

    • @uranictomcat3373
      @uranictomcat3373 Před 6 lety +1

      It's like the pipe in your toilets or sink, the one that bends upwards before it goes to the floor, you know what I mean. After water is done being pushed through it, the last bit of water levels out on both sides of the pipe.

    • @alih.2817
      @alih.2817 Před 6 lety

      At first I thought the later green liquid is motor oil instead of water (due to water stickiness feature to the walls of the funnel) so the first glassy liquid would be water the cameraman tries to show it is not working. BUT even in a large funnel (to have a lot of pressure by the weight of stored liquid upon eachother) the whole gravity pressure of the stored liquid would be restrained by the pipe walls and I don't assume even the motor oil to be able pass the high level of the stored water

    • @robertklonoski9068
      @robertklonoski9068 Před 6 lety +6

      Run it at quarter speed and watch the flask fill for over two seconds before anything comes out the bottom.

    • @poruchikrzhevskiy7667
      @poruchikrzhevskiy7667 Před 6 lety +5

      Incorrect. The “engine” would work for a while. On the merit of higher pressure in the wider reservoir versus the pressure in the tubing. But you are right, it’s by no means perpetual as the rate of flow into the flask is below the rate of the outflow, so, eventually, the system would balance out and the motion would seize.

  • @jimkelly4286
    @jimkelly4286 Před 5 lety +417

    The best perpetual motion machines consist of:
    video loops
    hidden motors
    false perceptions
    deceptions
    :-)

    • @m.skittle9864
      @m.skittle9864 Před 4 lety +36

      Jim Kelly read the description dumbo

    • @Frigerator_
      @Frigerator_ Před 3 lety +4

      Wait, even the ":-)" ? lol

    • @athame1217
      @athame1217 Před 3 lety +5

      @@m.skittle9864 read the comments dumbo

    • @shirai8908
      @shirai8908 Před 3 lety +1

      @@athame1217 what?

    • @athame1217
      @athame1217 Před 3 lety

      @@shirai8908 the person i mentioned deleted his comment

  • @Manuel_Valentino
    @Manuel_Valentino Před 3 lety +28

    The only working perpetual motion machine I've seen is that "waving" cat statue at my local Chinese restaurant.

  • @dropinabucket1484
    @dropinabucket1484 Před 7 lety +8

    I watched this video 3 months ago and when i came back it was still playing!!

  • @tubeyt860
    @tubeyt860 Před 6 lety +756

    they patched this bug in the 2.0.17 update

    • @Static_250
      @Static_250 Před 6 lety +8

      ur not in matrix, have a nice day!

    • @lunalinkpser
      @lunalinkpser Před 6 lety +10

      Woooosh

    • @Bone_Muncher
      @Bone_Muncher Před 5 lety +14

      Actually they patched this bug in the 0000000.000000000000.000000000000000000000000000000000000.0000001 update

    • @dandcc9192
      @dandcc9192 Před 5 lety +12

      DanTheMan31 More like they fixed the bug during alpha development.

    • @ChoboUnjeon
      @ChoboUnjeon Před 5 lety +1

      lol

  • @timdavis7845
    @timdavis7845 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I was always under the impression, that true perpetual motion was impossible. This video now has me questioning my assumptions. Thanks for sharing this with us :-) 👍

    • @BallMuncher555
      @BallMuncher555 Před 4 měsíci +1

      These all use motors to give the illusion of being perpetual motion. None of these are actually possible and have all been demonstrated to not actually work.

  • @brandonchan5387
    @brandonchan5387 Před 3 lety +54

    Just remember that in another universe with different laws of thermodynamics, these would be legit and free energy would be everywhere

    • @TunaBear64
      @TunaBear64 Před 3 lety +18

      A universe like this would likely disappear a plank time after it is created

    • @viktorramstrom3744
      @viktorramstrom3744 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TunaBear64 But what if the laws of physics of that universe enables it to not disappear?

    • @Lanay_
      @Lanay_ Před 3 lety +4

      ​@@viktorramstrom3744 that it's not how it works, if energy can't be transformed that means that the universe would basically be a sea of energy that basically can't be converted into matter no matter how hot or how much pressure is being applied to it

    • @lolzhunter
      @lolzhunter Před 3 lety +2

      that universe would explode instantly because of the feedback loop, like for example when you hold a mic too close to the speaker it makes that terrible ringing sound, the ringing is the universe exploding forever

    • @lolzhunter
      @lolzhunter Před 3 lety +2

      wait sorry i change my view, lanay is right since if there arent laws of thermodynamics that have the universe tend to disorder, or have things that want to be at a lower potential energy level, then explosions cant happen in the first place so it will just be a big universe packed with energy with no way to get rid of it, an explosion waiting to happen but never will basically

  • @japanimated9683
    @japanimated9683 Před 7 lety +76

    I'm not. Physics major but every example shown has friction.
    Not just the air around objects but also any other objects that touch or interact.
    That's why a bike on flat ground eventually loses energy when you stop pedaling.

    • @123devinzz1
      @123devinzz1 Před 7 lety

      they all use gravity in some way.

