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Overunity Machines Forum



Oscillating sine wave LC tank magnet motor.

Started by synchro1, August 31, 2014, 09:26:50 AM

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MarkE

Quote from: synchro1 on August 21, 2015, 03:06:32 PM
@MarkE,

I witnessed the "Paradox" of increased acceleration with decreased input before. What happens between the rotor and output coils as the rotor accelerates? Power is generated in inverse proportion to the input reduction. Going from 50 to a 100 hertz by halving inductance and capacitance, doubles the rotor output. This kind of "Synchronous" motor supplies power to help run itself as it speeds up from input reduction. This motor does indeed make it's own free energy!

The rotor needs to spin it's own field strength up in the coils before it can begin to surf  the "Sine Wave". Once the rotor makes the transition to the oscillating current, it's basicly turned into a self runner.
It is not a paradox.  It means that the system is non-linear.  Many systems are.  The common mistake that many people make is that they confuse increasing efficiency or increasing output with reduced input as a sign of over unity.  They invariably find that try as they might, they can't ever manage to get the system to the point that the absolute output energy exceeds the input energy, cycle by cycle.  There is always the "sticky spot" or its equivalent to overcome.  the predicted self-running machines only ever run down.

synchro1

This 5 to 15 volt D.C. pulse generator, (0-2khz), is listed for $4.39 on Amazon. Synchronous micro-wave carosel motors are selling for $5.00.

The carosel motor is driven by an LC oscillation sine wave and merely getting a boost from the D.C pulsed primary.


synchro1

Here's a good way to scale this architecture up: The magnet rotor rides on a pin and must be polarized diametrically, or side to side. Imagine two cases on their sides with the rotor pins facing one another. It would be possible to sandwich a larger 3' long diametric tube with two rotor magnets that would plug into the end holes, stick by natural attraction and glue. The plastic rotor magnet cusps, inserted into the holes of the large tube magnet, could then mount laterally to the case pins on each side, and be perfectly balanced.

The two coils could then be positioned upright at the open spaces to the sides and connected in parallel. The coils are fine precision wound 32 gauge magnet wire. Can someone measure the inductance of one of these turntable coils? This scaled up model would be able to run directly from wall current too.

Next step would be to match the parallel coil's combined inductance to the correct capacitance to resonate at 60 hertz, and try and power this A.C motor from a D.C. source through the LC tank inverter. Pulse booster primaries, a few wraps of thick wire around the perimeter of the power coils, would help sustain the oscillation pulsed at 60 hertz D.C..

A DPDT switch with a neutral position would allow us to run the magnet rotor up to 3600 R.P.M'S with wall current to energize the coils, then "flop over" to the D.C. tank circuit for super efficiency.

synchro1

Look at a long tube magnet: Any I.D. is available. The plastic rotor magnet cusp looks pretty close to 1/4" in the "Autopsy video".
We can work 4 power coils in parallel around a 6" tube. It may help to run this motor on the vertical axis the way it was designed to operate. We can improvise on the overhead support.

We can just sit a 1" diametric magnet tube over the seated rotor magnet, for a "quick and dirty" platform cut the sides from the casing, and power from the sides.