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Overunity Machines Forum



Agentgates´s TPU setup with strange wavehill hump

Started by agentgates, January 05, 2010, 09:28:18 AM

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0 Members and 14 Guests are viewing this topic.

chasson321

Quote from: Magluvin on January 10, 2010, 10:12:10 AM
I have stayed out of it to give a chance for tony to finalize, but the same question comes to my mind. How can a dc line on the scope remain on the sec. if the A is pulsed? That would assume that something is still happening in the primary or within the coil as a whole, during the off cycles. To have a solid dc line along with lil hump pulses on the sec. would suggest that the coil is acting as a capacitor of sorts. And with so few windings, I find it hard to comprehend.
Still awaiting a video

Mags

Possibly it can be explained by the same effect the John Bedini shows in this video at around the 4 minute mark.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aA8-0tctyw

broli

@altair: I used the parameters Tony used on his coil, unless I'm wrong. I don't like people or myself to give this a personal twist as we still do not have a working unit. I would stick to Tony's until we have a working replica, then you can go nuts with the modifications.

I have updated the presentation and rar file on page 21. I added some renditions that show what happens to a part of the coil if you jump to the next winding after one complete winding. As you can see there isn't any crossing just some extra space due to the jump. From the inside everything remains evenly spaced. So this isn't a problem.

altair

Hi broli,
it wasn't my intention to give this a "personal twist" at all.
My goal is just to find the correct number of notches needed so that the coil comes out even, and perfect.  I do not consider this as a modification.
Anyway I'm still amazed at your rendering of the coil. Outstanding work.

I'd like Tony to chip in and confirm if the number of turns of the primary per revolution of the core is 3 or 4 ?  Tony's picture shows 3, and your rendering shows 4.  ???

Cheers

ketone

Hello

       @broli   ...i think your diagram might be off with the arclength of the triangle being 45 degrees, i have one full 45 degree triangle upright at 120 degrees arclength making it a 60 degree arc angle from bottom to apex so three upright triangles for a revolution around the core btw...nice diagrams

broli

Quote from: ketone on January 10, 2010, 08:43:27 PM
Hello

       @broli   ...i think your diagram might be off with the arclength of the triangle being 45 degrees, i have one full 45 degree triangle upright at 120 degrees arclength making it a 60 degree arc angle from bottom to apex so three upright triangles for a revolution around the core btw...nice diagrams

Yes I believe you are correct, the angle should be 60° not 45°. This renders the entire presentation absolute. What tony was saying about 45° had nothing to do with the degrees of the cycle but was meant for the length of the tube. That is the length should be such that the wires are 45° degrees with the center line of the tube. Nothing beats learning something the hard way though  ;D .