    • @maxb9767
      @maxb9767 Před 7 lety +7

      +123devinzz1 yeah but think about this, if it uses gravity to bring it down, it's gotta bring it back up again doesn't it ?

    • @123devinzz1
      @123devinzz1 Před 7 lety +2

      +Max B youl noticed their design so the weight is farther out when coming down therefore having more leverage on the structure then the weights closer in on the other side going up.

    • @maxb9767
      @maxb9767 Před 7 lety +9

      +123devinzz1 try to build it for yourself and you'll see that these are fake.

    • @_DarkKnight2301_
      @_DarkKnight2301_ Před 7 lety +3

      +Max B you build it yourself and see how wrong you are

  • @aaron9828
    @aaron9828 Před 7 lety +640

    Plot twist: none of this is real

    • @aaron9828
      @aaron9828 Před 7 lety +11

      At least not the actual perpetual motion things ✌️

    • @jackyvacances
      @jackyvacances Před 7 lety +1

      dans lesible des millier d inventeur ont deja tous essayees et un dicton dit rien ne se cree tous se transforme regarder la roue qui tourne les billes se resserre d un coter mais de l autre une bille descent pendant que 4 monte de l autre coter ne perdez pas votre temps le perpetuel n existe pas

    • @aaron9828
      @aaron9828 Před 7 lety +3

      jackyvacances au revoir es wird nie mehr sein wie es war... Speak English dumbass 😂

    • @aaron9828
      @aaron9828 Před 7 lety +1

      ***** read my first comment on this comment

    • @rickewilde
      @rickewilde Před 7 lety +1

      I'm confused, are you saying these machines are fake and don't actually work and that perpetual motion is impossible..cos I was convinced as they look so feasible.

  • @no1bandfan
    @no1bandfan Před 2 lety +11

    “In this house, we obey the laws of thermodynamics!!!”

  • @sakgjtaoehtla4478
    @sakgjtaoehtla4478 Před 3 lety +17

    なんだ、全部みせかけてるだけで、仕掛けが内部にあるわけね。そりゃそうだよなー 一瞬夢を見てしまい興奮してしまった・・・

    • @user-js6hg9iz1l
      @user-js6hg9iz1l Před 2 lety +3

      永久機関を求め続けるその働きが永久機関なんやで!()

    • @user-qk2zv6fc3o
      @user-qk2zv6fc3o Před 2 lety

      @@user-js6hg9iz1l この先人類が滅亡したとしたら永久ではなくなるよ。

    • @user-qk2zv6fc3o
      @user-qk2zv6fc3o Před 2 lety

      雑魚が

    • @user-js6hg9iz1l
      @user-js6hg9iz1l Před 2 lety +4

      @@user-qk2zv6fc3o なるほど、確かにそうですね。でもそれって、仮に永久機関が出来ても壊れたら永久機関じゃないと言っているのと同じなのでは?

    • @user-zh9cz5dz1v
      @user-zh9cz5dz1v Před 2 lety

      @@user-qk2zv6fc3o そもそも永遠なんてないからな、宇宙にも星にもいつかは死ぬからな。

  • @miloblue2052
    @miloblue2052 Před 7 lety +13

    During the pour, notice the blockage at the thick support just below the funnel. Then notice how it starts fast, with added large bubbles. Then you notice that the base is a box, not just a block. Would be a little less conspicuous if the pump had been mounted closer, or an impeller as suggested by Greenaum.

  • @pokemin3346
    @pokemin3346 Před 6 lety +112

    未だにコメントで喧嘩してるの笑うw

  • @magurokanpachi1865
    @magurokanpachi1865 Před 4 lety +38

    ダークマターを手懐けられれば可能かもねw

  • @DarKodama
    @DarKodama Před 2 lety +5

    Lisa, in this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!

  • @DogeTrump
    @DogeTrump Před 6 lety +26

    From where I come from, we obey the laws of Thermodynamics

  • @phant0
    @phant0 Před 7 lety +13

    I thought of doing a self-powering fountain like the first example in the video when I first saw my dad use a siphon to fuel up a car when I was 6. I tried to replicate it at home and quickly realized that the exit end of the siphon hose has to be lower than the water level in the cup for it to work (and outside of the water cup). Otherwise the water in the tube isn't heavy enough to pull more water out with itself, which makes sense if you do the math about it. I then understood that everything is self-balancing like this and that you cannot just get free energy out of no where. That was way before I even heard of the law of conservation of energy. If you watch the "endless fountain" from the video you can see the green water bubbling after is appeared to pass through that wooden beam that supports the base of the cup. But these air bubbles seem to be coming out of no where. It's because these air bubbles are coming from the pump hidden inside the wooden beam as the pump starts dry. This also explains the delay between the moment the liquid is seen reaching the bottom of the cup and the moment it is seen coming out in the hose below that wooden beam. The same thing applies for all those "self-spinning wheels". If you sit down and examine them carefully you realize that these wheels are not constantly heavier on the same side during its entire revolution. It just looks like it could work at the first glance if you make false assumptions. The only reason why they work in the video is because there is a powered device hidden somewhere in the rig that spins them. Oh and this cone wheel thing going "up" the rail? The cone is actually going down a hill because the rail opens up to lower the cone faster than the ramp rises to raise it.

