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Science

Japanese Inventor's Motor Uses 80% Less Power 1095

novakane007 writes "A Japanese inventor named Kohei Minato has created a new kind of motor. It uses magnetism to perpetuate the motor motion. As a result the motors uses 80% less energy than a conventional motor, while still maintaing the same horsepower. "Minato assures us that he hasn't transcended the laws of physics. The force supplying the unexplained extra power out is generated by the magnetic strength of the permanent magnets embedded in the rotor. 'I'm simply harnessing one of the four fundamental forces of nature,' he says." On top of the energy savings the motor runs cool to the touch and is significantly quieter than a tradtitionally powered fan. Sound to good to be true? Well he's already started selling the fan to a chain of convience stores in Japan. Hopefully soon the design will make it in to your home PC, allowing them to run much quieter."
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Japanese Inventor's Motor Uses 80% Less Power

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  • Quiet PCs? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by octalc0de ( 601035 ) * on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:48PM (#8873617) Journal
    "Hopefully soon the design will make it in to your home PC, allowing them to run much quieter"

    What? I wasn't quite aware that computers generated their own power yet... Also, the article says the engines are quite large- probably impossible to be able to use them in a laptop setup. Plus, anyway, power supplies are quite quiet anyway, and they don't generate their own power. The problem with the noise from computers these days is unbearably loud hard drives and harsh fans.
    • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by molarmass192 ( 608071 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:54PM (#8873724) Homepage Journal
      You can buy pretty damned quiet PC fans, however, you're right that today's hard drives are louder than hell. Also, I'd bet that they generate a lot more case heat than they let on. That said, am I losing my mind or didn't I read back in 1993 that we'd all be using solid state hard drives by now??? Guess that was a sure thing in the days of $600 hard drives.
      • CompactFlash (Score:3, Interesting)

        by tepples ( 727027 ) *

        didn't I read back in 1993 that we'd all be using solid state hard drives by now??? Guess that was a sure thing in the days of $600 hard drives.

        Pricewatch.com tells me I can get a CompactFlash card reader for USB for under 20 USD and a 2 GB CF card for under 200 USD. There also exist adapters to plug CF cards into ATA cables. It seems that the desire for more capacity in a 3.5" desktop HD enclosure has outpaced the desire for larger persistent solid-state memory in desktop machines.

      • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by ciroknight ( 601098 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:18PM (#8874180)
        That just goes to show how slow technology adoption rates has become. Ever since compact flash's invention and continual adoption in hardware, Hard drive volumes have increased amazingly. We went from densities of around 10gb when CF became mainstreamed to now having 250GB hd's ship in computers, and 350GB hd's available for purchase.

        That being said, none of the flash memory densities have really scaled like this, and are just being left in the dust, sadly. I'd love to have an iPod with a SD/MMC card reader so that I could exchange songs with a friend at school if they wanted me to listen to something really quickly, or so I could pull data off the iPod and put it into a computer.

        Speaking of putting an SD/MMC card into a computer, when will Dell start shipping memory card readers in their machines that have dumped floppies, or are they just going to chalk it up to rewriteable CD drives and abandon solid state memory cells altogether?
        • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:5, Informative)

          by w3weasel ( 656289 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:33PM (#8874434) Homepage
          or so I could pull data off the iPod and put it into a computer
          1.)connect your iPod
          2.)In terminal (on OSX) type "cd /Volumes"
          3.)type "ls" (your ipod (whatever you named it) will show in the list).
          4.)type "cd <your iPod's name>"
          5.)type "ls -a"
          6.)explore the folders whose names begin with "." (dot).

          all your music is in there. use "mv" as needed.

          I'm sure on windows, the command line, or at the very least, Cygwin can accomplish the same task
          • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:5, Informative)

            by Rexz ( 724700 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @05:18PM (#8875015)
            In Windows you just need to set Explorer to show hidden files and you can drag-and-drop music from your iPod to anywhere else.

            There also exist many third party utilities [ipodlounge.com] for extracting music from iPods. These can be used to generate filenames, which the iPod often discards as it exclusively uses ID3 tags to populate its database.

      • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:4, Informative)

        by Kris_J ( 10111 ) * on Thursday April 15, 2004 @09:01PM (#8877008) Homepage Journal
        I'd love to switch to a solid-state hard drive, but the number of write cycles before it dies is way too small. I guess you might be able to get away with it if you had a few Gig of RAM so you didn't need swap and you had room for a RAMdisk-based temp/tmp folder, but just putting a Flash-drive in place of your system's hard drive will cause it to fail within a few months.
    • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by s20451 ( 410424 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:55PM (#8873763) Journal
      Hopefully soon the design will make it in to your home PC, allowing them to run much quieter

      Actually I find it odd that this is the first application that occurred to the poster.

      Gentlemen, this new motor design will make battery-powered cars a reality, reduce industrial energy consumption by a third, possibly save the world from global warming ... oh yes, and it will make your case mods mad 31337.
      • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by tbase ( 666607 )
        LOL- Thanks for saving me some typing- my thoughts exactly. Someone needs to turn off the computer and get outside, or at least turn on the news. Sheesh! Oh yeah- and don't forget the whole dependence on foreign oil thing!

        Seriously, 80% less power consumption is going to shave one heck of a lot of battery weight off a 100% electric car, or give the hybrids way better mileage. Hell, it might even bring us a little closer to solar powered vehicles.
      • by Stile 65 ( 722451 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:25PM (#8874312) Homepage Journal
        Actually, assuming this is for real, we now have a source of free energy.

        With an input of 540 watts and an output of ~1.57 KW (when hooking the motor to a generator) all you need to do is split the output of the generator between the motor and some other load, and your generator is now powering the motor that drives it and up to ~1KW load. That's 1KW of free energy!

        I think it has a very high likelihood of being BS, but if it's not, then hell... I can't wait to see it! Live-off-the-grid time for me!
        • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Stile 65 ( 722451 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:28PM (#8874349) Homepage Journal
          By "very high likelihood" I mean "near certainty." Free energy... riiiight. :D
        • by p4ul13 ( 560810 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @05:10PM (#8874912) Homepage
          Marge: I'm worried about the kids, Homey. Lisa's becoming very
          obsessive. This morning I caught her trying to dissect her own
          raincoat.
          Homer: [scoffs] I know. And this perpetual motion machine she made
          today is a joke! It just keeps going faster and faster.
          Marge: And Bart isn't doing very well either. He needs boundaries and
          structure. There's something about flying a kite at night that's
          so unwholesome. [looks out window]
          Bart: [creepy voice] Hello, Mother dear.
          Marge: [closing the curtains] That's it: we have to get them back to
          school.
          Homer: I'm with you, Marge. Lisa! Get in here.
          [Lisa walks in, chuckling nervously]
          In this house, we obey the laws of thermodynamics!
        • Re:Quiet PCs? (Score:5, Informative)

          by sprintkayak ( 582245 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @05:49PM (#8875370)
          From Gizmodo.com [gizmodo.com]

          JOEL JOHNSON -- After reading the story about Kohei Minato's super-efficient motor, reader Chris Drake wrote in with this explanation:

          All Minato's power calculations appear to be wrong (apparently it's a common mistake many scientists make); you can't measure input power using a multimeter when the current drain isn't constant. You can see his workshop in his videos - all his calculations are done using common multimeters and a desktop calculator. Minato motors use an optical sensor to "switch on" the "stator" (electromagnet) for a fraction of each RPM, so he'd need an oscilloscope and some funky math to figure out how much current the motors are really sucking up (or a stopwatch; and wait for the driving battery to go dead, then estimate based on the battery capacity). It's still a super neat idea though - which seems to boil down to "drive motors from the outside using aligned permanent magnets and momentary pulses from the stator" instead of the traditional "sick the stator in the middle" idea.
    • by the_rajah ( 749499 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:13PM (#8874079) Homepage
      I worked as a patent consultant briefly and in a short time saw a couple of perpetual motion schemes. The most elaborate was proposed by a bank security guard and involved a hydraulic pump and motor combined with an electric motor and generator.

      I explained that energy in a system worked like a bank account (bank guard -remember?) You put energy in and you can take it back out, but you can't get quite as much back out as you put in because there was a service charge in the form of friction. He begrudgingly understood. I complemented him on his nice drawings.

