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Overunity Machines Forum



Partnered Output Coils - Free Energy

Started by EMJunkie, January 16, 2015, 12:08:38 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 11 Guests are viewing this topic.

tinman

@ MarkE &PW

Below are 3 scope shots.
I have placed one of my large caps between the battery and motor,and the small cap across the brush wires as recommended. I have a 1 ohm 10 watt CVR on the negative side between the large cap and battery-->the blue trace is across that CVR. The yellow trace is across the input wires,probe between the large cap and battery on positive side-->common grounds together of course.
Scope shot one is with the scope set to average x4
Scope shot 2 is with scope set to sampling
Scope shot 3 is with scope set to peak detect.

Is this still to noisey on the input for my DMM's and/or an analog meter?.

tinman


picowatt

Quote from: tinman on June 23, 2015, 08:59:23 AM
@ MarkE &PW

Below are 3 scope shots.
I have placed one of my large caps between the battery and motor,and the small cap across the brush wires as recommended. I have a 1 ohm 10 watt CVR on the negative side between the large cap and battery-->the blue trace is across that CVR. The yellow trace is across the input wires,probe between the large cap and battery on positive side-->common grounds together of course.
Scope shot one is with the scope set to average x4
Scope shot 2 is with scope set to sampling
Scope shot 3 is with scope set to peak detect.

Is this still to noisey on the input for my DMM's and/or an analog meter?.

Tinman,

Does the scope/CVR measurement agree with the inline ammeter (DMM)?

800mV across 1 ohm?

PW

MileHigh

Brad:

I want to commend you on your ongoing work and your work with Mark and PW on this project.  We will see how it turns out.

I am now going to wax poetic a bit.

This clip is very important for any experimenter to look at:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASd0t3n8Bnc

It's not related to electronics but that doesn't matter.  It's the best video I have ever seen on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapse.

From the description, "This documentary took second place at Nationals in National History Day 2007 in the junior group division. The theme was Tragedy and Triumph."

Assuming that high school kids made the video, they did a truly fantastic job.

Here is a very brief article about a similar thing that happened in Canada in the early 20th century:

http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/quebec-bridge-disaster-feature/

Quote, "Of the 86 workers on the bridge that August 29, 1907, 75 died, many of them local Caughnawaga, famous for their high steel work. Some of the dead had been crushed by the twisted steel; others by the fall. Still others drowned before the rescue boats could reach them."

Okay, the philosophical musings will be in the next post.

MileHigh

MileHigh

In Canada, when you get your engineering diploma, you have a "secret" "Iron Ring" ceremony.  They give you an iron ring for all of your hard work and you wear it on your pinky.

In the ceremony, there are iron chains for you to hold while you recite your engineering oath. The chains extend from a long table on the center stage out into the audience.  So in theory you are "connected" to everyone and connected to the engineering dignitaries that are sitting at the center table.

There is a myth, and even though it is a myth, it's still a nice symbolic story.  The myth is that the metal used to make the iron rings comes from one of the girders of the bridge that collapsed in Quebec.

So what do you think you say in your oath?  Something like, "I am a hot-shot and now with my engineering diploma in hand I am going to run out and change the world?"   Like Bill Gates and Steve Jobs changed the world?

Well, in fact you basically state the opposite.  You state that you are a clueless newbie, you are a babe in the woods.  You state that you have no experience and no authority to state anything about anything.  You are humbled and you are reminded that you have to gain life experience and you have to work hard and work at learning and you have to work hard to gain respect from your peers and from the general public at large.

The idea that your ring was smelted from a girder from the collapsed bridge, even though it's just a story, is to remind you that you have to be responsible and accountable and conduct yourself properly and work for the benefit and betterment of your fellow man.  You are never to irresponsibly assume anything or make any oversights because people are counting on you to do the right thing and you have a serious responsibility to try to never let there be another bridge that collapses.

And then you get your iron ring.