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Overunity Machines Forum



Bedini dc motor hybrid

Started by jonnydavro, September 10, 2008, 06:00:48 PM

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0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

jonnydavro

Hi,I have combined a dc motor with a bedini motor.The dc motor is in series with the power coil of my Bedini motor,my Rotor sits on this dc motor.
When i spin the rotor the bedini trigger circuit switches the transistor on which sends power through the dc motor and then the power coil.This does 3 things.
1.The power coil pushes the magnets on the rotor
2.The dc motor(rotor) spins.
3.The capasitor in parallel with the dc motor charges up

When the transistor switches off,the capasitor discharges through the dc motor so turning the rotor when a normal bedini would be free wheeling.
This hybrid motor is spinning really fast on 16mA but will run on a lot less but at a reduced speed
This motor has quite a bit off torque so i will be trying to turn a small dc gen with it.
Regards jonnydavro

mscoffman

jonnydavro;

You have a neat and interesting idea there. One good generator would be to use a permanent magnet battery operated cassette
tape motor. That is, turning the shaft mechanically rather than suppling any DC voltage to it and measuring the output
voltage produced

You would need to adjust the gearing (belt) ratio to maximize output. (that is; optimise the mechanical impedance)
Then you could use a variable resistor maximize the multiplication product of voltage times milliamperes.
for example you make a table of volts and side by side with milliamps. Then multiply those numbers together to
give milliwatts. You then pick the highest milliwatts that is your maximum power and the variable resistor setting gives
your setup's impedance resistance.

Then you could compare this output milliwatts with your input in milliwatts.
Who knows? you may already have an overunity setup!

If you have overunity you can come back to report it and we could discuss a converter to connect the input to output
to make it an official overunity self-runner. A true overunity machine.


:S:MarkSCoffman




nightlife

That is a interesting circut. Thank you. I may try it on a design I have.

jonnydavro

@ mscoffman.Thanks for your suggestion.That method with the variable resistor sounds like a goodway to accurately measure output power.
@ Nightlife. Glad to have helped,let me know if you have any luck.
 
                                                                    regards jonnydavro.

altium

Hi jonnydavro,
do you achieve overunity and perpetual motion with this construction?