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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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synchro1

The turntable coil has a 10 to 1 step down transformer enclosed in the plastic plug housing and normally runs at 21 volts (Omni Hertz). We need to charge the D.C. cap to 21 volts to match.

synchro1

I believe the D.C. capacitor would need 210 volts. I'm not sure if those kinds of power coils would resonate with the transformer in the way. This coil is extremely versatile because it can plug directly into a wall socket and run any N.S. rotor effortlessly with synchronous A.C.. We need more testing to determine it's value as an LC tank componant. It may help to wire the capacitor to the coil above the transformer at 21 volts. We would need to wire the DPDT switch between the coil and capacitor at the coil's electrode junction to disconnect the transformer. These turntable motors come in different power ranges. The copy models cost around $10.00 from ebay.

synchro1

We spin the powerful A.C. magnet rotor up to 3600 R.P.M., disconnect the power, and "flop" the charged capacitor into the coil. The coil now functions as an output coil for the powerful rapidly spinning magnet rotor. Where would all this instantaneous A.C. power go to at 60 hertz? How much would the rotor output increase the amplitude of the LC sine wave in the tank circuit resonating at 60 hertz?

We still need to feed the circuit to replenish the losses. Feeding pulsed D.C. into the tank, through a coil primary, or directly into the capacitor would sustain the rotor speed at 3600 R.P.M'S.

The spinning rotor raises the coil's impedance helping cause "Lenz Reversal". The rotating magnet is storing it's own output in the LC tank sine wave amplitude which is in turn driving the rotor. The phase shift results in "Lenz Propulsion" above "Critical Minimum Frequency", or (CMF).

synchro1

Disconnecting the transformer from the coil and pulsing the 1 turn primary into an LC tank consisting of the 10 turn transformer secondary and matching capacitor, tuned to a resonant frquency of 60 hertz, may act as an A.C. "Pony Tank" and feed power into the adjacent main tank inductor through induction.

synchro1

The "Keppe Motor" can run as an A.C. synchronous, or D.C. pulse motor. Keppe has reported the same reduction of input under load as Gotoluc. Luc grabs ahold of the rotor axle untill it starts to slip, and measures a drop in input.

The slowed rotating magnets are forced to do work to try and catch up with the A.C. frequency. The permanent magnet's field is actually strengthened from the quantum plane to help the rotation get back in synchronicity with the A.C. frequency. When Luc squeezes the axle and causes the magnet rotor to begin to "Slip", the magnets really start growing stronger to help catch back up to the input frequency from the atomic level. This results in the reduction in input, and amounts to "Free energy".