Permanent Magnet Motor Invention

Tue, Feb 16, 2010

Magnetic Motor Videos

Magnetic Motor Review

07/07/2007 Here I made a little (crappy) 'tutorial' on an interesting PMM invention by Frank Fecera (google to find original patent) At the beginning of the video, the horizontal disk should not spin until after the gears are added (my mistake). It gives a false impression as if the horizontal disc will rotate if you spin the vertical disc, but that is NOT how it works — you need 3:1 gear set for horizontal disk to spin (as shown later in the video). N40 or higher grade Neodymium permanent magnets are preferred. OMFG. STOP ASKING! THIS IS A NON-WORKING FICTITIOUS INVENTION. PERIOD.

Magnetic Motor Review
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25 Responses to “Permanent Magnet Motor Invention”

  1. zvidalek Says:

    Please in whith software was it created?

  2. sika1991 Says:

    i think is designed with Catia;)

  3. Alpha9n Says:

    Maxon Cinema 4D. Awesome Software.
    IMO, in some ways it is more superior to 3DS Max.
    Go to maxonDOTnet for tutorials and gallery ;)

  4. avazons Says:

    Nice. Now lets see the prototype.

  5. Alpha9n Says:

    Well… I already built it, but it was confiscated by some dudes in black suits ;)
    Too bad.

  6. etramway Says:

    Your working the problem. We need more power. Good work.

  7. ShawnHydedotcom Says:

    actually he is right magnets are not permanent, based on usage they wear out over time with use. It doesn’t mean that cannot be used to power things like cars and be replaced with magnets that are made via wind power.

    I also don’t think this prototype will work how you think it will. But magnetic power is a great asset that has not yet been utilized, keep working on your concept.

  8. Alpha9n Says:

    Hmm.. I dunno… Lifetime of thousands of years [to be used in a PMM] does sound more like “permanent” to me.

    Yeah, magnets are quite mysterious. This search for free energy will perhaps one day help us understand them fully.

  9. truepal20032001 Says:

    btw, it’s not permanent according to the law of conservation of energy, the reason you think it’s permanent is because of the magnets,they repell and attract each other, the magnets captured their energy from the world’s magnetic field thousands of years ago, sure they last a long time but not for ever!

  10. Eonnn84 Says:

    hmm perhaps this is similar to how the Perendev Motor works… by the way, magnets last for approx. 400 years, and its quite easy to re-magnetise them. How much fuel would you need to keep your car running that long? :P

  11. ShawnHydedotcom Says:

    it’s not thousands of years, the magnets need to be replaced look at some of the companies making PMM already, they say lifespan is about 10 years.

  12. JRicky Says:

    this seems like a very good idea for a magnetic motor system. Somebody should try making a working model to see how efficiently it really works.

  13. Alpha9n Says:

    depends on the grade/quality. oh, and the ambient temperature as well.

  14. ibercaracole Says:

    Good !
    Wath is name of the software animation ?

  15. R0B0duck Says:

    do you forget that there most be a force to turn the horizontel wheel

  16. eyethesuicide Says:

    Supposedly it’s impossible to block a magnetic field right? Well, my brother took apart an old hard drive (serial number: 286391-001 do a google search) and inside this hard drive there were to superpowerfull magnets mounted on some strange alloy of metal, face to face I can hardly pull them apart, but back to back they barely even hold together! A very strange reaction indeed! (a blockable magnetic field would mean these magnetic motors can be made to work super efficiently)

  17. Alpha9n Says:

    This ‘effect’ have already been proven pretty much useless.
    However, maybe you’ll find some use for it if you experiment with it enough. Have fun.

  18. bexiang67 Says:

    like one comment below, I have also noticed a similar effect of hard-drive magnets, one side does not seem to be very magnetic. I heard the metal bismuth is very diagmagnetic, but im not sure if that means it’s like aluminum or nickel, or perhaps it repels magnetism?

  19. KbApimp007 Says:

    nice invention but how does the middle one keep spining?

  20. Alpha9n Says:

    Ok why are you asking before you even watch video to the end or at least read the description?
    THIS IS A NON-WORKING FICTITIOUS INVENTION.

  21. tommm3000 Says:

    This is well thought out and should work exactly as shown.

  22. pipoxyz Says:

    Nop..this doesnt work..it is actually a very basic concept of perpetuem motion.
    At the points the vertical rotor magnets enter the field of the horizontal rotor, first they will attract eachother with +1 +1, then the motion continues and the vertical magnet breaks the magnetic field with -1 -1. Then it has to enter the opposit field with -1 -1 and gets repelled from it +1 +1. =0 force.

  23. pipoxyz Says:

    I didnt include inertia. I guess if you could make the power of inertia constant and bigger then +1, it would work. Another way to make perpetuem motion work, is to have a nonmagnetic magnet shielding. You can put it in between the magnets at the point the fields seperate, or at the point it enters a repulsive field.

  24. Zi80 Says:

    Magnets spend energy and so it would eventualy stop, i had an idea sometime ago, a eletric car that uses eolic (wind) energy to replenish the bateries, in high speeds it would use almost no energy, having good autonomy, if you could combine in a car a magnetic motor, bateries and a windmill for harnessing eolic energy, the bateries would replenish the magnets, and the windmill would replenish the bateries, if the magnets dont need constant energy the car could have a huge autonomy.

  25. magnumblackburn Says:

    To put this on a large scale you need a lot of energy they have already invented this and have already applied this to some trains around the world.

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