Swansont Hi
Thank you for the reply, Ah ok more open in lingo
My apologies on requesting information to be directed to my email, I feel as if I may be going crazy.
OK just a brief update on who I am and what I know, I know very little actually about most forms of science yet I do find it ever so intriguing suddenly.
My understanding about the laws of force and the effects of gravitational forces on moving objects is what grabbed my attention, thus started looking at engines and other machines.
what force is being required to produce another force in a mechanical fashion, an electric motor requires x amount of power to produce X amount of converted energy.
1 watt in .98 watts out as some of the energy is lost due to heat and so on, that is a golden rule right?
Now what I am asking really is as follows
If I put 1 watt of power in and convert it to a mechanical force but get more out, than what I put in and is powerful enough to only use 2% of its output power to keep it running should be impossible?
engines are not very efficient and all ways run at a loss, like a petrol engine has so much loss - the torque that is lost on the wheels are huge.
For the same amount of fuel and combustion power = 4 times greater force on the wheels, thus a smaller amount of energy is needed to create a greater mechanical output.
I still have the same amount of wasted power on input, only the output power is much greater thus.
a 2 liter motor was producing 200 kw output / now 200 400 800 1600 and far far greater at the same fuel consumption, the initial fuel is still wasted but the return power is far greater even under a load.