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Selfrunning Free Energy devices up to 5 KW from Tariel Kapanadze

Started by Pirate88179, June 27, 2009, 04:41:28 AM

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0 Members and 102 Guests are viewing this topic.

gigitonggos

fyuhh..finally i realized that sr 193 used an"  AC HOMEMADE FLYBACK " ;) .february will be an interisting month .. 8)
@ madsatbg your video MAD14 is what sr 193 pointed  :). can it replicated with an " AC FLYBACK  "instead neon transformer?
yeah i should upload my inverter,but the  net here suck  :(


Hoppy

Quote from: Farmhand on January 29, 2014, 06:50:16 PM

If your gutted LED's are supplied 11.8 volts would they blow or light up like the "sun" ? Anyway it seems to me the current draw of the Halogens and the LED's could be almost the same but for one decimal place, if the current shunt was changed it could look the same.

..

Yes, at 11.8V my LED lamp glows like the sun! LED drivers are designed to work on a constant current principle, so ideally LED's should not be supplied from a straight unregulated power supply or battery. However, for the purposes of a very short self-running device claim using LED lamps, it matters little whether the supply is regulated or not.

Hoppy

Quote from: Farmhand on January 29, 2014, 07:08:09 PM

Without knowing the circuit it's impossible to say. Brightness does not always equate to power. For instance with my torches they can turn on and off at 10 Hz at the same brightness as full brightness on high setting obviously using less power than always on, but if we were to increase the strobe frequency to about 100 Hz we would not notice the strobe effect and the power consumption would still be less than when always on, although the total light emitted would be less, due to "period" on and off, even though the brightness would be the same. (on a side note the 10 Hz strobe make me feel odd !) It's disturbing to my perception.

This is similar to power and energy. Brightness and total light emitted. They are not directly relative to each other.

Cheers

EDITED: some small Errors.

When pulsing my LED lamp on a 50/50 duty cycle, I can perceive a non-flickering / constant brightness at a minimum frequency of around 22Hz. However, although the lamp appears to my eye as being only slightly dimmer than when run from a constant DC supply, my Lux meter shows a big difference.

a.king21