  • @JavierGonzalez-oi1fv
    @JavierGonzalez-oi1fv Před 3 lety +1

    Simplemente: Geniál !
    No obstante, esos mecanismos pmm, necesitan una fuerza que los saque de su estado de equilibrio ("inercia"); Una vez en movimiento las fuerzas de roce del propio mecanismo y del aire lo detendran en algún momento...
    Disfrutenlo...

  • @banjopatterson3574
    @banjopatterson3574 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks to the good humans behind this channel!
    These kind of videos should be consciously searched by all and everyone.
    More ‘Human Beings’ and less ‘Human Doings’ in 2021 I hope...

  • @mikemisch7968
    @mikemisch7968 Před 7 lety +33

    I can remember not too many years ago when everyone including scientists said that it would be impossible to cross the Atalntic Ocean in less than 7 days. Thinking out of the box might surprise you some day.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před 7 lety +9

      YOU SAID: "I can remember not too many years ago when everyone including scientists said that it would be impossible to cross the Atalntic Ocean in less than 7 days."
      == Pfftttt. What are you? A 900 year old vampire? Ships have crossed the Atlantic in under 7 days for more than a century.
      == And, c'mon, name one scientist who ever said that crossing the Atlantic in under 7 days was IMPOSSIBLE?? What ARE you babbling?
      YOU SAID: "Thinking out of the box might surprise you some day."
      == And, that's relevant to the famous physics failures in this video, how?? I mean, this isn't new science here. This stuff was disproven almost 400 years ago. Even Da Vinci never expected his machines to work, and he essentially built them to show people that they DO NOT work. But, here you are in a video showing motorized novelty toys, encouraging people to "think outside the box"?? What box?

    • @stephenmiller9009
      @stephenmiller9009 Před 7 lety +1

      that's not too many years ago given that the earth has and will be around for billions.....

    • @stephenmiller9009
      @stephenmiller9009 Před 7 lety +3

      the *outside of the box part* was hard to comprehend I get it

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před 7 lety +2

      Papi Panther
      Sigh, he said he REMEMBERS it. Sheeesshh. Did you read a single word before you wrote your silly reply?

    • @stephenmiller9009
      @stephenmiller9009 Před 7 lety

      Funny how you replied to the wrong guy ironically, do you have a brain?

  • @technichy3633
    @technichy3633 Před 9 lety +44

    dont leave those running all the time they might lag the server

  • @regiwiz
    @regiwiz Před 2 lety +1

    What's the soundtrack and where can I get it?

  • @abelsm6270
    @abelsm6270 Před 3 lety +8

    The monke in me wants to spin every one of those as fast as possible

  • @shaun-ography7745
    @shaun-ography7745 Před 9 lety +8

    Wow. How handy is it that everyone in the comments is an expert in physics.

  • @IamtheLordofDoom
    @IamtheLordofDoom Před 6 lety +32

    Love how all these wheels aren't moving until they're 'started' ;)

    • @yeetusdeletus8565
      @yeetusdeletus8565 Před 2 lety

      ??? I hope you know that in the description it is stated these are demonstration only

  • @user-metallicshyva
    @user-metallicshyva Před 3 lety +51

    最後のやつ回りながらビクンビクンしてるの草

  • @celixblade
    @celixblade Před 2 lety +1

    What music did you used?

  • @Masterhughesproductions
    @Masterhughesproductions Před 8 lety +72

    hey have you got a time machine, need one badly!

    • @veproject1
      @veproject1  Před 8 lety +13

      Master Hughes I have one to travel to the future only

    • @veproject1
      @veproject1  Před 8 lety +8

      I'd like to explain.
      Right after you turn the time machine on trying to travel to the past, the machine will stop just because she was off in the past.
      Comments?

    • @u-kn
      @u-kn Před 8 lety +1

      veproject1 unless you go to a parallel time dimension.

    • @gxzxyx294
      @gxzxyx294 Před 8 lety +2

      veproject1 No, a time machine would not work like that. The vehicle would be surrounded by a temporal discontinuity field, which allows the vehicle and its contents to travel backward in time relative to the external reference frame, but time aboard the vehicle is not affected. So, you as a passenger do not grow younger and disappear. Neither does the vehicle experience reverse aging. IMHO :) BUT, if you stick your hand out the window there's gonna be trouble!

    • @Masterhughesproductions
      @Masterhughesproductions Před 8 lety +1

      Just so long as there room for a ice chest. gotta have a cold drink when traveling.

  • @murderyoutubeworkersandceos

    how long does "forever" last? About 20s.

  • @bluerojo
    @bluerojo Před 3 lety +1

    Loving the battery in the self-flowing flask

  • @sarcasticguy4311
    @sarcasticguy4311 Před 10 měsíci

    Neat how every single one of these is on a very elaborate base structure.

