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Overunity Machines Forum



Reactive Generator Research for everyone to share

Started by gotoluc, November 15, 2013, 04:51:05 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 6 Guests are viewing this topic.

forest

Of course you can use it but that is different story.... I posted some time ago very revealing documents. Reactive power is crucial to maintain LINE VOLTAGE which is all needed to create current in load. So the assumption you cannot use reactive power is very wrong. Actually power station use the balanced reactive power to create situation when current in your house is generated for loads! That's how I understood that somehow covered knowledge limited to people operating power station.


Why my God oh why ,books do not let us know answers !? Ask simple , explain simple ! Transmission lines, why they had to have groundings in many places ? That's one question...
Where is coming the current , after doing work in my house ? According to Ohm law it cannot just dissapear , right ? Second question...


hartiberlin

Well, if this works at 50 or 60 Hz with heavy MOT transformers , this can also work at 20 Khz for instance
with small ferrite transformers !

Then you could probably also use a small 9 Volts powered sine wave oscillator only using MilliWatts
and extract Watts of power via a ferrite joke transformer the same way...

Probably much easier to setup and play with as you don´t need the big transformers and also much smaller
caps only...

Has anybody tried this yet ?

Regards, Stefan.

Stefan Hartmann, Moderator of the overunity.com forum

forest

Quote from: hartiberlin on December 08, 2013, 06:25:01 PM
Well, if this works at 50 or 60 Hz with heavy MOT transformers , this can also work at 20 Khz for instance
with small ferrite transformers !

Then you could probably also use a small 9 Volts powered sine wave oscillator only using MilliWatts
and extract Watts of power via a ferrite joke transformer the same way...

Probably much easier to setup and play with as you don´t need the big transformers and also much smaller
caps only...

Has anybody tried this yet ?

Regards, Stefan.


I believe so. Keep in mind it would require very very precise electronics to do this. I expect no results or the blow of components are two opposite effect visible.  :P  Recall Steven Mark notes.

tim123

Quote from: forest on December 08, 2013, 01:04:29 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tP3T8w0gBm4

Hi Forest :)
  thanks for that link. Bad audio, but good content.

It 100% explains what I was observing with the Universal Motor - using just the caps switchbox to correct the power factor...

With the circuit 'tuned', the voltage at the motor *leads* the voltage at the source, and is a higher voltage. So the caps are providing the 'vars'... The waveform I see is what he shows in the vid. The vid also explained that a resistive load only consumes real power...


Luc, I've not observed any effect which suggests OU. The circuit seems quite conventional.

It does improve the efficiency of my motor by about 3% (1 watt), according to the wattmeter, but that's far from the 50%+ improvement you showed in your vid. But you were still putting 50 watts into your motor - which is a fair bit of power...

At the moment, there's nothing to suggest to me that anything other than power-factor correction is occurring.

It would be nice if you would share the details of your motor etc.  You did promise to share in the title, but haven't been very forthcoming with details, and I did notice that you'd ignored most of my questions.

Regards
Tim