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Overunity Machines Forum



Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect

Started by Overunityguide, August 30, 2011, 04:59:41 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 13 Guests are viewing this topic.

Newton II



@Vineet.K.


You are first converting torque motor to a speed motor.  Then you are reducing the gap between the cores of a standard generator to reduce lenz's forces.  Then you  are suggesting to use a bigger diameter rotor to get mechanical advantage from weak lenz's forces.   Obviously this cannot produce reuired torque output for overunity in one stage.   So you have to do it in several stages each time slightly widening the gap between the cores of  respective generator to get stronger lenz's forces hence stronger torque.

Think that you will get required torque output for overunity after ten such stages then what would be the total length and total weight of the entire set?   What would be its total cost? 

Suppose Mr.Thane Heins connetcs this entire  motor - generators  set to his bicycle,  he has to provide one separate lorry to carry this motor - generator set .  Is it not? 


@Deepcut,

Quote :

Say our rotor does 2000 RPM for 10 watts of power when there is no AUL coil assembly present, just a rotor with no coils/cores.

Then we present our shorted coil assembly to the rotor, the rotor does 2,100 RPM and draws 9 watts.

End of quote


I don't think it is the correct test for overunity.    May be you are trying to make a energy effiecient device.   A tungston bulb consuming 40 watts gives lesser light than set of LED bulbs consuming just 15 watts.  But this doesnot prove any overunity.


I want to see a motor-generator set in which power generated in the generator is fed back to the motor and this set runs on its own without consuming energy from any external source.   Can anybody show such a device?












vineet_kiran

Quote from: Newton II on February 23, 2013, 10:37:46 AM

@Vineet.K.


You are first converting torque motor to a speed motor.  Then you are reducing the gap between the cores of a standard generator to reduce lenz's forces.  Then you  are suggesting to use a bigger diameter rotor to get mechanical advantage from weak lenz's forces.   Obviously this cannot produce reuired torque output for overunity in one stage.   So you have to do it in several stages each time slightly widening the gap between the cores of  respective generator to get stronger lenz's forces hence stronger torque.

Think that you will get required torque output for overunity after ten such stages then what would be the total length and total weight of the entire set?   What would be its total cost? 

Suppose Mr.Thane Heins connetcs this entire  motor - generators  set to his bicycle,  he has to provide one separate lorry to carry this motor - generator set .  Is it not? 


You are absolutely right.    Achieving  overunity  is not so easy.   Atleast as for my knowledge it has to be done in stages.

DeepCut

If you have a coil that adds to the rotor speed and subtracts from the input current, compared to the rotor running free, then you have OU if many coils are used.


DC.


synchro1

Quote from: DeepCut on February 23, 2013, 12:47:08 PM
If you have a coil that adds to the rotor speed and subtracts from the input current, compared to the rotor running free, then you have OU if many coils are used.


DC.

Not so simple. Multiple coils split the output along with the Lenz delay effect.

DeepCut

OK well i haven't gone beyond single-coil testing so i hear you :)