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Overunity Machines Forum



Free Energy Revealed - Magnet Battery

Started by 0ne, May 25, 2008, 09:14:52 PM

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0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

xee

@ Jimboot
There is no hurry. Either you are making a mistake in your measurements or you have made a new scientific discovery. Without more information I do not know which. When I tried this per original instructions I did not get any current flow with dry paper and the only voltage was from the leads picking up stray electric fields. But I was using a horseshoe magnet not a neo magnet. I will try it again with a neo magnet, wet paper, and plastic spacer. But I suspect it is something you are doing that hopefully will show up in the video.

xee

@ Jimboot
I tried a chrome plated neo magnet, piece of wet paper towel, and a plastic bag spacer. My meter leads are nonmagnetic so they are not steel. Not sure what they are. I got about 0.3 volts with wet parper and magnet. No voltage when plastic bag spacer was inserted between wet paper and meter lead. No measureable current either way.

Jimboot

Quote from: sandor on July 09, 2008, 09:43:56 AM
Two, it's the floating voltage of the DMM. Digital multimeters tend to drift and may record a surprisingly large voltage if the two leads are not connected together by any low impedance connection (for instance touching them together). The semiconductors need a solid voltage to get a definite reading, even if that voltage is 0, so if you just have two wires dangling it may drift all over the place. You won't see this with a classic coil-based multimeter.

OK picked up an analogue meter today. Will let you know how I go. I am uploading a vid today with the digital meters measuring volts through plastic.

Jimboot


xee

@ Jimboot
Two things to consider:

1. Meters drift on low scales, so a change in reading may be due to drifting. You need to re-zero meters often when using lowest scales.

2. Digital meters have small integration capacitor across input when measuring voltage to help eliminate noise. This capacitor can remain charged for a while after voltage is removed from leads when using low scales. You may be creating a voltage by moving leads past magnets which then remains as a charge on this capacitor for a short time. Try moving steel lead probe back and forth near magnet and see if it produces a voltage on meter when using lowest scale.

Good video. What happens if you use one of your new probes instead of your old dirty one?