      "In this house we obey the law of thermodymanics" - Homer Simpson
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:48PM (#8873619)
    Uh, no thanks. :)
    • by raygundan ( 16760 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:52PM (#8873696) Homepage
      As opposed to what? Oh, wait, the ones that are in there are ALREADY magnetic. How do you think normal electric motors work?

    • You think the fan that cools your motherboard is not magnetic? Think again.

      Even the motor in your hard drive is magnetic.

      You just don't have to worry, because the magnetic fields are not very strong.

      • by GigsVT ( 208848 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:57PM (#8873788) Journal
        To the contrary, the magnets in your hard disk are the most powerful types of permanant magnets, rare earth magnets. They are very strong. A single hard disk magnet can usually lift at least 10 pounds, maybe more.
        • by Ralph Wiggam ( 22354 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:05PM (#8873954) Homepage
          I can't be the only Slashdotter to have cracked open a dead hard drive. Those magnets are very very strong. Could someone with a better physics background than I please explain how a drive based on tiny fluctuations in a magnetic field can operate next to such a powerful magnet?

          -B
          • by ron_ivi ( 607351 ) <sdotno@cheapcomp ... s.com minus poet> on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:14PM (#8874093)
            Mod this guy up... This is a really strong magnet; and dead hard drives are an awesome source for refrigerator magnets.

            To your "how a drive ... can operate next to it"... I think this is the explanation.

            While a normal magnet

            N---S

            has a field that falls off at something like 1/R^3 or 1/R^4, you can arrange more than one that falls off even faster. I think like this:

            N---S
            S---N
            N---S
            S---N

            And extend it to 3-dimensions and it'll fall off even faster than that.
            That way the field will be super-strong next to the magnet, but super-week even a short distance away.

            • by timmi ( 769795 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:31PM (#8874396)
              Have you ever tried to erase a floppy with a magnet? I have tried on several occasions and it is harder than you might think.

              to "Randomize" the magnetic "markings" on the disk, you need a Degausser. (Gauss being the pioneering physicist on the subject of magnatism.

              A Degausser is an electromagnet that creates a magnetic field that is constantly changing. that is what you need to "Randomize" the magnetic alignment of the particles on the disk in order to erase it entirely.

              For the record, I took a full, height, five-and-a-quarter hard drive apart, (I think it was on the order of 1 GB) and there were two extremely strong magnets in the head actuator mechanism. they were so strong that you couldn't pull them apart, you had to slide them, so they were kind of offset and twist them.

              I still use them to re-magnitize screwdrivers and bits

          • Easy. (Score:5, Funny)

            by 2names ( 531755 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:16PM (#8874135)
            You just have to put in a magnetic field damper.

            You can get them at Radio Shack.

            They are on the same shelf as the Flux Capacitors.

    • Right because the fans already in your PC don't use magnatism. Nor do the speakers nearby. Nor to the heads in your harddrive, the transformers in your PSU, you get the idea. Just because the fans use permanent magnets doesn't mean they're going to erase your hard drive.
    • by T5 ( 308759 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:55PM (#8873761)
      You! Back to physics class!

      Exactly how did you think that an electric motor functions? The electrons don't line up all nice and pretty and start pushing the armature around and around. Their dizzying speed doesn't induce a partial vacuum that drags the armature around in its wake. No siree, Bob. They're enslaved to make a magnetic field that alternates attraction and repulsion against a set of fixed magnets.

      Magnets! They're everywhere! Argh!
  • by wawannem ( 591061 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:49PM (#8873632) Homepage
    Heh, This guy will soon end up in the oil company holding cell with the guy trying to make a porcelain engine that runs on water.
    • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:52PM (#8873701)
      Heh, This guy will soon end up in the oil company holding cell with the guy trying to make a porcelain engine that runs on water ...down the hall from the vault containing the Skynet microchips from the future, all those Tesla inventions that the government has been sitting on, alien car motors from Roswell, turbines that run on Orgone energy, and real working cold fusion.

      By the way, the porcelain engine with water? I've got one in my bathroom. It turns on when you flip a metal lever.
  • Just to be clear.. (Score:5, Informative)

    by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) * on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:49PM (#8873637) Homepage Journal
    "9.144 volts and 192mA output. 1.8 x 0.15 x 2 = 540mW input and 9.144 x 0.192 = 1.755W out. "

    So there's nothing real to be seen here. Move on.

