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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

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Jeg

Quote from: Void on November 24, 2014, 04:33:37 PM
Interesting Jeg, but I am always a little suspect when there is a power supply connected to
the mains. I have sometimes seen quite different results in some of my testing when comparing
with a power supply and with batteries only.


Me too Void, but I wanted a separate source for this demonstration for being sure that the less consumption is not due to power stealing from Katcher when I fire it on.

Hoppy my consumption of katcher depends on the voltage that I feed it. When I supply it from 24V is something around 2A. When I give more input voltage to see the difference at the output, it consumes more. The point is to raise katcher's output voltage without increasing input power. At least this would be my target.

Void

Quote from: Jeg on November 24, 2014, 04:46:29 PM
Me too Void, but I wanted a separate source for this demonstration for being sure that the less consumption is not due to power stealing from Katcher when I fire it on.

Hi Jeg. Right. It is one step forward and one step back when trying to analyze
what is going on in these devices. Scope probes are bad for altering circuit behavior as well.
The Observer Effect in action. ;D
All the best...


d3x0r

Quote from: Void on November 24, 2014, 03:18:18 PM
Hi T-1000. That could be, but I think you need some sort of sparkgap to create those voltage spikes.
I don't know for sure, but I don't think Ruslan was using a sparkgap on his tesla coil output in his latest
video. I am still experimenting with this arrangement, so we'll see if anything interesting turns up. :)

P.S. I attached a scope shot showing what happens when I manually do a sudden discharge across the 1uF output cap.
Slow as molasses in January. ;)

All the best...
nice ; that's charging in milliwatts... was looking for a calculatin for T, V and C to get A or W ... best I did was setup falstad with a fixed powr supply a Capacitor and a resistor until I could find the current through the resistor... it's a RC time constant *4 or something.... or T/4




Hoppy

Quote from: Jeg on November 24, 2014, 04:46:29 PM
Me too Void, but I wanted a separate source for this demonstration for being sure that the less consumption is not due to power stealing from Katcher when I fire it on.

The point is to raise katcher's output voltage without increasing input power. At least this would be my target.

Adjustment of the Kacher turns ratio will deal with this. However, required operating frequency affects this objective.


d3x0r

Quote from: Hoppy on November 24, 2014, 03:48:42 PM
'Hot' resistance of my bulb is in the order of 750R at the brightness / temperature level I have. Cold resistance is a lot lower than 'hot' resistance for tungsten filament lamps!

There is no DC bias on my caps.


re no bias... I thought you said it was holding 200 something volts across the load, and charged to 768 instantly...


------
added another winding, and made a joule-thief driver... it's weak... 2.4V 30-40mA; nothing special regarding runtime... tried to take the difference from the cap and apply it to the input; but it's not a lot of output...