Old Oct 11, 2011 | 07:09 PM
  #74 (permalink)  
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rush549
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Joined: Jun 2008
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From: Parsons Kansas
Default Re: Is a self charging electric car possible?

Originally Posted by amx1397
look at it this way two cars welded together one FWD one RWD both elect,, the FWD car charges the RWD car as it drives,, lets say it will go 100 miles on a charge now when it is low charge then switch to the RWD car and do the same,and so on,,,,,and so on,,,,,and so on. i did not say it would work,,,my sample RC cars,A & B i tried it on did work and is still working ,,,I was told. jim
You claim you tried tying two RC cars and created perpetual motion? Please, please, please tell me I have misread this.

Your idea will not work. It is the first thing any inventor worth his salt has tried and failed on. Your dragging a lot of weight around. plus the energy required to run your other wheels as a generator. Add the losses of transmission along the way, and you will get minimal recovery. In fact, you will likely burn more energy than retrieve in this manner. Making it a net loss. You would be far better off trying to limit weight and drag than trying to generate electricity by using electricity. Though the use of generating properties during braking is a good and novel way of recouping some usable/plausible energy.

Parasitic drag is your primary opposition. Maybe you could take your ideas into space. Very little drag problems in zero oxygen/gravity in outer space. Go on, I dare ya'.

One of the cooler ideas I've seen is the use of rising and lowering ocean tides to fill huge reservoirs. As the tide rises, the water rushing in runs generators. when the tide runs out the generators reverse and create energy as well. It is elegant in it's simplicity. And the closest you will ever find to a free ride. Charge your electric car from this, and there's your perpetual motion!!!
 

Last edited by rush549; Oct 11, 2011 at 07:12 PM.
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