When the vertical component of the centrifugal force of the rotating eccentric load exceeds the weight of the brick, the brick will move off the ground. Non-vertical components will drive the brick horizontally every time the net force exceeds the weight of the brick. Two small synchronous motors, if properly aligned and fixed to a 1 ton rigid load, could allow it to be moved by another small motor. No wheels are required!
US Patent office refused a patent on this concept, despite seeing an operating system with a small example. On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 2:11 PM MSF <foster...@protonmail.com> wrote: > This is one of my favorite subjects. Not Hutchison, but speculation about > how the ancients were able to cut and transport those huge blocks of stone. > It might be that electrical effects are involved, but I'm not sure that's > necessary. Hutchison effects might be real, but those videos he made had > some rather obvious primitive video fakery. At least that's my opinion. > > Here's an experiment I did longer ago than I care to remember. It's > simplicity itself. I epoxied a small DC motor to the top of a brick and > placed it in a sandbox. The motor had an eccentric weight attached to the > shaft. Connected to the motor was a variable DC power supply. Obviously, > the frequency of vibration could be controlled by varying the current to > the motor. As the RPM of the motor increased to a certain level, the brick > began to move. Depending upon small adjustments of the current, the brick > might rotate in one direction or the other or shift slightly. When > stabilized, the brick could be moved with the touch of a finger. > > You could see light under the brick through the oscillating sand. This > doesn't exactly constitute levitation, but you could see how it could be > interpreted that way. There are so many ways of creating sonic frequencies, > it's hard to say how ancient peoples did it. > > There you have it. I encourage anyone reading this to replicate my little > experiment and tell us what happened.