This is a far more intelligible interpretation of my design. For a working title, we'll call it the hex motor, based on the hexagonal interaction of the magnets.
The green represents the teeth of the gears, necessary for locking in angles of interaction and procession of each interaction. The six positions of the base magnets are arranged so that the fields of each magnet are interfering with one another, dulling the magnetic fields over time, as little as possible. Blue and red represent the poles of each magnet.
The eureka moment came when i based the orientations on minimal interference and drew the pattern of the sequence. For the last, i don't know, eight or ten years, I've been drawing the unicursal hexagram and etching it into my tools. I drew it one day on accident and it quickly became my signature. It's very useful when marking your tools on busy job sites is essential to being able to find and keep your tools.
The synchronicity of having been drawing this, not knowing it was the orientation i needed for this design, which I've been toying around with since 2012, set me off. It feels like destiny as corny as that sounds. I spent all night putting the prototype together in my head. I think í know exactly the hardware and where to get it. The question is going to be how much torque this design can muster. If it can't generate enough to turn a small ac motor, thus producing electric current, enough say, to power a bitaxe, it is more or less a dud.
In my mind, that does not eliminate the viability of the premise of the motor, it just means I'll be back to the drawing board.
Take this design. Run with it. Print it out. Post it on telephone poles all over your town. Tweak it. Perfect it. The sooner energy becomes free, the sooner people begin to internalize and manipulate these principles, to discover free energy, the sooner we break the chains. This is the freedom and power of #nostr
GM☕