How they work
My only concern is that they're either on or off, and the forces they induce would be too great, I'm seeing a lot of /facestteringwheels.
Last edited by Aries_37 (2008-05-19 10:21:53)
Yes you are Look how easy it slowed the little plates down, now imagine four of them, and distribute the 1000kg by four wheels and you only have to stop 250kg, and the plates with be the size of disc brakes, it all adds up, and probably would work.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Interesting,but it will require one hell of a magnet to stop a 1000kg+ car.
Or am I being ignorant
Still,250 kg is a lotFunky_Finny wrote:
Yes you are Look how easy it slowed the little plates down, now imagine four of them, and distribute the 1000kg by four wheels and you only have to stop 250kg, and the plates with be the size of disc brakes, it all adds up, and probably would work.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Interesting,but it will require one hell of a magnet to stop a 1000kg+ car.
Or am I being ignorant
Always there to ruin the funDonFck wrote:
Magnets. Right.
I'm really not impressed by this self proclaimed "inventors" fantastic Dremel-powered disc spinner-machine and his magnetic stopping system made of fridgemagnets and tinfoil.
I'm sorry if I offended someones dad.
I lol'd.DonFck wrote:
I'm sorry if I offended someones dad.
i know, right?DonFck wrote:
Magnets. Right.
I'm really not impressed by this self proclaimed "inventors" fantastic Dremel-powered disc spinner-machine and his magnetic stopping system made of fridgemagnets and tinfoil.
I'm sorry if I offended someones dad.
Not computers,only hard disk drives I thinkParker wrote:
i know, right?DonFck wrote:
Magnets. Right.
I'm really not impressed by this self proclaimed "inventors" fantastic Dremel-powered disc spinner-machine and his magnetic stopping system made of fridgemagnets and tinfoil.
I'm sorry if I offended someones dad.
theres nothing wrong with the braking systems that are in vehicles right now.
arent magnets not such a good idea to mix with computers?
cause the last time i checked, there are a lot of computer parts on cars.
every single sensor on a vehicle is controlled by a computer.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Not computers,only hard disk drives I thinkParker wrote:
i know, right?DonFck wrote:
Magnets. Right.
I'm really not impressed by this self proclaimed "inventors" fantastic Dremel-powered disc spinner-machine and his magnetic stopping system made of fridgemagnets and tinfoil.
I'm sorry if I offended someones dad.
theres nothing wrong with the braking systems that are in vehicles right now.
arent magnets not such a good idea to mix with computers?
cause the last time i checked, there are a lot of computer parts on cars.
did you read what he said? hard drives. only hard drives.Parker wrote:
every single sensor on a vehicle is controlled by a computer.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Not computers,only hard disk drives I thinkParker wrote:
i know, right?
theres nothing wrong with the braking systems that are in vehicles right now.
arent magnets not such a good idea to mix with computers?
cause the last time i checked, there are a lot of computer parts on cars.
from your Manifold Absolute Pressure sensor, to your fuel/air sensor...they all come back to the Electronic Control Module.
which not only tells your vehicle how to perform based on certain conditions, but it also stores trouble codes which can tell a mechanic what is wrong with the vehicle.
hell, my grand am even has tire pressure sensors that drive me fucking insane.
hard drives are not the only thing that is hampered by magnetic interference.haffeysucks wrote:
did you read what he said? hard drives. only hard drives.Parker wrote:
every single sensor on a vehicle is controlled by a computer.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Not computers,only hard disk drives I think
from your Manifold Absolute Pressure sensor, to your fuel/air sensor...they all come back to the Electronic Control Module.
which not only tells your vehicle how to perform based on certain conditions, but it also stores trouble codes which can tell a mechanic what is wrong with the vehicle.
hell, my grand am even has tire pressure sensors that drive me fucking insane.
i already said that.haffeysucks wrote:
it wont replace our brakes now anyway, nothing wrong with them.
it isn't just 1000kg either. Consider acceleration, and the front wheels have to stop much harder than the rear. It could easily turn into 800kg per wheel given the right circumstances. Although, I've heard of some rocket type cars using magna force breaks...so I dunno.Funky_Finny wrote:
Yes you are Look how easy it slowed the little plates down, now imagine four of them, and distribute the 1000kg by four wheels and you only have to stop 250kg, and the plates with be the size of disc brakes, it all adds up, and probably would work.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Interesting,but it will require one hell of a magnet to stop a 1000kg+ car.