  • @saml7820
    @saml7820 Před 7 lety +31

    new video idea-these machines after one hour

    • @MikeOxolong
      @MikeOxolong Před 6 lety +5

      One hour? Most of these stop after like 2 seconds, if there weren't any motors.

  • @RFDarter
    @RFDarter Před 10 lety +9

    #1 - pump in the device (look at how long I takes the water to get from the bottom of the glass into the tube)
    #2 - The hole table is titled as I the camera
    #3 - Simply a motor in the back of the device
    #4 - Again a motor in the back
    #5 - Motor in the base of the device or the back
    #6 - That's my favorite. Of course there is a motor again somewhere in the device, but the funny part is you see that so clearly, because as the weights are falling, and stopped hard you would expect the wheel to get a boost. The reason for that is a gearbox, because the standard electrical motors are spinning way to fast, that it would not look real at all, he needed to slow it down, with the help of a gearbox. On the side where the motor is connected you can easily spin it, but on the other side, where the wheel is connected it is extremely hard to move it, because the gear ratio is so high.

  • @tolkt-ymd
    @tolkt-ymd Před 3 lety +16

    3:12これが止まれてる時点でもうおかしいと思うの

    • @user-ig7hz1nj9r
      @user-ig7hz1nj9r Před 3 lety +1

      むしろ止まってる状態に球を一つ追加するわけだから、そのバランスが崩れていい感じに動き続けそうじゃない?(語彙力)

  • @reychan7616
    @reychan7616 Před 4 lety

    espectacular te hace imaginar lo imposible es posible asi se avanza abriendo la mente a la imaginacion

  • @Chancy-da
    @Chancy-da Před 5 lety +51

    正直、永久機関が作れるかもって思いながら、あーだこーだ考えて色々作ってた時が1番楽しかった説。
    最初に、絶対に出来ないって分かっちゃた時の残念感半端なかっただろうな...

    • @river4679
      @river4679 Před 2 lety +6

      それでも人間がコレだけ技術が発達してもなお永久機関を研究し続けるのは
      きっとそれそのものがロマンだからなんやろなぁ……
      出来ないと証明されても[出来るかも?]って覆そうとする人達も少なからずいるってわけやんね

    • @deaddog5973
      @deaddog5973 Před 2 lety

      Ur right buddy, I've perfectly understood

    • @user-fy5db9ng6p
      @user-fy5db9ng6p Před 2 lety

      @レンコンゲームズ 出来るかもよ

    • @user-fy5db9ng6p
      @user-fy5db9ng6p Před 2 lety

      @レンコンゲームズ じゃあそれをまた違うエネルギーに変換させて最終的に元に戻したら?

    • @user-fy5db9ng6p
      @user-fy5db9ng6p Před 2 lety

      @レンコンゲームズ 成り立つかもしれないよ

  • @rockyowens9017
    @rockyowens9017 Před 7 lety +52

    I would like to see you make a perpetual cone train track (longer experiment).

    • @veproject1
      @veproject1  Před 7 lety +1

      it's here
      czcams.com/video/fQQ8_PDAdfI/video.html

    • @voraciousweasel57
      @voraciousweasel57 Před 7 lety +1

      It's fake. Look how high the two edges of the cone are on top of the wood. He obviously has a downhill piece so the cones can roll down, hence why it sinks down into the wood.

    • @uginvissar2361
      @uginvissar2361 Před 7 lety +2

      +Voracious Weasel do you not realise as the two wood tracks separate the further it travels. as the split increase the coned wheel can "climb" it. those pieces are not parallel. re watch that segment please.

    • @cameronparkes6629
      @cameronparkes6629 Před 7 lety +7

      The cones center of mass is getting lower as it rolls because the cones inclination is greater than the inclination of the rails. In essence the center of mass is rolling downhill

    • @jacoblester1007
      @jacoblester1007 Před 7 lety +5

      It's just a ramp in disguise.

  • @HueManatee
    @HueManatee Před 3 lety +1

    i wonder - although these obviously cannot power anything, should we use these for inspiration on how to make energy transfer very efficient? since (unless there's a motor hidden) these machines tend to work by efficiently using the energy they were given.

  • @ferro1398
    @ferro1398 Před 2 lety

    I'm curious how does the first one work with the liquid? I'm assuming there's a mechanism that continuously pumps it in the left hidden just below the funnel or at the right side where it's being gripped.

  • @LouLope
    @LouLope Před 7 lety +31

    #4 Rolling balls; if you do the math, at any given point the number of balls in their position and torque generated would be equal on both sides. This contraption would stop immediately when it loses momentum, and come to a final balanced rest.

  • @boaster50
    @boaster50 Před 10 lety +8

    These are machines that conserve the energy added to them from a starting motion such as pouring water in the container or giving a wheel a turn in the first place. The energy remains within the system so well that it cycles through with seemingly infinite energy. The reason why the systems are hypothetical is because they will eventually lose the energy in the system after enough time has passed due to friction. So unless you make a frictionless machine you can't have a truly perpetual machine. Even then no energy is being made and if you tried to remove energy from the system you could not receive any more energy than you applied to the machine in the first place.

