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Overunity Machines Forum



Looks Like OU Senior Member Avalon Has DONE IT! New Video!

Started by Just..Sayin.., January 16, 2016, 01:09:01 PM

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0 Members and 5 Guests are viewing this topic.

tinman

Quote from: TinselKoala on January 17, 2016, 05:48:55 PM
Yes, and in permanent magnets.

Hence commutation, either mechanical or electrical.

I have seen no AC generator(alternator) with commutation.

tinman

Quote from: MileHigh on January 17, 2016, 06:00:59 PM
No, it's a generic statement and what half of the AC sine wave you are on has nothing to do with it.

MH
The two magnetic fields only !push! against each other for half of the cycle.

tinman

Quote from: Magluvin on January 17, 2016, 06:11:17 PM
Brads question was is it electrons in motion that produces the magnetic field of a magnet.

Could you elaborate on that? ;)

Mags

Yes,an important question Mag's,but i doubt it will be answered correctly-or at all in any depth. ::)

Magluvin

Quote from: tinman on January 17, 2016, 06:19:48 PM
Yes,an important question Mag's,but i doubt it will be answered correctly-or at all in any depth. ::)

Well I caught that and going with it.  To me it seems that electrons are the source of magnetic field. If atoms are realigned when making a magnet then the electrons would be in alignment also. When a current flows in a wire, Im of the belief that the electrons that are in motion and broken away from their atoms in the wire are also of a particular orientation. Orientation as in the electron possibly has a + side and a - side electrically. If they do, then that may explain that when the electrons flow in a conductor one way the mag field is of one polarity around the wire, and when the electrons flow through the conductor in the other direction the polarity of the magnetic field is reversed. It just seems logical that the electrons are electrically polarized and not just negative items themselves.

Like if we apply a small current in a wire, only some of the electrons in the wire are breaking and moving in a particular direction and the field around the wire is only comprised of the fields of those fewer electrons in motion. But when we apply a  very high current through the wire, there could be a huge number of electrons in motion and electrical alignment where all of their fields around the wire are much denser and stronger.

So in a magnet sitting on a table, is it just simply that the electrons are aligned as such to produce a polarized field within the magnet, or is it due to electron motion(as you had questioned of Mh and TK confirming)?

Mags