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Overunity Machines Forum



Claimed OU circuit of Rosemary Ainslie

Started by TinselKoala, June 16, 2009, 09:52:52 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 19 Guests are viewing this topic.

MileHigh

Fuzzy:

I assume that you are going to wrap the wire around the glass tubes.  I have a feeling you are going to end up with something akin to a toaster element.  The wire will get very hot and may even glow, and then will slowly heat up the thick glass tube to thermal equilibrium.

That's in contrast to the real power resistor where the wire is embedded within the ceramic material giving you full thermal contact with the wire.  The ceramic resistor body will heat up more quickly and evenly as it gets to thermal equilibrium.

I get a much better feeling about the real ceramic resistor for measuring the temperature changes.

MileHigh

fuzzytomcat

Quote from: MileHigh on August 23, 2009, 04:45:19 PM
Fuzzy:

I assume that you are going to wrap the wire around the glass tubes.  I have a feeling you are going to end up with something akin to a toaster element.  The wire will get very hot and may even glow, and then will slowly heat up the thick glass tube to thermal equilibrium.

That's in contrast to the real power resistor where the wire is embedded within the ceramic material giving you full thermal contact with the wire.  The ceramic resistor body will heat up more quickly and evenly as it gets to thermal equilibrium.

I get a much better feeling about the real ceramic resistor for measuring the temperature changes.

MileHigh
Hi MileHigh,

Not to worry back in the days of Tesla they used tinned iron wire wound on asbestos, or porcelain tubes ( ie: Hawkins Electrical Guide  copyrighted 1917 ) ...... I will be using a special cement to cover the windings and baking the Borosilicate Glass Tube assembly in a "kiln" at a specific time frame and rate to harden the external covering.

Have you been able to source this resistor for a replications ?? It appears to me be a custom made one by Specific Heat CC (SA) ??

Fuzzy
;D

MileHigh

Hi Fuzzy,

If you can bake it and embed the wires in the glass that should make a big difference.

I don't know much about high power wire-wound resistors.  I have to assume that similar parts would also be available in North America.  I am pretty sure that I read that they are available in "regular" and "low inductance" versions.

The regular version is probably a single coil of resistive wire embedded in a ceramic tube shape.  The low inductance version is probably two half size wire coils embedded in a ceramic tube, one with clockwise turns and the other with counterclockwise turns.  The low inductance version would be a bit more expensive because it would be more expensive to manufacture.

A few phone calls to some of your local electronics component distributors would probably do the trick if you can't find anything online.

MileHigh

fuzzytomcat

Quote from: MileHigh on August 23, 2009, 06:11:19 PM
Hi Fuzzy,

I am pretty sure that I read that they are available in "regular" and "low inductance" versions.

The regular version is probably a single coil of resistive wire embedded in a ceramic tube shape.  The low inductance version is probably two half size wire coils embedded in a ceramic tube, one with clockwise turns and the other with counterclockwise turns.  The low inductance version would be a bit more expensive because it would be more expensive to manufacture.

A few phone calls to some of your local electronics component distributors would probably do the trick if you can't find anything online.

MileHigh

Hi MH,

Been there done that, and as I said "NO ONE" has to my knowledge or postings has found or is using the correct 10 OHM resistor on a RA replication "AND" to get one is a custom order, with minimum quantity for $$$$$$$$$$$$$$ .... been looking for two months now and so has everyone else from the looks of it.

Regards,
Fuzzy
;D


janne808

Quote from: MileHigh on August 23, 2009, 01:03:52 PM
Hoppy:

I just read all of the new posts.  When I read between the lines it looks to me like Aaron did his battery rundown tests but only got data that shows a very slight COP > 1.  As a result, he is actually now trying to use the DSO to record waveforms and do some processing on them, which would be great.

Good old "battery conditioning spikes."  Aaron even dragged out the old Bedini quote:

I assume that is his way of responding to the question asking why oscillations would allegedly make the Ainsley circuit create even higher free energy gains.  The fact is that Bedini motors do not demonstrate free energy or over unity at all.  It is simply a myth, and any experimenter that is a beginner will get all excited seeing the voltage on his charging battery increase.  On this site, or on the Energetic Forum site, there is a very sobering Bedini thread where the people that have done serious extensive testing, sometimes charging the same sets of batteries back and forth 10 times, have all reported no over unity effects with Bedini motors.  Proponents will say, "But a Bedini charger can recondition an old dead battery."  Big deal, you can get some more life out of a dead battery, this has nothing to do with over unity.

If you want real insight into John Bedini, just go to his website and see that he sells a few flavours of a "CD Clarifier."  The "CD Clarifier" is supposed to make audio CDs "sound better and clearer" if you put your CD into this device before you put it into your CD player.

This is a piece of audiophile electrical quackery that has no affect on the audio CD.  That's your smoking gun on John Bedini that can go all the way back to the "Bedini motor."

Aaron:

You shouldn't say this in public!  lol  You are going to really have to figure this one out one day Aaron because it creates a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach just like when myself and .99 tried at least 20 times to explain to Rosemary how an inductor works and she still didn't get it.

It's like being a Creationist and walking around telling people that the Earth is only 6000 years old.  It's that bad.

MileHigh

Or like saying that the earth is flat. EEs always fall (!) for that one.

janne