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Overunity Machines Forum



Selfrunning cold electricity circuit from Dr.Stiffler

Started by hartiberlin, October 11, 2007, 05:28:41 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 15 Guests are viewing this topic.

fleubis

I'm a bit confused about the use of Barium in  this device. Please  correct  me if  I'm wrong, but the only Barium I see in this device is in the ferrite tuning beads.  Right? The old radio antennas contain no Barium, or do they? Am now  trying to source that very thin multi-conductor wire used in the coils....not so  easy to find. Will  post a source when I find one.

Would like to remind everyone of Dr. Stiffler's clear disclaimer about his environment NOT being setup with proper shielding and grounding, and the presence of a nearby radio transmitter might easily explain everything.

James 

redorman

The way I see it, the key to the powering of the bulb IS the signal generator.  The energy of several (or many, depending) low power pulses from the signal generator get stored and then released as one relatively large pulse to blink the LED or lamp.

Freenrg4me

I think people are confusing and assuming things that are not claimed by Dr. Stiffler. Part of the problem is, from the time we watch the video to the time we type, we modify what may be claimed.

Best to watch the video again and see what is claimed. Look at the scope shots and look at things like frequency and voltage and then replicate it and see how it works for you.

The part of this last video that confused me is that he did not use the 90 degree opposed secondary coil, instead used three coils on the ferrite.

Another thing that may be confusing is that he called the video CE4 (Cold electricity 4) but in a previous video he said that the key to creating cold electricity was the counter opposed coil on a barium ferrite core.

I am sure that with time and patience all these issues will be resolved. I am looking for a barium ferrite cores and the closest thing I can find is barium ferrite magnets.

Mostly what the video showed me is the use of the plug at the end of the circuit which he clearly cites to the inventor. It is all good.

Freenrg4me

Here is something else I found interesting relative to an experiment he (Stiffler) did on his web site regarding electrolysis using just the input from a single LED powered by a cold electric barium ferrite core setup.

It appears that barium resonates at almost exactly ten times the resonate frequency of hydrogen (H1)

Mr. Stiffler talked about not being interested in recreating the Meyer process and instead developed the CREC - Charge recycle circuit which does work as advertised. Then while doing that experiment where a tiny bit of light was cracking water, he asked the question (paraphrasing) "Is this related to the Meyer process"

I about jumped out of my chair when I noticed that the two elements had such a close match.

Source of information was Texas Nuclear Magnetic Resonance something or another - Sorry, I lost the URL.

Note: Resonance frequencies are quoted relative to a resonance
frequency of exactly 100 MHz for 1H.

Isotope: 1H

Spin:                         1/2
Natural abunance:             99.985%
Magnetogyric ratio (rad/T s): 26.7520 x 10^7
Relative receptivity:         1.00
Magnetic moment               4.83724
Quadrupole moment Q/m(2)      0
Resonance frequency           100,200 and 300 MHz

Isotope: 135Ba

Spin:                         3/2
Natural abunance:             6.59 %
Magnetogyric ratio (rad/T s): 2.671 x 10^7
Relative receptivity:         3.28 x 10^-4
Magnetic moment               1.080
Quadrupole moment Q/m(2)      0.18
Resonance frequency           9.984 MHz

This indicates, if I understand correctly, that barium resonates at 998.4 MHZ and hydrogen at 100MHZ
Almost a perfect harmonic.

I know this much for sure, Meyers "State Space Change" could have been referring to the state change of a field effect transistor and perhaps a barium vessel surrounding the anode may have something to do with that patent and I am damn sure going to be playing with it soon!

Freenrg4me

Quote from: fleubis on October 14, 2007, 11:21:45 PM
I'm a bit confused about the use of Barium in  this device. Please  correct  me if  I'm wrong, but the only Barium I see in this device is in the ferrite tuning beads.  Right? The old radio antennas contain no Barium, or do they? Am now  trying to source that very thin multi-conductor wire used in the coils....not so  easy to find. Will  post a source when I find one.

Would like to remind everyone of Dr. Stiffler's clear disclaimer about his environment NOT being setup with proper shielding and grounding, and the presence of a nearby radio transmitter might easily explain everything.

James 

Thin multi-strand  wire is called litz wire and it can be found on the web.

Ferrite tuning beads? No those are ferrite beads for decoupling and are easy to find but they do not do tuning. If anything, they DE-tune.

The antenna core looks like the same cores used in earlier videos and he stated that they were barium cores from an AM radio probably produced in China. I remember the little AM raidios from 20-30 years ago did have a core like that in them.

Hope that helps