@heavym3tal A tesla turbine uses a force similar to that of a tornado, drawing the air down into a spiral in the center, out through an exit hole doesn't it?
@XxLeurxX Not really. The theoretical operation of a Tesla Turbine is that a fluid flows past the disc, dragging the disc along with it (so it transfers some of its kinetic energy to the disc), causing it to spin. The air will travel around the disc as the disc speed increases, and the direction of travel becomes a spiral toward the center of the disc. The holes in the center provide an exit for the fluid. Running the turbine in reverse as a pump causes a pressure difference in an enclosed pipe.
True Free energy devices exist,But the Big corporations spend millions to ensure that information does not spread to the masses,Find a motor that needs no fuel or input at LT-MAGNET-MOTORdotCOM ,Let the revolution begin!
Actually, since the fluid exits immediately after the nozzle, you are getting a different action from the exiting portion. Specifically you're getting the compressor function in that area, rather than the Tesla driver (engine) function. Basically what you have is an impact turbine working at the periphery with plades set at 90 degrees.
yes there is a lot of energy loss, but the only reason I did this was to demostrate the effect of the boundary layer on the turbine. Same effect happens if you place the edge of a pizza cutter under running water from the water faucet.
Pls see the video of the diesel motor 2 strokes by valves only can learn something
ricardojp07 3 days ago
@ricardojp07 Please spam somewhere else.
heavym3tal 3 days ago
This....really isn't a Tesla turbine without the enclosure, it's just air spinning discs...
XxLeurxX 3 months ago
@XxLeurxX That's all a Tesla Turbine is---> Air(or whatever fluid) spinning a stack of discs
heavym3tal 3 months ago
@heavym3tal A tesla turbine uses a force similar to that of a tornado, drawing the air down into a spiral in the center, out through an exit hole doesn't it?
XxLeurxX 3 months ago
@XxLeurxX Not really. The theoretical operation of a Tesla Turbine is that a fluid flows past the disc, dragging the disc along with it (so it transfers some of its kinetic energy to the disc), causing it to spin. The air will travel around the disc as the disc speed increases, and the direction of travel becomes a spiral toward the center of the disc. The holes in the center provide an exit for the fluid. Running the turbine in reverse as a pump causes a pressure difference in an enclosed pipe.
heavym3tal 3 months ago
e=mc2
weldon0m 8 months ago
@weldon0m NO. Is torque:(3uVr^2)/2h
sayrocknoanime 8 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Great video ! More Tesla tech in videos "Tesla cold electricity" by HorizonDelta
HorizonDelta 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
True Free energy devices exist,But the Big corporations spend millions to ensure that information does not spread to the masses,Find a motor that needs no fuel or input at LT-MAGNET-MOTORdotCOM ,Let the revolution begin!
perplexfraction 1 year ago
Actually, since the fluid exits immediately after the nozzle, you are getting a different action from the exiting portion. Specifically you're getting the compressor function in that area, rather than the Tesla driver (engine) function. Basically what you have is an impact turbine working at the periphery with plades set at 90 degrees.
teslstirlputt 2 years ago
without the enclosure, you lose a lot of the friction energy transfer.
11supaman11 3 years ago
yes there is a lot of energy loss, but the only reason I did this was to demostrate the effect of the boundary layer on the turbine. Same effect happens if you place the edge of a pizza cutter under running water from the water faucet.
heavym3tal 3 years ago