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Overunity Machines Forum



Amplidyne - a mechanical amplifier

Started by Neo-X, September 20, 2012, 02:51:57 AM

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Goat

Quote from: Neo-X on October 13, 2012, 05:30:16 AM
@goat
Thanks for posting this information. It will help others to understand how it works. I have an idea now of how can we make it solidstate. Instead of rotating the rotor to induce voltage in its coil, we can use ac in stator coil to induce voltage in the rotor similar in induction motor. Using phase shift we make a rotating magnetic field in stator so no need to rotate the rotor. We can use the standard induction motor in this setup. Because the rotor coil of induction motor is shorted, it will make a huge current and magnetic field. I imagine what if we add a additional coil to the rotor so that the shorted coil magnetic field will induce voltage in the additional coil similar to the amplidyne? Would it make a huge power gain in the additional coil?

@Neo-X

I agree with your idea in principle but you would need to draw it out for me to follow completely.

Would you be replacing the brushes in the images of the amplidyne with direct connections since the rotor would not be rotating?

I can imagine locking the rotor and shorting the coils and rewiring the perpendicular coils as the "output brushes" as described in the amplidyne description, question is, how do you include the control field?

Can a control field be added to an AC induction motor's rotor, is there any room in there to accommodate it?

Regards,
Paul

Xaverius

Quote from: Goat on October 22, 2012, 07:19:25 PM
Hi Xaverius

Thank you for your reply.

I've been having difficulties with this site for awhile now and tried but couldn't reply to your post.

Hope this post makes it's way to you!

Regards,
Paul
Glad to help out Paul.  I've had problems with this site too(I think everyone has).  Good luck with the amplidyne, I'm sure it has some possibilities.