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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 22 Guests are viewing this topic.

hartiberlin

By the way:

MUR 4100 E
1kV 4(125)A 75ns DO27
from Motorola

diodes work quite nice as the Avramenko Plug diodes.
A bit better than the 1N4148
at least in my setups.
Stefan Hartmann, Moderator of the overunity.com forum

hoptoad

Quote from: zaydana on November 18, 2007, 08:43:25 PM
"You cannot just measure the DC current going through the LEDs to check for over-unity, you actually need to check the input to the entire circuit against the light output. "

Lumens out per input Watts, .....KneeDeep......LpW......KneeDeep  ;D


amigo

Quote from: hartiberlin on November 18, 2007, 09:49:42 PM
@Amigo,
can you please show a picture of your Thomas circuit ?
Did you built it also onto an experimentator board, that has 2 alu backplates ?

How do you control the resonance frequency with this circuit ?
How do you adjust it for optimal resonance ?

I hope we can get rid of these experimentator boards and can try to
create something that works on a normal PCB board, so one could
create a kit that also works without any problems.

Photo is attached (turned out pretty nice in close-up). :)

I am using a standard breadboard with a single plate at the bottom since I do not have spare plate-less breadboards right now. Once I free one I'll try the circuit on a plain breadboard and report what happens.

I have tried changing the 190pf cap to 150 and 220 and that seems to have change the operating frequency by couple of tens of kHz. Otherwise I did not have to adjust anything, the circuit is self-regulating once the oscillations begin.

Power is supplied from the rail in the middle, connected to a 12V gel battery via alligator clips (out of frame).

hoptoad

Quote from: amigo on November 18, 2007, 10:22:22 PM

Previous quote "The circuit apparently oscillates at ~1.5MHz and uses ~32mA of current from my 12V gel battery though that figure seems to fluctuate up and down, I've seen it go up to 70mA when I was probing points with my scope but that's just temporary."

Photo is attached (turned out pretty nice in close-up). :)

Assuming 35 ma is the real average for the point of reference, then just 3 LEDS running at that current would account for 12 V x .035 = 420 milliwatts. You have what appears to be 20 LEDS running very brightly  :o  :o
Just how brightly! is the key question to me. Things "look" very promising from here.

Great Job Amigo.  ;)

KneeDe...


hansvonlieven

Quote from: amigo on November 18, 2007, 09:15:16 PM
So now that this works how do we get rid of the battery altogether? ;D

Burn it ???

Hans von Lieven
When all is said and done, more is said than done.     Groucho Marx