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Overunity Machines Forum



Skycollection's "Pentafilar Pancake" inductively coupled "Overunity Potential".

Started by synchro1, February 24, 2015, 04:12:38 PM

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synchro1

Here's Skycollection's latest video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9FqHSYzU4Q&list=TLEoOMpHCLc8o

Skycollection shows a schematic of one centered power coil sandwiched by two single wire coils to each side. The intriguing aspect is that Jorge infers that the additional inductively coupled coils in oscillation along with their LED loads, are not reflected by increased input from his power capacitors source.

Question:

"Does the drive coil current increase with powering 1 light vs. 4 lights"?

Here's what he said:

Skycollection:

"When the circuit goes into "self-oscillation" is similar to how a JOULE THIEF works, everything illuminates brightly"...!

It would be very easy to loop the output from one or two of those oscillating coils back to the super capacitors through a fast switching diode! 

                                            This looks like it has some very serious "Overunity" potential!

It's important to understand that the magnetic oscillation alone is itself generating the power in the inductively coupled coils that run the LEDS, and not the stored power in the super capacitors.

synchro1

Here's a video from a week ago with thee coils:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QY9TjsGccM4

The question is Folks; How many coils can we pack end to end this way in a PVC pipe? Thery're seemingly limitless, right? We should be in store for a "Septefilar" next, with two additional LED arrays for the same money! Hallelujah!

                                          This is an extrodinarily awesome demonstration from Jorge!

                                                                            BRAVO JORGE!

                                                                             

skycollection

Quote from: synchro1 on February 24, 2015, 04:12:38 PM
Here's Skycollection's latest video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9FqHSYzU4Q&list=TLEoOMpHCLc8o

Skycollection shows a schematic of one centered power coil sandwiched by two single wire coils to each side. The intriguing aspect is that Jorge infers that the additional inductively coupled coils in oscillation along with their LED loads, are not reflected by increased input from his power capacitors source.

Question:

"Does the drive coil current increase with powering 1 light vs. 4 lights"?

Here's what he said:

Skycollection:

"When the circuit goes into "self-oscillation" is similar to how a JOULE THIEF works, everything illuminates brightly"...!

It would be very easy to loop the output from one or two of those oscillating coils back to the super capacitors through a fast switching diode! 

                                            This looks like it has some very serious "Overunity" potential!

It's important to understand that the magnetic oscillation alone is itself generating the power in the inductively coupled coils that run the LEDS, and not the stored power in the super capacitors.




Very soon i will make an amazing experiment with more LED BULBS and more pancake coils connected in series, is possible that this experience be close to overunity potential...!

synchro1

Skycollection's "Complementary Transistors" are driving current in both directions through the primary pancake coil! Jorge calls this "Singing Oscillation "The Swing".

"Two different types of transistors "PNP" and "NPN", can be a great advantage when designing power amplifier circuits such as the Class B Amplifier".

Class-B amplifiers uses "Complementary" or "Matched Pair" (that is one PNP and one NPN connected together) transistors in its output stage or in reversible H-Bridge motor control circuits were we want to control the flow of current evenly through the motor in both directions.

A pair of corresponding NPN and PNP transistors with near identical characteristics to each other are called "Complementary Transistors" such as the 2N3906 PNP and the 2N2222 NPN Skycollection's using.

Also, class B amplifiers use complementary NPN and PNP in their power output stage design. The NPN transistor conducts for only the positive half of the signal while the PNP transistor conducts for negative half of the signal.

This allows the amplifier to "drive the required power in both directions" at the stated nominal impedance and power resulting in an output current which is likely to be in the order of several amps shared evenly between the two complementary transistors.

Skycollection shows his circuit schematic at 1:05 in this video:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QY9TjsGccM4

skycollection

When the circuit goes into self-oscillation, is similar to how a joule thief circuit works, and everything iluminates brightly...! very soon i will make an amazing experiment with more led bulbs and more pancake coils, this experience with pancake coils is awesome...!
The pancake coils have a dark side, it was not easy to get here, there is still much to investigate.