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Overunity Machines Forum



Self-Runner NS Coil Pulse Motor Live Video Stream. It's been going for months!

Started by lasersaber, September 01, 2010, 09:59:28 PM

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0 Members and 52 Guests are viewing this topic.

Thaelin

shylo:
   Take a look a your connect points. It does not take hardly any resistance to drop the final value down. I think if you do the math backwards to find the ohms value, it will be fairly close. No connection is perfect. With the small value of E and I, it fits.

thay

IotaYodi

QuoteI don't understand this drop in readings??.......do you need both volts & amps to produce an electro-magnet , or is it one or the other?
Anything with resistance that is put into a circuit will have a voltage drop. Current is being pushed by voltage. The current carrying wire must be wound in a tight helix around the core in order to produce an electromagnetic field. The higher the amps the greater the electromagnetic force. Take a used car battery even with a dead cell,Charged up of course, and wind #12 or #10 wire on a 1/2 or 3/4 steel core. You will see the greater effect of current. The 12 volt car battery has hundreds of amps. Use good sense and caution when doing this.
What I know I know!
Its what I don't know that's a problem!

IotaYodi

QuoteI must say that there ARE other things than "Standard" current that can produce an "Electromagnetic" field. 
From my little knowledge of physics even more so. From the human body to grass blowing in the wind. With 84 Terrawatts of solar energy a day and the worlds consumption around 12 Terrawatts a day,we need to devise ways to use it. Even the 100 volt per 2 vertical meters of the electrostatic field havent been utilized yet. Between the Aether,atmosphere and the Earth, Im surprised nothings been done yet on a large scale. So much power at our fingertips and we cant use it?

QuoteI guess I shouldn't have said anything, as I really am offering no useful ideas
All it takes is a few words to turn the light on for someone. Egos and high school ramblings are subject though! lol
What I know I know!
Its what I don't know that's a problem!

dllabarre


Rosemary Ainslie wrote:

"Don - I get it that the response is much stronger with tap water and, as Laser has pointed out - with other mixes.  But if there's even 'some' response - enough to keep even a slow rotor turning - then we've got some argument against the coil being a battery. "

My tap water is filtered a lot.
Next time I'll try "dirtier" water taken before my filters.

DonL

Rosemary Ainslie

Guys, I've mentioned this before.  I'm not sure how our meters determine the resistance of anything but have been advised that the meter itself applies a small current and it then measures the rate of flow.  This effectively means that the the higher the resistance the more 'blocked' is the current flow which then becomes the Ohmage 'measure' of that resistance.

Well.  I have some cylindrical magnets - ferrite - very small - I'll try and get a photo up here at some stage but I've left those magnets on campus.  In any event, the point is this.  I can join those magnets in a string that it's roughly equivalent to an 8 guage wire.  And regardless of the 'length' it seems that I can simply NOT measure any resistance at all.  In effect a permanent magnet enables the flow of current - and in a cylindrical bar magnet which is the actual construct of that string - then it enables the current flow in either direction.  I see this - in the mind's eye - as the applied current running either through or around the flux of those magnets depending on the polarities presented when taking that measurement.

What it seems to show is this.  Current flow is not materially 'restricted' in this flow by another magnetic field imposed in that path, so to speak and continues it's path through or around that magnet at an angle of 180 degrees.  One magnetic field interacts with another field at an angle of 180 degrees.  Could this perhaps be some kind of evidence that current itself simply comprises magnetic fields?  If so then here's the proposal.

Resistance would then be a measure of those magnetic fields - inside the material being measured - that is not aligned at an angle of 180 degrees to the applied current flow.  Wherever it is that these magnetic fields are situated - whether atomic or extraneous to those atoms - they are then able to 'resist' the 180 degrees interaction from a 'magnetic field' or 'flux field.  In other words resistance or Ohmage would actually then be a measure of the magnetic potential of the material itself? 

So.  When we use two different metals with two different resistances, then there would be a difference in their magnetic conditions and somehow the galvanic effect is exploiting this difference?  Maybe?  That's certainly the only explanation that I can find that logically explains this.  But it's just a thought.

Regards,
Rosemary