Loading...
 

sucking effect

Schauberger
[10] Tractive force: This refers to the force described hydraulically as 'Shear force' — the force that acts to 'shear off' or to dredge and dislodge sediment. In German the term for shear force is 'Schubkraft', meaning 'to push, to shove' as well as 'to shear', whereas Viktor Schauberger uses the word 'Schleppkraft'. The verb 'schleppen' means to drag, draw or pull. Viktor Schauberger's choice of 'Schleppkraft' here is quite specific, since in his view the movement of sediment is due to the sucking action of fast flowing, dense cold water downstream, rather than to the mechanical impact of the water coming from upstream. In view of this subtle change in emphasis, in lieu of the hydraulically correct term 'shear force', the term 'tractive forces' will be used. This dynamic is similar to the effect of wind on roofs, where a roof is blown off not by force from the windward side, but rather by the sucking effect of vortices created on the leeward side. -Ed. [The Energy Evolution - Harnessing Free Energy from Nature, The Biological Vacuum - The Optimal Driving Force for Machines]

See Also


11.10 - Matter is the Recording of Sequential and Successive Steps of Polarized Thought
3.21 - Successive Centralizations
air-suction
atomic pressural or suctional force
retro-suctional
suck
sucking action
sucking effect
Suction
suction-intensifying
suction-screw
suction-turbine
Suction-Turbine Rotor
suction-vortex
suctional
suctional component
suctional force
upsuctional force
vacuum
water-inwinding suctional force

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Friday September 9, 2022 05:01:49 MDT by Dale Pond.