Added: 2 years ago
From: pageau1987
Views: 12,412
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  • Nice video loop, retard.

  • Wow, your an idiot.. Stainless steel ball? That isn't even attracted to a magnet if it is stainless steel. And Yes, you can see where you cut the video, it is obviously a loop. Fail.

  • You need to do a better video editing job. You can see where you spliced the video.

  • So the ball is magnetic, so it is not stainless, but chrome plated steel.

    Even though it is a great experiment !!!!!!.

  • @vipond50 cheaper stainless steel is magnetic, Commercial kitchen surfaces/extractor hoods are normally made out of cheaper stainless.

  • @frackcha cheaper stainless steel is magnetic

    Methinks it has nothing to do with cheap or not,

    just the composition is different.

    But it is true, there is both, magnetic and non-magnetic stainless "steel",

    which ain't no steel, actually.

  • u need to make a how to build vid

    ' plz i believe in it

  • I am not sure in that but this is 3 second looped video mixed with some background scene...Fake.

  • The reason why it stops is because of friction and gravity wearing it down.

  • Could the reason that it only runs for about 12 minutes be because that's how long it goes before the battery powering the little motor hidden in that box runs out?

  • Dude why would you make a fake ass video? Does it make you feel good?

  • This video is edited..closely watch the rug and the fan blades.

  • @dupeeq its just the shudder speed of the camera -_-

  • Interesting.... But stainless is not magnetic. Therefore, I don't understand how the ball would be pulled towards the magnets.

  • Magnets srore Magnetic Power, like battery's store electrical enegy, sorry

  • @Films4You - magnets do not store magnetic power. That myth was created by loonies who believe in free energy from magnets.

  • hi ... I enjoyed this experience, I am 12 years old, live in Brasil.Tenho to do a science project. Would you teach me how to do this your machine.

    Thanks.

    Carlos

  • Put the ball in ferrofluid. No friction! Maybe the axis too. Wow. Good work hoss!

  • @zorchart That would be awesome

  • What's in the box? Ah, ha ha ha, lol, a motor? Looks like a old DVD rom or something and then you hooked up a bedini circuit to it, lol. No, seriously.

  • @debunkified The box is a cd rom case, I took the spindle out of the cd because it has really low resistance and I put graphite powder inside of it then I soldered it to the outside of the cd case.

  • it would be nice to look under and in the box to confirm your theory

  • so damn fake get a life

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  • That's incredible! What about a model that is 200 times bigger? It could probably run most if not all day.

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  • 12 minutes till your batteries run out loll

  • Laws of "perpetual" mouvement of magnetic/gravity machines :

    1- They don't need inicial impulse to start running.

    2- Once running they don't stop unless a brake is applied.

    3- They work without any electric wires or motors attached.

    4- And finaly (unhapply)... they never work, even if you try very hard.

    If any of these rules is broken, the machine is a fake .

  • a bedini in a box -fake!!

  • interesting

  • i wonder if your getting sound sleep dude?

  • how can the universities teach there is no such thing as perpetual motion,then turn around and show everyone a model of a atom?i'm tired of being lied to be science.

    some 90%of the universe is unaccounted for,yet scientists and engineers point to flawed laws of physics to say no such thing as over unity.

    i think we should send the universities the jaws of life so they can pull their heads out of their behinds.start teaching worthwile courses and quit lieing to everyone.

  • @ez3usx2 - you have missed the point. At the atomic level things whizz around perpetually.

    What the physics teacher actually said was perpetual motion MACHINES are impossible. So take your head out of your backside.

  • @LiamXaoh

    just like life to thrive in arsenic

    was impossible until they discovered it

    don't believe everything your physics teacher told you

  • @tgmo07 - bacteria thriving in a harsh environment is not breaking any laws of physics. It may have been considered unlikely. Why don't you tell us how scientists thought the world was flat too or that scientists said the Wright brothers would never fly, they're all bullshit too.

    Perpetual motion machines are impossible, learn to live with that thought.

  • @LiamXaoh Perpetua mobile are very well possible. These work fine, unless either i) a human with a basic understanding of the laws of thermodynamics approaches, ii) or somebody attempts to video the working machine, or iii) the inventor runs out of investor's money, so he can't produce any longer rigged results.

  • @SH0LVA - LOL - Also animated perpetual motion machines work perfectly too.

  • seeing that it dose stop after 12 minutes. each rotation of the wheel is slower then the first.because of residence.the axel has to ride on a baring which creates friction and so on and so forth.with out friction there is possibility of it.but so far it escapes us.

  • looks like a good fake....nice one

  • very interesting approach, 5*'s

  • Can you please show free axel rotation of the wheel without the ball first, and then with the ball. This way it looks like the wheel would rotate anyway by some mechanism in the box?! :|

  • Not bad.

  • Very intriguing !

    Nice experimentation !

    I put 5 stars.

    Do continue your researches !

    BlueManCa.

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