    • @MrSupercar55
      @MrSupercar55 Před 2 lety

      And that's what ball bearings are for. With friction reduced, motion is prolonged. Have you ever noticed how a wheel on an overturned shopping cart won't spin as long as a fidget spinner? That's because the fidget spinner has ball bearings and can spin for a long time, and most people just get fed up and stop them spinning, whereas the shopping cart wheel doesn't have ball bearings and therefore can only spin for so long.

  • @pranaymondal1950
    @pranaymondal1950 Před 3 lety

    In the double cone model, you are forgetting that you first have to push the model to the narrower part, which is actually consuming work as increase in potential energy(as the centre of gravity is moving upward).
    Then the model is using this potential energy to go uphill, because now the centre of gravity is actually moving down)
    So technically what you are demonstrating is the second part, but you missed the beginning where the model is consuming work to attain the narrower rail to uplift its centre of gravity.
    I am pretty sure we are missing something like this in those other models, it just needs time to get revealed.
    But I really appreciate those models, creativity levels of those geniuses are amazing and 'almost' convincing.

  • @lizroga3348
    @lizroga3348 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Nice project!, now lets wait until it stops because of phisics

  • @AlexPBenton
    @AlexPBenton Před 5 lety +15

    All of these are just very good at conserving energy, and the train one is just rolling downhill!

    • @qwertyuiopasdf160
      @qwertyuiopasdf160 Před 3 lety

      These are fake

    • @AlexPBenton
      @AlexPBenton Před 3 lety +1

      @@qwertyuiopasdf160 Yes, that’s why I said conserving energy, not perpetual motion

    • @qwertyuiopasdf160
      @qwertyuiopasdf160 Před 3 lety

      @@AlexPBenton yes but why do people think tat these work

    • @AlexPBenton
      @AlexPBenton Před 3 lety +1

      @@qwertyuiopasdf160 Because they look like they work

    • @qwertyuiopasdf160
      @qwertyuiopasdf160 Před 3 lety

      @@AlexPBenton but they dont

  • @CalculusVariations99
    @CalculusVariations99 Před 7 lety +41

    Confusing energy and forces leads to non-sensical ideas such as free energy (perpetual motion) machines. Such machines always fail precisely because forces are not energy, and you can't extract one single bit of energy from a force itself. For instance, a "free energy" machine could consist of a ball that rolls down a hill and hits a paddle, which turns a wheel. The problem with this machine is that the ball has to be returned to the top of the hill for the process to continue, and the amount of energy you have to put into your machine to put the ball back at the top of the hill equals the energy you get out of your machine from the spinning wheel. Actually, the amount of energy you get out of your machines is always less than the energy you put into it because some of the inputted energy is wasted to heat energy through friction. Free energy proponents devise ever cleverer ways to get the ball back to the top of the hill (or the magnets separated again, or the rubber band stretched again, etc.), hoping that just one more extra gear or wheel will somehow magically create energy out of nothing. But they can never get around the fact that forces are not energy and you can never get more energy out of a system than you put in.
    What about hydroelectric plants that extract energy from the falling water in rivers? Don't they extract energy from gravity for free? No. The water in the river is no different from the ball that you have to haul up the hill. The water got its energy not from gravity but from some external agent that placed it high up in the mountains against gravity, so it could fall down the river bed. The external agent in this case is sunlight. Sunlight warms the ocean, causing the water to evaporate and float into the sky. The energy contained in the photons of sunlight is converted to the potential energy of the water molecules that are lifted high in the sky. These water molecules then rain down to the ground, form rivers, and flow back down to the ocean, converting their potential energy to kinetic energy, heat, and (in a hydroeletric plant) electricity. Ultimately, therefore, hydroelectric plants extract solar energy from water.

    • @gxzxyx294
      @gxzxyx294 Před 7 lety +3

      Excellent! Now, if only the idiots would read (and believe) what you wrote ...

    • @RR-fd1gk
      @RR-fd1gk Před 6 lety +1

      Just checked, sunlight is free, therefore no cost to supply water to the river, a tidal lagoon also is free to fill via moon power.
      Just cos you can give a very long explanation of a basic process doesn't mean that you are right.

    • @gxzxyx294
      @gxzxyx294 Před 6 lety +3

      Well, yes Robin, but that's not what Calc-99 is talking about. Solar power, tidal power, etc. are not generally considered to be "perpetual motion" (PM). He does, however, equate "free energy" with PM, which is a bit confusing. Sure, sunlight is free, but in the same sense so are coal and oil ... they're just laying there, waiting to be dug up (the purely human-invented concept of mineral rights notwithstanding). But that's not what PM is. PM is a device that runs with no energy input at all, which is impossible.

    • @ayushsharma9270
      @ayushsharma9270 Před 6 lety +1

      Still these machines are impossible

    • @GhostRiderAZ
      @GhostRiderAZ Před 6 lety +2

      Every single one of these functions as demonstrated for the most part, IF perfectly balanced which is the real challenge. What CalculusVariations was saying, these function because the only force that drives them is the force created by the weight being moved, no less, no more. More over you have to remove all resistance by perfectly balancing the forces around the circle. If you tried to generate energy with one of these you would be adding resistance which would prevent them from working. In other words, the energy generated is the same as the energy that makes it move.