    • Yeah, when you discover it violates the laws of thermodynamics, you can safely ignore it because it doesn't really exist. :-)

      • Thermodynamic anarchy! It's what's for dinner!
        What will come next, dogs mating with cats?!?!
        • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:05PM (#8873944)
          What will come next, dogs mating with cats?!?!

          Venkman: "Or you could accept the fact that this city is headed for a disaster of Biblical proportions."
          Mayor: "What do you mean, Biblical?
          Ray: "What he means is Old Testament, Mr. Mayor. Real wrath-of-God type stuff. Fire and brimstone coming down from the sky. Rivers and seas boiling."
          Egon: "Forty years of darkness, earthquakes, volcanoes."
          Winston: "The dead rising from the grave."
          Venkman: "Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria."

      • I will bet you large amounts of money that it is a measurement error or a fraud.

        Extrordinary claims require extrordinary proof, and this is a very extrordinary claim.

    • by The Raven ( 30575 ) * on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:00PM (#8873838) Homepage
      Absurd claims are the hallmark of junk science. Impressive though that this guy managed to dupe people long enough to sell many thousand units.

      I'm curious if the motor IS better than usual, just not to the extent claimed, or if it's ALL hoax. I cannot get to the site myself... japan.com surrendered to the /. nuke.
    • by MyFourthAccount ( 719363 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:03PM (#8873905)
      So there's nothing real to be seen here. Move on.

      But, "In Japan, no one pays for 40,000 convenience store cooling fans without being reasonably sure that they are going to work."

      And if that didn't convince you:

      Hopefully soon the design will make it in to your home PC, allowing them to run much quieter.

      Because we all know that the noise generated by the fan comes from the motor and not from air hitting the fan.

      How can you contradict such a logical and fact laden article?
    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:18PM (#8874192) Homepage Journal
      You are correct in your dismissal, however your calculation is only correct for DC or pure resistive loads.

      disclaimer: IANAP (I am not a Physicist)

      In an AC circuit is quite possible to measure an AC voltage and amperage which if multiplied give greater than the power input. The trick is that power is not equal to the RMS voltage times the RMS current if the voltage and current are out of phase. For example the peak current happens during off peak voltage and vice versa.
      • by Viv ( 54519 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @06:14PM (#8875611)
        Not quite right -- in an AC circuit, if you take ALL power into account, you'll always get equal power in and out. The key is that when the current and voltage are out of phase (as in an inductive or capacitive circuit), some of the power is "real" and some of it is "reactive". The real is measured in watts and the reactive is measured in "VAR"s. You can't use the VARs directly because they're the power that gets stored in the inductance and/or capacitance in the operation of the circuit.

        If you get a higher output power than input or a higher input power than output, it means that you forgot to check the reactive power :)

        Four laws of electrical science; there are no exceptions to these, ever:
        1. Voltage is equal to current times impedance
        2. The algebraic sum of all voltages in a loop is zero.
        3. The algebraic sum of all currents in a branch is zero.
        4. The algebraic sum of powers in a circuit is zero. (aka, power in = power out).

        If your measurements ever violate any of these laws, you either f*cked up, or you need to file a patent because you just found a way to violate a _law_ of electrical science. That's a big deal, like violating gravity :)
    • Judge for yourself (Score:5, Informative)

      by Martin Blank ( 154261 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:28PM (#8874353) Homepage Journal
      US Patent 4,751,486 [uspto.gov]

      US Patent 5,594,289 [uspto.gov]

      Note that I'm not speaking for or against his claims, but if you want to see how it works, there you go.
  • Summary is wrong (Score:5, Insightful)

    by theLOUDroom ( 556455 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:50PM (#8873656)
    Hopefully soon the design will make it in to your home PC, allowing them to run much quieter."

    The noise in your pc is caused by air turbulence caused by the fan blades. Even if the motors inside your fans were 100% efficient, your computer would not be significantly quieter.
  • by SQLz ( 564901 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:50PM (#8873668) Homepage Journal
    Magnet power cars are a threat to national security.
  • by QuantumFTL ( 197300 ) * on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:51PM (#8873676)
    This is probably already redudant, however the article says
    " Minato says that average efficiency on his motors is about 330 percent. "
    That's definitely violating thermodynamics. I do not understand how this is "news for nerds", however at least the editors should please put some kind of disclaimer that he is in fact claiming to break conservation of energy.

