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Overunity Machines Forum



"Quantum Receiver".

Started by synchro1, December 06, 2019, 06:08:06 AM

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0 Members and 5 Guests are viewing this topic.

skywatcher

Quote from: synchro1 on December 12, 2019, 03:14:20 PM
Build an Avramenko plug to test it. The plug can have two reversed LED's connected to the ends of the two reversed diodes; It will work one way or the other. Connect one end of the coil to the signal generator electrode set to the 13.52 Mhz with no power, with the ground wire free; Then see if an LED illuminates in the static field in proximity to the coil.

*hmmm*

It's not enough to illuminate a LED (only 250 mVpp) but the strange thing is: the voltage does not depend on the distance between sending and receiving coil.   :o
(i varied the distance from 10 cm to approx. 1.5 m and in this range the voltage is constant)


I connected the sending coil to the generator (only one end, the other end open), generator was running at 13.44 MHz and 10V sinewave.
On the receiving coil i connected only one LED, no other diodes. What is the purpose of the normal diodes ? 

The LED itself is a diode so it should also work without additional diodes (?)

synchro1

Quote from: skywatcher on December 12, 2019, 05:08:01 PM
*hmmm*

It's not enough to illuminate a LED (only 250 mVpp) but the strange thing is: the voltage does not depend on the distance between sending and receiving coil.   :o
(i varied the distance from 10 cm to approx. 1.5 m and in this range the voltage is constant)


I connected the sending coil to the generator (only one end, the other end open), generator was running at 13.44 MHz and 10V sinewave.
On the receiving coil i connected only one LED, no other diodes. What is the purpose of the normal diodes ? 

The LED itself is a diode so it should also work without additional diodes (?)


Do you know what an Avramenko plug is? Nothing connects to the end of the coil except the clip lead. You need to make a plug now to receive the capacitance.

skywatcher

With a wire (30 cm) at the open end of the coil the receiving voltage increases to 350 mVpp.
Ok, this is not a miracle, it's what ham radio operators do all the time: they are also using short vertical antennas with a coil at the base to tune it.
And everything i tested was near-field, less than one wavelength between transmitter and receiver.
It works even better when i change the frequency at the generator to 12.4 MHz.

synchro1

Quote from: skywatcher on December 12, 2019, 05:17:12 PM
With a wire (30 cm) at the open end of the coil the receiving voltage increases to 350 mVpp.
Ok, this is not a miracle, it's what ham radio operators do all the time: they are also using short vertical antennas with a coil at the base to tune it.
And everything i tested was near-field, less than one wavelength between transmitter and receiver.
It works even better when i change the frequency at the generator to 12.4 MHz.


You need an Avramenko plug to illuminate the LED. Do you know what I'm talking about?

skywatcher

Quote from: synchro1 on December 12, 2019, 05:15:23 PM
Do you know what an Avramenko plug is?

I googled it, and there seem to be many different versions...