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Overunity Machines Forum



Some thoughts on how the TPU might work.

Started by dfro, November 26, 2007, 07:43:29 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 5 Guests are viewing this topic.

EMdevices

thanks nightlife,  very interesting and relevant.  I see he uses iron wire.

every time I hear people talking about Meyers, I thought they were talking about Stanley and his water cell, so this is a surprise for me. 

In figure 8 of his patent is the simplest device by which he discovered the effect.  So simple to build. Did anybody build this and try it?

EM

Quote from: nightlife on December 23, 2007, 03:33:17 PM
Hansvonlieven posted this link on another thread and you all may want to check it out before continuing to argue as some are.

http://www.mondovista.com/meyers/

tak22

@EM

4549raymond said he tried it with no success ... A friend and I recently built Roy Meyers accumulator but we could not get it to work

http://www.overunity.com/index.php?topic=3403.345

He's still around so maybe send him a PM ....

tak

EMdevices

thanks guys,

I just played around with some iron wire and magnets and copper wire, and digital voltmeter, and I can see a small voltage (0.5 V) when I touch things with my hand.  It's definitely galvanic action (chemical), and different metals make a difference.   

So, I'm thinking this is simply a galvanic action type of a device, even though he says in his patent that it's not motional or chemical, but I think it's chemical all right, but not in the sense of a lead acid battery like what Meyers was probably thinking.  Dissimilar metals with different electro-negativities will produce a voltage at their junction, and he is using iron and zinc, and what do they use zinc for?   to prevent rusting through galvanic action. 

It would have been nice if it was some sort of generator based on the earth magnetic field, etc..   :(

EM

innovation_station

hummmm

zink not much mention of that material at all

lol   anybody know what the resonant freq for zink is?

what might happin if you set it into resosnance

i have not played with zink at all

however if you know anything about zink you would know there is free engery there all the time in the form of electricty

hummmmm


ist

i have done 0 reserch on zink perhaps the time is now!!
To understand the action of the local condenser E in fig.2 let a single discharge be first considered. the discharge has 2 paths offered~~ one to the condenser E the other through the part L of the working circuit C. The part L  however  by virtue of its self induction  offers a strong opposition to such a sudden discharge  wile the condenser on the other hand offers no such opposition ......TESLA..

THE !STORE IS UP AND RUNNING ...  WE ARE TAKEING ORDERS ..  NOW ..   ISTEAM.CA   AND WE CAN AND WILL BUILD CUSTOM COILS ...  OF   LARGER  OUTPUT ...

CAN YOU SAY GOOD BYE TO YESTERDAY?!?!?!?!

nightlife

Zinc (pronounced /ˈzɪÃ...‹k/, from German: Zink) is a metallic chemical element with the symbol Zn and atomic number 30. In some historical and sculptural contexts, it is (or was) known as spelter.

Zinc is a moderately reactive, bluish-white metal that tarnishes in moist air and burns in air with a bright bluish-green flame, giving off plumes of zinc oxide. It reacts with acids, alkalis and other non-metals. If not completely pure, zinc reacts with dilute acids to release hydrogen. The one common oxidation state of zinc is +2. From 100 ?C to 210 ?C (212 ?F to 410 ?F) zinc metal is malleable and can easily be beaten into various shapes. Above 210 ?C (410 ?F), the metal becomes brittle and will be pulverized by beating. Zinc is nonmagnetic.

History

ZincIn ancient India the production of zinc metal was very common. Many mine sites of Zawar Mines, near Udaipur, Rajasthan;-Zawarmaala were active even during 1300?1000 BC. There are references of medicinal uses of zinc in the Charaka Samhita (300 BC). The Rasaratna Samuccaya (800 AD) explains the existence of two types of ores for zinc metal, one of which is ideal for metal extraction while the other is used for medicinal purpose.[citation needed] Zinc alloys have been used for centuries, as brass goods dating to 1400?1000 BC have been found in Israel and zinc objects with 87% zinc have been found in prehistoric Transylvania. Because of the low boiling point and high chemical reactivity of this metal (isolated zinc would tend to go up the chimney rather than be captured), the true nature of this metal was not understood in ancient times.

The manufacture of brass was known to the Ebi by about 30 BC, using a technique where calamine and copper were heated together in a crucible. The zinc oxides in calamine were reduced, and the free zinc metal was trapped by the copper, forming an alloy. The resulting calamine brass was either cast or hammered into shape.

Smelting and extraction of impure forms of zinc was accomplished as early as 1000 AD in India and China. In the West, impure zinc as a remnant in melting ovens was known since Antiquity, but usually discarded as worthless. Strabo mentions it as pseudo-arguros ? "mock silver". The Berne zinc tablet is a votive plaque dating to Roman Gaul, probably made from such zinc remnants.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zinc