    Cheers,
    Justin
    • by the morgawr ( 670303 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:19PM (#8874196) Homepage Journal
      The article is fubar'ed beyond belief. Ignoring for a minute the obsurd thermodynamics claims, based off of the description of the motor, it seems like he's invented a very controlable reluctance motor.

      Asside: For those who arn't EEs you can use magents to spin things in various ways: induction, rotating fields generated by coils, reluctance, etc. Reluctance motors are 10-20% more efficient they their syncronous counterparts, but tend to be limited in size, hard to manufacture, and difficult to control. A lot of research has gone in to the different ways to make the magnetic stator to make the motor easier to make, control, and scale up.

      At best he's invented a particular rotor/stator combination that creates a really odd magnetic field that he can actually control. My guess is that the motor he has made runs syncronous after spinning up and that his particualar arangement of magents makes it possible for the motor to get enough torque to spin up at non-syncronous speed (i.e. start when you plug it in, and possibly give it a spin).

      IF this does work, IF he can get the reliability to the level of syncronous motors, IF it runs at a reasonable power factor, IF its reasonably EMC, AND IF it doesn't require complicated or expensive control mechanisms, he will have a good product on his hands. This would likely be used in a lot of factories, and in HVAC systems in cars. It's probably not that useful for speed control based applications (if it's a reluctance based motor, it's running at syncrous speed) so that excludes it from replacing induction motors and DC motors, unless it's so much more efficient that adding a variable AC supply to the control equipment leaves it still more efficient.

      Honestly though, I think the countless posts here are probably right: he invented something and only THINKS it works.

  • by foosballhound ( 769065 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:51PM (#8873680)
    question: wouldn't the magnets de-magnitize after a while? isn't that what physics would predict? good business opportunity tho. exchange the cost of electricity for the cost of buying a new motor, when the magnets stop working any physicists out there who can comment?
  • by idontgno ( 624372 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:53PM (#8873710) Journal
    I'm trying to figure out how strong your cooler mounts will have to be in order to support about a cubic meter of "high-efficency motor." It's hard to judge, but it looks like about 20 or 30 Kg of motor to me.

    It'll need a big case, in any event.

  • by Ckwop ( 707653 ) * on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:53PM (#8873715) Homepage
    "Mention of Over Unity devices in many scientific circles will draw icy skepticism."

    Hmm.. Simple reason why. If you supply power to the motor using a carnot engine
    and use the power from the motor to drive a carnot refrigator.
    Then there will be an overall flow of heat from cold to hot..
    Breaking the second law of thermodynamics..

    Bullshit is word of the week.

    Simon.
  • If you (Score:4, Informative)

    by ColaMan ( 37550 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:53PM (#8873719) Journal
    Search for "over unity motor" on google , you'll find a heap of these.

    I always get suspicious when those sites say, "and my motor/generator at full load begins to get cold"
  • I've seen it (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Bobdoer ( 727516 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:54PM (#8873745) Homepage Journal
    I saw a similar effect on one of my brother's contraptions. Essentially, it was a roller skate wheel that had powerful magnets embedded in it. When it was spun, the magnetic field would act on a spool of wire underneath and create a charge that went into a capacitor. When tinkering with the thing, I found that one could take a magnet and place it a small ways away and that magnet would repel the other magnets on the wheel, making the thing spin longer for the same amount of energy. Later, my brother's acquaintance found a similar effect by placing the magnet on the bar that held the wheel up. I'm guessing that the process is more similar to the latter than the former.
    As all of these sorts of posts are appended IANAP, so I could be wrong.
  • by Spamalamadingdong ( 323207 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @03:56PM (#8873773) Homepage Journal
    I could probably make a device that could take 16 watts in and generate 300 volt-amperes (AC) out - but the volt-amperes would be almost 90 degrees out of phase, and the power factor would be less than 5%. The real power out of the device would be substantially less than 16 watts. There is no way in physics to have more than 1 watt out per watt in, "magical magnets" or no. If the device was extracting energy from the magnets, they would be depleted and the device would run down after a while. That's 2nd semester physics, basic E&M.

