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Overunity Machines Forum



pulse motor Working video and info

Started by adam flow nemo, June 15, 2007, 02:03:22 PM

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0 Members and 6 Guests are viewing this topic.

Nastrand2000

Hey Ren,
How did the testing go with motor....just wondering.
Jason

Ren

hey mate,

Testing went good. I have now placed another 5 sets of magnets around the wheel for a total of ten. The output from the secondaries went from 20 v to 30v. I was a bit skeptical of this reading so I hooked it up to an analogue gauge. It read 5 volts with 5 magnets and now reads 10 volts with 10 magnets. I dont know which one is correct, but I have to go with the 10 volt reading on the analogue, so as not to get ahead of myself.

Ordered some halls today and transistor, looking forward to seeing how they perform.

Amps went up on the input side however to around 1.6 amps. Im guessing since I have doubled duty cycle per revolution that its using more current. Is there a simple circuit I can buy/make that will allow me to make adjustments to voltage and amp draw from the battery?

Output is enough to turn hobby motors, and will light up a 12 v 5 watt bulb, not to full brightness though.
I have got heaps more ideas for it yet so stay tuned.

Nastrand2000

Ren,
To reduce the current your motor is using, you will need to place a resistor inline with one of your coils. I suggest doing it right after the micro switch. A standard light dimming switch is probably the easiest and most robust for the price, a cheap one will do. Using the dimmer, you can vary the current going through your coils.
Jason

Ren

I brought a 1k varible resistor yesterday, would that do? I am going to go and make a vid now. Post it shortly.

Nastrand2000

Ren,
If you have resistors available to you, putting on inline with the dimmer switch is a plus. You just need to figure out how much current you want running to the motor and match that with a resistor of correct rating. This will be trial and error.  Here is a website  to figure out what your resistor is rated at. Just change the color bands on the resistor on the web site to match the one you are using.
http://www.samengstrom.com/nxl/3660/4_band_resistor_color_code_page.en.html
Jason