  • @Antoates76
    @Antoates76 Před 5 lety +9

    Mass multiplied by arm length equals moment.

  • @danburch9989
    @danburch9989 Před 3 lety +3

    First one: There's about 1" of green liquid in the bottom of the glass before any flows past the bottom support. The liquid is pumped through a U-tube via a pump in the base.

    • @yeetusdeletus8565
      @yeetusdeletus8565 Před 2 lety

      Yep, all of them are fake, read the description, they are for demonstration only

  • @Mtaalas
    @Mtaalas Před 10 lety +4

    This is a first that goes "hypothetical" :)
    Love the honesty. Liked!

  • @gregorypdearth
    @gregorypdearth Před 7 lety +18

    That cone rolling 'up' hill kills me. The passengers in a train designed around this concept would have to go UP steps to get out of the train at exactly the increase in elevation the gradual slope presents. The weight moves down at a higher rate than it goes up the slope. The axis of rotation (the pointy ends of the weight) goes down, not up.

    • @Rejoice.
      @Rejoice. Před 7 lety +2

      +hotpockets222 You are the best kind of person.

    • @joydivision39
      @joydivision39 Před 7 lety

      +jaguilar7643 yeah man

    • @joydivision39
      @joydivision39 Před 7 lety

      +jaguilar7643 yeah man

    • @joydivision39
      @joydivision39 Před 7 lety

      +jaguilar7643 yeah man

    • @JediDoc
      @JediDoc Před 7 lety +1

      To make that possible to have infinite motion out of that, furthermore, you should use an infinitelly large cone, put that cone on infinitelly long rails that part further and further from each other, to infinity.
      Since there's no such a thing as "infinite" something, you can't make a train out of that concpet, anyway.

  • @user-du2hy9do9y
    @user-du2hy9do9y Před 2 lety

    Ваши механизмы нуждаются в доработки, которые очень интересные. Надеюсь когда нибудь мы их будем претворять в жизнь

  • @lostbp
    @lostbp Před 3 lety +10

    all the smart guys forgot to read the description where it does say perpetual motion machines are literally impossible

    • @wheedler
      @wheedler Před 3 lety

      It only says the laws of thermodynamics say they're impossible; the uploader has posted comments saying these laws haven't been proven.

    • @lostbp
      @lostbp Před 3 lety

      word?

  • @zeromailss
    @zeromailss Před 5 lety +6

    Nice visual, would like to have one or two for decoration
    Speaking of free energy, the sun is bright outside

  • @RylanEdlin
    @RylanEdlin Před 10 lety +11

    Very cool, though as many people have mentioned, these are really just mechanisms for reducing the friction of the system. Eventually, they will stop spinning.

  • @dumb_tan2539
    @dumb_tan2539 Před 2 lety

    When I was a kid, this thought came to my consciousness that can we build a system in which the energy is not transformed into any other form... I mean the system will be in a loop forever... It will be so cool...
    And now when I'm seeing this , it feels so satisfactory.

  • @LinkOStalker
    @LinkOStalker Před 5 lety +9

    *MUSIC*
    *Far The Days Come Letter Box*

    • @LinkOStalker
      @LinkOStalker Před 4 lety +1

      @Ethan Ansell ;)

    • @opepa-
      @opepa- Před 4 lety

      ありがとう、何年も前から曲名を知りたかった

  • @brown_note4710
    @brown_note4710 Před 7 lety +490

    visual "education" but none of this actually works perpetually

    • @brown_note4710
      @brown_note4710 Před 7 lety +25

      and that overbalanced wheel so obviously has a motor! that thing wouldn't move evenly, it would jolt every time an arm dropped!

    • @KyaneOficial
      @KyaneOficial Před 6 lety +4

      It can have a kinetic wheel attached behind, the same thing cars have to smooth cilindrical force.

    • @brown_note4710
      @brown_note4710 Před 6 lety +9

      oh yeah, to absorb more of the energy

    • @smawkm
      @smawkm Před 6 lety +1

      those who ignore must read the universe is expanding perpetually

    • @SKyrim190
      @SKyrim190 Před 6 lety +7

      The cone going "up" the slope is real, but it doesn't have any perpetual motion in it. It is a matter of the center of gravity going down (potential into kinetic energy)

  • @kadajjWJM
    @kadajjWJM Před 8 lety +18

    4:18 Pay close attention. Isn't it cool how the motor that actually turns the wheel kicks on and drags his finger a little bit before he pretends to push start it?

    • @4egosha
      @4egosha Před 8 lety +6

      Good catch. Totally faked it. Though golden video for certain audience.