    Either the proponents of this device are complete incompetents, or they are complete frauds. I'm inclined to believe the latter, as incompetents tend not to have the sales skills evident in the article [japan.com]

  • by alphorn ( 667624 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:06PM (#8873974)
    motors uses 80% less energy than a conventional motor

    A conventional electric motor motor uses at most 1.6 Joules of electric energy to produce 1 Joule of motion energy (German Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]). If you reduce that by 80%, you use only 0.3 Joules to produce 1 Joule... nice perpetuum mobile.
  • by bcolflesh ( 710514 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:12PM (#8874052) Homepage
    ... on April 5 [geek.com]
  • by DumbSwede ( 521261 ) <slashdotbin@hotmail.com> on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:28PM (#8874367) Homepage Journal
    SCAM!

    This sentence pretty much tells you this is another perpetual motion hoax:
    With the help of magnetic propulsion, it is feasible to attach a generator to the motor and produce more electric power than was put into the device. Minato says that average efficiency on his motors is about 330 percent.
    Wooo-Hooo we can replace coal, oil and nuclear by just string these things together like Christmas tree bulbs!

    The other clue that this is a scam is the entourage of bankers and investors to the demos, not physicists and engineers.
    Joining us are a middle-aged banker and his entourage from Osaka and accounting and finance consultant Yukio Funai. The banker is doing a quick review for an investment, while the rest of us just want to see if Minato's magnetic motors really work. A prototype car air conditioner cooler sitting on a bench looks like it would fit into a Toyota Corolla and quickly catches our attention

  • Magnets wooho! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dj245 ( 732906 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:32PM (#8874424) Homepage
    The mystefying power of the magnet is a strange and powerful thing. People seem unable to grasp properly an invisible force that comes semingly from nowhere, leading to rampant fraud and mislabeling of properties. Just look at fraudelent "medical devices" that are nothing more than wee little magnets in a convenient strip. Do they do anything? Studies are a little hard to come by since the placebo group and study group will know almost immediately which ones they are. Even in complete isolation, it wouldn't take long before they stuck their magnet bracelet to the hospital bed, door, etc.

    Magnets, to many people, can explain anything, becuase they do not understand them properly. Just as you can not construct a perpetual motion device using magnets, however, you cannot raise efficiency using magnets as an energy source. Magnets can only raise efficiency by acting as frictionless bearings, but that is not the case for these motors. This is blatant fraud, and I cannot believe these people fell for it.

  • by scrytch ( 9198 ) <chuck@myrealbox.com> on Thursday April 15, 2004 @04:49PM (#8874687)
    Slashdot insults Einstein's memory by regularly posting junk science articles with his image attached. But of course, they don't actually write the articles .. or submit them .. or proofread them .. or fact check them ..

    What do they draw a paycheck for again?
  • by slazar ( 527381 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @06:11PM (#8875590)
    This guy is putting energy into the machine every time his magnet moves. Attach it to a fixed position say with a clamp and it would not work. Take a look at this video [lhup.edu] of Minato and then read the explanation here [lhup.edu]. You will need to search in your browser for minato because the page is long. Also you have to wait for the avi to completely download.
  • by GPS Pilot ( 3683 ) on Thursday April 15, 2004 @07:56PM (#8876571)
    Lt Col Tom Bearden (US Army, retired) has been predicting this since 1995 [cheniere.org].

    It's fascinating to read Bearden's views. He claims that what we know as Maxwell's Equations are actually gross oversimplifications, made by Heaviside, of the real Maxwell's Equations -- and that a lot of amazing physics would be possible if we would go back and exploit all the possibilities in the real Maxwell's Equations. Heaviside's "arbitrary crippling" of Maxwell is basically the reason we haven't yet colonized Alpha Centauri.

    There is a lot of overlap between Kohei Minato's research and Bearden's [google.com]. Bearden made quite recent comments about Minato's motor [netscape.com].

    By the way, Minato's invention is called the "MagMotor." Does anybody know whether this is related to the Magmotor Corp. of Massachusetts [magmotor.com]?

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