Or am I being ignorant
Yes, but its eddy current braking. So the faster it moves the stronger the braking force. And vice versa. And it is guaranteed to work with no power cuts.Varegg wrote:
Don't they have magnetic brakes on rollercoasters ?
Last edited by teek22 (2008-05-19 12:26:14)
Number one, you would need a fucking strong magnet to hurt a hard drive. It is shielded, and has quite strong neodymium magnets in it. You're probably not going to hurt that anyway.Parker wrote:
hard drives are not the only thing that is hampered by magnetic interference.haffeysucks wrote:
did you read what he said? hard drives. only hard drives.Parker wrote:
every single sensor on a vehicle is controlled by a computer.
from your Manifold Absolute Pressure sensor, to your fuel/air sensor...they all come back to the Electronic Control Module.
which not only tells your vehicle how to perform based on certain conditions, but it also stores trouble codes which can tell a mechanic what is wrong with the vehicle.
hell, my grand am even has tire pressure sensors that drive me fucking insane.
CrazeD wrote:
Number one, you would need a fucking strong magnet to hurt a hard drive. It is shielded, and has quite strong neodymium magnets in it. You're probably not going to hurt that anyway.
Parker wrote:
hard drives are not the only thing that is hampered by magnetic interference.
so are they nonexistent, or are they far enough away? also:CrazeD wrote:
Second, the computers in a car don't have hard drives, and are far enough away that they wouldn't be disturbed anyway.
Parker wrote:
hard drives are not the only thing that is hampered by magnetic interference.
yes they will.CrazeD wrote:
Third, magnets won't hurt a computer. Look at all these people with huge ass subwoofers and such in their cars, near their amps and such. No damage at all.
Last edited by Parker (2008-05-19 12:55:09)
They used these brakes to stop the car that was attempting to break the land speed record, I believe they used that exact size of brakes, they have a hell of a lot of stopping power.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Hmm. Interesting, but magnets won't mix well with the computers and shit (Like Parkie sez'd). Unless they have some sort of shielding. I say interesting, because current brakes need all that brake pad/fluid shit. With this, it's much simpler. Although, on the scale of a car moving at fast speeds. I'm sure you'd need a bigger magnet which wouldn't be practical. Actually you'd still need hydraulics or whatever they use these days to move the magnets, and they wouldn't be as responsive as current brakes.
rite?
Last edited by GorillaKing798 (2008-05-19 12:54:37)
Exactly. Also, those wheels have no torque, they'd probably slow down at that speed without the magnetic brake thing.Parker wrote:
i know, right?DonFck wrote:
Magnets. Right.
I'm really not impressed by this self proclaimed "inventors" fantastic Dremel-powered disc spinner-machine and his magnetic stopping system made of fridgemagnets and tinfoil.
I'm sorry if I offended someones dad.
theres nothing wrong with the braking systems that are in vehicles right now.
arent magnets not such a good idea to mix with computers?
cause the last time i checked, there are a lot of computer parts on cars.
Yes, consider a car with 60mph of momentum behind itliquix wrote:
it isn't just 1000kg either. Consider acceleration, and the front wheels have to stop much harder than the rear. It could easily turn into 800kg per wheel given the right circumstances. Although, I've heard of some rocket type cars using magna force breaks...so I dunno.Funky_Finny wrote:
Yes you are Look how easy it slowed the little plates down, now imagine four of them, and distribute the 1000kg by four wheels and you only have to stop 250kg, and the plates with be the size of disc brakes, it all adds up, and probably would work.Metal-Eater-GR wrote:
Interesting,but it will require one hell of a magnet to stop a 1000kg+ car.
Or am I being ignorant
Last edited by GodFather (2008-05-19 15:49:39)