    • @k.s3ca
      @k.s3ca Před 6 lety

      scam lol

    • @yeetusdeletus8565
      @yeetusdeletus8565 Před 2 lety

      *DEMONSTRATION ONLY, READ DESCRIPTION*

  • @luckymars2410
    @luckymars2410 Před 3 lety

    i don't know what these are and all this scientific stuff can't get through my head, but boy did i watch this whole thing until the end. very entertaining video, although i have no idea what did i just watch

  • @rdmiroar
    @rdmiroar Před rokem

    Un video extraordinario. Coincido: en el momento en que el Hombre deje de pensar en el movimiento continuo, se pudráa todo muy mal. Felicitaciones.

  • @LostandFoundTravel
    @LostandFoundTravel Před 10 lety +3

    What a great collection of demos. The link didn't load - where was this?
    Nice to see activation energy slowly turning to heat via friction...

  • @labibbidabibbadum
    @labibbidabibbadum Před 6 lety +4

    Wow - if only there was a way to get the electricity for the hidden motors for free these would be true perpetual motion! Great stuff.

    • @kh6853
      @kh6853 Před 11 měsíci

      Just verifying you read the description

  • @sridhars7117
    @sridhars7117 Před 2 lety +1

    Around 40 years ago, I read a book published by Mir Publishers, Moscow. The Author / Translator (Ya. Pearlman) has described various perpetual motion machine models - He has explained very well why the given model was a failure and is of the view that it is impossible to achieve perpetual motion

  • @czoraa21
    @czoraa21 Před 3 lety +64

    cats always land on their feet and buttered toast always lands butter side up. Strap buttered toast to cats back and then attach the two to a generator. the only real perpetual motion device that could power the world.

    • @Vi-pv3xi
      @Vi-pv3xi Před 3 lety +4

      Underrated

    • @vastingood
      @vastingood Před 3 lety +2

      I think you would just create a black hole. Or the strap would break :)

    • @lucasmartin4883
      @lucasmartin4883 Před 3 lety +2

      *tl;dr how to create a black hole

    • @Hocotatium111
      @Hocotatium111 Před 3 lety

      Two issues. First, these two phenomena only occur before landing. They likely use some of their potential energy to right themselves in the air, which is of course, not perpetual. Second, only living cats land on their feet, so you need to provide some sustenance to the cat, meaning it's not perpetual. It's probably just better to stick to the machines in the video.

    • @brown22sugar25
      @brown22sugar25 Před 2 lety

      @@Hocotatium111 too bad they don’t work either

  • @cesarflores8450
    @cesarflores8450 Před 7 lety +67

    DO NOT LET STONERS SEE THIS ****

  • @Gilmaris
    @Gilmaris Před 8 lety +11

    "Oh, ye seekers after perpetual motion, how many vain chimeras have you pursued? Go and take your place with the alchemists."
    -Leonardo daVinci

  • @adrianorodrigues4321
    @adrianorodrigues4321 Před rokem

    Teoria flui em nossa mente, daí colocamos em prática igual como na teoria !!

  • @Mrskarr3524
    @Mrskarr3524 Před 3 lety +10

    Most of these machines only look like they would power themselves nothing more

    • @yueshijoorya601
      @yueshijoorya601 Před 3 lety

      By that virtue, just the existence of air will stop it.

  • @atulgarg5801
    @atulgarg5801 Před 10 lety +10

    all of the above working models are operating on external source of energy..a simple force analysis of above machine will show that they will come in a equlibirium or a balanced condition after a small angular displacement..and in first case of boyles model there is a hidden pump under the base and a hidden tube at the vary junction of reservoir and tube ....pump outlet tube is connected to the inlet of the pipe coming out of reservoir

    • @distraughtification
      @distraughtification Před 10 lety

      good observation. the (hypothetical) in the title already told everyone that though.

    • @yeetusdeletus8565
      @yeetusdeletus8565 Před 2 lety

      *DEMONSTRATION ONLY, READ DESCRIPTION*

    • @atulgarg5801
      @atulgarg5801 Před 2 lety

      @@yeetusdeletus8565 why are you getting offended

    • @yeetusdeletus8565
      @yeetusdeletus8565 Před 2 lety

      @@atulgarg5801 wut, I'm just copy pasting this around to any comment I glance at that looks like it's saying *FAKE!* because this is a demonstration only

    • @atulgarg5801
      @atulgarg5801 Před 2 lety

      @@yeetusdeletus8565 weird way of finding people to have conversation with them

  • @WhiteCollarCrimeDNB
    @WhiteCollarCrimeDNB Před 8 lety +7

    I'm impressed with the craftsmanship and how well you hid the motors.
    good magic trick.

    • @matthistauritzbakker1992
      @matthistauritzbakker1992 Před 8 lety

      these are really working thins they just aren't 'infinite' they do go for a long time though

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před 8 lety

      +Matthis Tauritz Bakker == Sorry Matthis, you're wrong. These are motorized novelty toys. They'll come to a pretty quick stop when you unplug them from the electric socket.

    • @matthistauritzbakker1992
      @matthistauritzbakker1992 Před 8 lety

      rockethead7 oh....... But how do you know?

