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Overunity Machines Forum



Overunity Device by Tanju Argun (Moderated)

Started by gotoluc, June 23, 2017, 06:28:51 PM

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0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Tanju

The final output capacitor which feeds the Leds (80 volts is 66000 Micro (2 times 33000)
The schematic from the video is a bit old there are some  changes, I will post final schematic later. Once it is final because I am still playing with it.
But basic concept is the same. You see-saw a capacitor between BEDİNİ LOAD AND A 24 VOLT BATTERY alternatelyş
Bedini circuit is modified. The collector output diodes connect to 66000 micro cap pos terminal, neg terminal  of cap to a diode and to ground.
It is across this cap the 80 volts feeding the powerLEDs.
Note When you put this capacitor you dont need the neon lamps which protect the transistors in original Bedini.
tanju

popolibero

Hi Tanju and all,


thanks for sharing your setup. Since you have a cap on the output, even just measuring output amps and volts should give a decent idea of the output power you are achieving in the load leds.


regards,
Mario

icarus

Hello Tanju,
could you post the program code for arduino ?

Thanx

Tanju

My Problem is: I cannot see the current , just milliamps.
When I connect  1 (One) LED to   a 28 volt power supply I read 0.7 Amps and it gets real hot.
But when I connect 21 LEDs to my system I get the same illumination level on each LED  (LUMENS) but the current I measure is only .30 Amps for all 21 LEDs and no heat!
Tanju

gotoluc

Quote from: Tanju on June 24, 2017, 11:03:23 AM
The final output capacitor which feeds the Leds (80 volts is 66000 Micro (2 times 33000)
Quote from: Tanju on June 24, 2017, 11:37:17 AM
When I connect 1 (One) LED to a 28 volt power supply I read 0.7 Amps and it gets real hot.
But when I connect 21 LEDs to my system I get the same illumination level on each LED (LUMENS) but the current I measure is only .30 Amps for all 21 LEDs and no heat!

Are the LED's continuously powered by the 80 vdc 66000uf capacitor or are the LED's momentarily powered on by a mosfet switch?

Quote from: Tanju on June 24, 2017, 11:03:23 AM
The schematic from the video is a bit old there are some  changes, I will post final schematic later. Once it is final because I am still playing with it.

When you have a schematic update I can update it to the first post so all can easily find it.

Thanks

Luc