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3.7 VOLT BATTERY POWERS 56 WATTS

Started by magnetman12003, March 28, 2017, 07:46:43 PM

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magnetman12003

Here is my latest using a car 12 volt battery and a step up booster converter.  The 12 volt seven watt bulbs are not modified   64.819 watts is driving the 70 watt load.   Nothing spectacular but if you remove the frosted caps on the bulbs by unscrewing them your light output increases 3 times.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oC1wnptNL_4

magnetman12003

Not to bad-- 5 seven watt 120/220 volt AC bulbs were powered by a 12.25 volt DC setup battery for 5 straight hours.  At the end of those hours the battery was down to 11.61 volts.  A .64 volt drop.

No signs of total shutdown and the bulbs still burned brightly.  Never flickered or progressively went dimmer.

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=eKUcM8Wkwgs

PARAV


Quote from: magnetman12003 on August 13, 2017, 08:30:33 PM
Here is my latest using a car 12 volt battery and a step up booster converter.  The 12 volt seven watt bulbs are not modified   64.819 watts is driving the 70 watt load.   Nothing spectacular but if you remove the frosted caps on the bulbs by unscrewing them your light output increases 3 times.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oC1wnptNL_4


High Magnetman =
Nice work,---will be watching this with great interest.
Paul

magnetman12003

Quote from: magnetman12003 on August 22, 2017, 05:58:38 PM
Not to bad-- 5 seven watt 120/220 volt AC bulbs were powered by a 12.25 volt DC setup battery for 5 straight hours.  At the end of those hours the battery was down to 11.61 volts.  A .64 volt drop.

No signs of total shutdown and the bulbs still burned brightly.  Never flickered or progressively went dimmer.

https://www.youtube.com/edit?o=U&video_id=eKUcM8Wkwgs
You might think of this as an inverter of sorts but what comes out of an inverter is AC power with 12 volts DC feeding in.  Not so with my setup.  12 volts DC feeds the setup circuit and I measure 12 volts DC feeding each of five 110/220 volt AC 7 watt bulbs.   If you took one of the bulbs by itself and fed 12 volts into it it will not light up? ??? ??? ??    Only by first spinning a system magnet over the coil will the bulbs burn and stay burning. That's untill the battery circuit is opened? ??? Then you must repeat the magnet spin for a second to get things going again.  The magnet is not required to spin any more after the bulbs are lit.  I WONDER IF TESLA IS INTERESTED???  Once again a .64 volt battery drop after a 5 hour run!!!

magnetman12003

Quote from: magnetman12003 on August 22, 2017, 05:58:38 PM
Not to bad-- 5 seven watt 120/220 volt AC bulbs were powered by a 12.25 volt DC setup battery for 5 straight hours.  At the end of those hours the battery was down to 11.61 volts.  A .64 volt drop.

No signs of total shutdown and the bulbs still burned brightly.  Never flickered or progressively went dimmer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKUcM8Wkwgs