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před 8 lety +1

      Matthis Tauritz Bakker I understand the physics. But, if that's not good enough for you, then you can go to veproject1's website and blog, where he explains that these are motorized examples of failed "inventions" from centuries ago. Or, you can go to his "behind the scenes" channel and see the hidden motors. Or, you can just pay close attention to this one, and notice the long delay as the clear fluid is spurting through the hidden tubing as the hidden pump is priming, before the green fluid slowly follows behind.

    • @matthistauritzbakker1992
      @matthistauritzbakker1992 Před 8 lety

      rockethead7 OK well...... I knew perpetual motion machines were impossible but I didn't know that they lose momentum that fast. Can you explain why the fluid wouldn't work cause I couldn't think of something

  • @vimini5378
    @vimini5378 Před 4 lety +10

    "Energy cannot be created nor destroy"

  • @kalles8789
    @kalles8789 Před 2 lety +1

    What's the soundtrack of this Video? Is it something from Earth?

  • @user-jb1vm5rp9r
    @user-jb1vm5rp9r Před 6 lety +28

    BGMがコナンの犯人が語っとるシーンみたい

    • @user-ql8rq9jp6k
      @user-ql8rq9jp6k Před 3 lety +3

      それにしか聞こえなくなったやんけw

  • @seezookey
    @seezookey Před 8 lety +146

    If any of these were real, the person who sold them would be a billionare.

    • @veproject1
      @veproject1  Před 8 lety +18

      +seezookey Yes, I am

    • @papab34r
      @papab34r Před 8 lety +19

      +seezookey they may be perfectly real, what you dont see is A the hidden motor or B them stopping after a certain amount of time since no engine/system ever conceived have been 100% efficient due to a number of reasons, air resistance for one. The Uploader of this video sure knew how to troll the intrawebs, I find this humorous

    • @ramisnow3358
      @ramisnow3358 Před 8 lety +3

      +veproject1 Whoever you are guys,, you are so damn awesome and brave .. don't care what those close-minded fuckers say ... keep it up

    • @papab34r
      @papab34r Před 8 lety +30

      theres a difference between having an open mind and having a hole in your head :-)

    • @ramisnow3358
      @ramisnow3358 Před 8 lety +2

      I'd like to be crazy rather than being a parrot ... Acting traditionally won't get you anywhere ... Not mention how boring it is ..
      Abstraction of willingness and ambition is the real disability, Proofed by many instances .. Ameen

  • @carni1233
    @carni1233 Před 2 lety

    I love this kind of stuff I wish I had a little wood shop at home where I could just work on this kind of stuff all the time

  • @dh4134
    @dh4134 Před 4 lety +8

    Magic is so easy on the internet wallah!

  • @greenaum
    @greenaum Před 7 lety +199

    These presumably have hidden motors, although the water one is impressive, I can only think there's a small impeller pump somewhere in one of the non-transparent bits.
    As a simple test, you can build the liquid one at home with a funnel and some tube. Notice that it doesn't do what the one in the video does!
    By this day and age I'd hope we're more advanced than Da Vinci's time, enough to know there's no such thing as perpetual motion. But they're nice fakes.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před 7 lety +10

      "These presumably have hidden motors, although the water one is impressive, I can only think there's a small impeller pump somewhere in one of the non-transparent bits."
      === The pump is in the base. The tubes are in the wooden structure, beginning at the thick wooden support bottom of the flask.
      "I'd hope we're more advanced than Da Vinci's time, enough to know there's no such thing as perpetual motion."
      == There's no shortage of believers in nonsense. But, FYI, Da Vinci didn't think his would work. He built them to show people that they do NOT work. So, you correct, but it's especially sad that people still haven't learned Da Vinci's lesson after all of these centuries.

    • @crispinsmith730
      @crispinsmith730 Před 7 lety +5

      greenaum you are wrong, have a closer look, the water one actually works when you use the right kind of water, aka soda water, it's the bubbles in the water that push it up the tube similar to how an aquarium air pump causes water flow... and it will only work for a few minutes before all the bubbles has been released... give it a try at home with a funnel and pipe and some fizzy drink, it's kinda fun

    • @lukesmalley7204
      @lukesmalley7204 Před 7 lety +6

      water wants to achieve equilibrium so it will only push up to where the tube and the flask are the same height

    • @CrusaderDeleters
      @CrusaderDeleters Před 7 lety

      It also looks like this isn't even colored water. It looks like something far more viscous, like motor oil.

    • @AliAhmad-cb2bl
      @AliAhmad-cb2bl Před 7 lety +1

      greenaum no I did the water one it's real

  • @joubertjunior9573
    @joubertjunior9573 Před 6 lety +10

    This phenomenon is impossible to happen by the need to create energy from nothing, which is contrary to the principle of energy conservation.

    • @ayelmao1224
      @ayelmao1224 Před 3 lety

      It literally says in the description that this is impossible it’s just a demo

  • @elepaocv3661
    @elepaocv3661 Před 4 lety

    How many time they kept in movement? It was terrific

  • @shithinkuttappy5205
    @shithinkuttappy5205 Před 3 lety

    These are permanent solutions for continues / non stop motion ??????
    I need ansure