I was fascinated by the reference in that video to the Orffyreus wheel, a similar machine from the 18th century. The name was code for the real name of the inventor, Johann Bessler. His wheel (or wheels, actually, as he built several of different sizes) would start moving from stationary with a slight push and would run at 25-50rpm for up to 54 days without any obvious energy source. They could do real work, lifting 5-40lb, depending on the size. Even today there is speculation that he may actually have discovered a source of perpetual motion.
I think the secret is quite simple however. The machine had to have a source of energy, and how would you power a machine like this? Gravity. There were clocks powered by gravity from the period like this one:
A heavy weight on a rope wound round the cylinder visible in the picture would have rotated the cylinder, with the torque converted to movement of the hands by a train of gears. It was obviously situated in a tower or high up on the face of a building or in a high space.
A simple falling weight would not work to power a wheel because it could not pass through the axle. Most probably there was a weight (or weights) attached to a shaft around the axle, powering the mechanism again through a gear train. A couple of large lead weights falling from the top of the machine around the inner circumference towards the base could have powered a hollow wheel on bearings for many days, or easily contained enough energy to explain the work the machine did. (Yes, they did have bearings in the early 18th century.)
So there you have it. The wheel was a clock. There are actually a couple of very large clues: the pendulum on the front of the wheel controlling an escapement, and the fact that Bessler was an apprentice watchmaker.Some witnesses of the Bessler machine stated that they could hear falling weights in the wheel, leading to speculation that it was a weighted wheel machine. Such a machine can work, if there is an input of energy, giving weights at the top of the wheel a nudge upwards (and increasing their potential energy). The power source I have described could have been used to do this.
I suppose it's possible that with a complex mechanism of large weights and smaller weights moving in the machine Bessler genuinely thought he was getting something for nothing and failed to realise he was supplying the machine with potential energy in setting up the machine in a state where some of those weights could fall over time, supplying the machine with the kinetic energy it needed to keep running. I'd somehow rather believe that he wasn't an outright fraud.
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