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Overunity Machines Forum



Kapanadze Cousin - DALLY FREE ENERGY

Started by 27Bubba, September 18, 2012, 02:17:22 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 139 Guests are viewing this topic.

verpies

Quote from: itsu on November 26, 2012, 07:47:04 AM
Right, but even then no sweet spot has been found..... yet.
You know that I don't think this system will work without gain medium.

However, in case I am wrong, I still have several useful objections:
1) In Dally's schematic a 220V light bulb is used at the output of the device (L4). Not a 12V bulb.
2) The nanopulse might not be narrow enough (yes it still can be improved a lot and you know it)
3) During fine tuning, a light bulb does not provide a visual feedback of the tuning response that is quick enough to notice, if the frequency response of the anomaly is very sharp.  Because of this, a scope should be used to catch anything anomalous and short happening at L4 (using one-shot realtime sampling triggered by some anomalously high trigger level).
4) In Dally's schematic a FWBR made out of D10-D13 is connected to the output of the device (L4) and this FWBR is feeding stiff capacitors C35-C37. This is very significant because stiff capacitors will allow a very large current to flow in L4. High current flowing in L4 changes the magnetic field distribution in the coil significantly. Such high current cannot flow with just the 12V light bulb, without those capacitors! 

itsu

Quote from: verpies on November 26, 2012, 08:38:34 AM

However, in case I am wrong, I still have several useful objections..............

I first tried with a 220V bulb, but no light at all.

Anyway, i wanted to show severall people that just putting the parts together not necessarily mean that the magic starts.
More work needs to be done and improving the nano-pulse (narrow it) is one of them.

Regards Itsu




Black_Bird

Quote from: itsu on November 26, 2012, 08:56:08 AM
I first tried with a 220V bulb, but no light at all.

Anyway, i wanted to show severall people that just putting the parts together not necessarily mean that the magic starts.
More work needs to be done and improving the nano-pulse (narrow it) is one of them.

Regards Itsu
@itsu
Currently, after some modifications, my nanopulser is producing 960 volts pulse. The modifications were:
1) using a MIC 4427 MOSFET driver with a single 10 ohms resistor in series with the gate of the irf840.
2) returning the toroidal transformer to 6 turns primary and 12 turns secondary. The toroid was obtained from the printed circuit of an Osram 9w CFL. I removed the plastic insulation and made the windings directly on it.
3) the capacitor in the output of the transformer is 1nF/ 2KV ceramic.
4) used two 1N5408 in parallel as the output diode, assembled directly at the input of the coaxial cable.
5) at the drain of the Irf840, I get a 140ns pulse.

My inverter is operating at 58.2 KHz, so I modified L2 to 160 turns, 18AWG and tuned it with 4 100 nF capacitors in series.
My L4 is about 59 turns flex wire, multi stranded AWG 12.
L1 was wound on a movable carton core, so I can slide it inside L2/L3/L4.

What I found out is that I can light a 60W incandescent bulb, with voltage that can vary from peak 120 to almost 160V ( sine wave, at 58.2 KHz), depending how much of L1 is inside the other 3. At 120V peak, input current is about 4.1A in the 12V power supply, which actually is 11.6v DC. Turning on the nanopulser, and sliding L1 out a little bit, I started to see some modulation on the envelope of of the sine wave, probably related with the frequency of the nanopulser, but no improvement in the output voltage or light intensity. Grounding L1 and L4 did not make any difference.
That's where I am, quite similar to you, despite difference in the frequency.

itsu

Quote from: Black_Bird on November 26, 2012, 01:52:20 PM
@itsu

What I found out is that I can light a 60W incandescent bulb, with voltage that can vary from peak 120 to almost 160V

right on Black_Bird,

that sound more like it.

2x 1n5408 parallel he, got to try that out.
Can you try to increase the output cap till about 10nF? It works much better with higher value's with me.

Please also take note of the comments by verpies above, especially the point 4 concerning the output FWBR:
"This is very significant because stiff capacitors will allow a very large current to flow in L4."


Regards Itsu

Black_Bird

Quote from: itsu on November 26, 2012, 02:56:32 PM

Can you try to increase the output cap till about 10nF? It works much better with higher value's with me.

Please also take note of the comments by verpies above, especially the point 4 concerning the output FWBR:
"This is very significant because stiff capacitors will allow a very large current to flow in L4."


Regards Itsu

I will try that. Capacitor up to 10n first.
PS: I added a 3.3 nF cap in parallel with the 1nF cap. The nanopulser amplitude is now 1920V, but there is an uncertainty on that, because I'm measuring it through a voltage divider. I don't have a high voltage probe, neither can afford one now, so I added in parallel with the diode one 180 ohms resistor in series with a 12 ohms. The voltage at the 12 ohm terminals will be 1/16 of the voltage on the diode, and I'm measuring 120Volts on it, so across  the diode it should be around 1920V.