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Tesla Switch need help

Started by TheOne, September 16, 2007, 07:27:52 PM

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0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

plengo

@Groundloop,

I would not advice to use the relay. They clumsy, noisy and they will break soon. I am using them really for quickness proof of concept and also because I do think the spark has something there for me to learn about. I think you are on the correct track with the solid-state quest. I saw your question at the other group and the response from Mike.

I even think your idea of using the pic is genius because we can hell control the timing on this thing better than electronics. I think you only really have to fix that up/down switching to the fastest that we can.

The relay I am using is the ones you can easily find at radio shack the problem is usualy those only have 2 switchs (6 poles) and for this 4 swtich Tesla stuff we need more and making them trigger in perfect synch is impossible. I am only testing the switching for one battery and coil just to see the effects I am to expect when I will be playing with the full circuit. I already concluded just doing that one test that timing IS everything and the battery DOES respond in a not very conventional manner. It does give more power than if you just use it in a steady current stream.

Remember those "decoupling" coils used by Bedini on the base of the trigger transistor? well I think they are more than just decouplers. You see, Bedini is a genius and he really makes things very simple but profoundly complex in its workings, so when I see those coils, transistors and so on I see much more that i "dont see".

Also I was thinking how he design things that are kind of self-regulators, they adjust themselfs as the signals travels through the parts (like the PN3055 transistor and the bifilar coil on the SSG triggering as the magnet pass by and shutting the transistor off imediatly because of the quick turn on of the transistor causes the magnet field and therefore the current on the other side of the coil). Nothing can beat that self-regulation at the "speed sensing" of the parts themselfs. Make sence?

We are working towards now with a , we find the timing, but it would be better if we could design something that finds that spot automatically, that's what I think those coils on the base of the transistor on the Brandt/Bedini is ALSO.

But, hey, one step at the time. Now I am learning about the coil saturation, its speed, the sparks, the response of the different kind of batteries and so on. For example the NIMH reacted very poorly compared to the Lead-Acid battery and I was expecting that because the Lead-Acid battery have the heavy ions to interect with in orders of magntude compared to the reactions inside the NIMH. Still the NIMH behaved much faster but drained faster too.

Get that design of yours going, dont give up, I think it will work it is really a matter as you know already about the fast switching fix.  :)

Fausto.

Groundloop


plengo

@Groundloop,

no I dont mean fast as frequency, I mean as switching rise time. The slope of the curve. Not how many pulses per second.

Fausto.

Groundloop


Nali2001

Here is a simple 4 battery relay version.

Steven