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Tesla switch concept revisit.

Started by captainpecan, December 19, 2021, 04:07:21 PM

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captainpecan

Thats awesome. That's exactly the kind of research I have been hunting for. There isn't enough people posting there numbers out there to see the actual run times. I have been doing something similar but its a very slow version of manually switching every so often after some energy has flowed for a while. It's not using the fast switching theory that Ronald Brandt said was the key. But it does appear to greatly increase the amount of run time I can light bulbs off of my simple invertor. There is a lot to learn still here. I am working on another project but it still has this concept wrapped up in it. Hopefully Ill have something to share soon.


What was your run time results? Did it seem to you that you were actually recycling that energy and gaining run time? It seems that way to me, although of course it does not charge up the batteries on it's own as Ronald  Brandt claimed. At least mine doesn't. They all run down, just much slower and I appear to get more work out of them before they do.

Energy Hack

The run time was around 14 hours and the load 18 watts. (2) 4-watt LED's and a 10-watt Boost Converter charging an external battery.  I continually measured all the loads to confirm power output.   I did a second test and got similar results.  The system returns about 80% of the batteries stated capacity however once one battery goes dead I stop it.  There is in fact still power in the other three batteries though none are over 13 volts.  Also, batteries are over  year old and have been used in several experiments so they may not actually have 76wh in each (as stated on the battery).  I did NOT do a control group to see how much power they can deliver in a standard load set up.  I may do a third test and put just a DC motor in for the load to see if I get different results vs resistive load of LED lights.  It may also be possible to build this solid state with Mosfets and get the switching speed up to 100hz.  Trying to design that but my electronics skills are pretty basic!