Overunity.com Archives is Temporarily on Read Mode Only!



Free Energy will change the World - Free Energy will stop Climate Change - Free Energy will give us hope
and we will not surrender until free energy will be enabled all over the world, to power planes, cars, ships and trains.
Free energy will help the poor to become independent of needing expensive fuels.
So all in all Free energy will bring far more peace to the world than any other invention has already brought to the world.
Those beautiful words were written by Stefan Hartmann/Owner/Admin at overunity.com
Unfortunately now, Stefan Hartmann is very ill and He needs our help
Stefan wanted that I have all these massive data to get it back online
even being as ill as Stefan is, he transferred all databases and folders
that without his help, this Forum Archives would have never been published here
so, please, as the Webmaster and Creator of these Archives, I am asking that you help him
by making a donation on the Paypal Button above.
You can visit us or register at my main site at:
Overunity Machines Forum



Apparent C.O.P. of 1.413469133935024 ...

Started by DeepCut, November 30, 2010, 08:04:49 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Bruce_TPU

Hi Gary,

Keep up the good work.  My favorite part of your setup... "An output coil consisting of 1.15 kilometres of 0.25mm copper magnet wire, this coil is on a separate former that is larger than the drive coil's former and so can be placed around the drive coil."  Hehehe  Good to see someone is listening and actually grasps some of the concepts I have learned and spewed out from SM.  He said one would be suprised how much energy can be extracted from a magnet, based on the very principle you have used. 

Cheers,

Bruce

1.  Lindsay's Stack TPU Posted Picture.  All Wound CCW  Collectors three turns and HORIZONTAL, not vertical.

2.  3 Tube amps, sending three frequency's, each having two signals, one in-phase & one inverted 180 deg, opposing signals in each collector (via control wires). 

3.  Collector is Magnetic Loop Antenna, made of lamp chord wire, wound flat.  Inside loop is antenna, outside loop is for output.  First collector is tuned via tuned tank, to the fundamental.  Second collector is tuned tank to the second harmonic (component).  Third collector is tuned tank to the third harmonic (component)  Frequency is determined by taking the circumference frequency, reducing the size by .88 inches.  Divide this frequency by 1000, and you have your second harmonic.  Divide this by 2 and you have your fundamental.  Multiply that by 3 and you have your third harmonic component.  Tune the collectors to each of these.  Input the fundamental and two modulation frequencies, made to create replicas of the fundamental, second harmonic and the third.

4.  The three frequency's circulating in the collectors, both in phase and inverted, begin to create hundreds of thousands of created frequency's, via intermodulation, that subtract to the fundamental and its harmonics.  This is called "Catalyst".

5.  The three AC PURE sine signals, travel through the amplification stage, Nonlinear, producing the second harmonic and third.  (distortion)

6.  These signals then travel the control coils, are rectified by a full wave bridge, and then sent into the output outer loop as all positive pulsed DC.  This then becomes the output and "collects" the current.

P.S.  The Kicks are harmonic distortion with passive intermodulation.  Can't see it without a spectrum analyzer, normally unless trained to see it on a scope.

DeepCut

Hi Bruce, long time no see :)

I'm following Gyulasun's advice and will get the voltage regulator etc tomorrow.

Will post results.

*EDIT* Who's SM ? *EDIT*


Thanks,

Gary.

DeepCut

@Gyula

Hi. I can't get hold of a 7818 tomorrow, i think this one will do please tell me if i am correct :

http://www.maplin.co.uk/media/pdfs/Module%208067-2.pdf


Thanks,

Gary.

derricka

The LM317 is a classic (adjustable) voltage regulator that should be a good replacement for the 7818 (18v fixed voltage output). There are a few things to keep in mind. First, the maximum output voltage you can expect, will always be about 1.5 volts less than your input voltage, so if you want 18 volts out, you will need to feed the regulator with at least 19.5 volts, and ideally, a bit more. Secondly, the 317 is an adjustable regulator, so you will need to add a couple of resistors to the circuit to set the voltage. I usually use a 240 ohm resistor for R1 and an adjustable 5K (or 4.7k) trimpot for R2. If you don't have a trimpot, use a 3.3k resistor for R2, which should get you reasonably close, at 18.4 volt output.

http://www.national.com/ds/LM/LM117.pdf

gyulasun

Hi Gary,

Yes, this IC (http://www.maplin.co.uk/media/pdfs/Module%208067-2.pdf )  is also fine to use, another  make of what derricka just suggested.

NOW that I have seen your setup, please do a favour for yourself: check the current consumption of the 0.15A from your 18V power supply WHEN your 220 Ohm load resistor is connected to the output (unless you have done so already).

There is one more problem: as I tried to estimate the power loss in the 7818 voltage regulator (it will be the same for the TS317 too) it comes out too much loss and it eats up your COP to under the value of 1 so looping would not work....   Think it over:
your input power is 18V at 0.15A=2.7W (assuming you measured this when the 220 Ohm is actually across the output)
power loss in the 7818: 10V at 0.15A=1.5W
output power in the 220 Ohm as you calculated: 3.82W

Now 3.82-1.5=2.32W and already this is under the needed 2.7W input power.   SO one solution is NOT to use the 220 Ohm when you are looping, not to use even the 350 or 400 Ohm what I suggested last night, then the dissipation might just be enough for a COP of just over 1....

Gyula


EDIT: possibly your unloaded output voltage is higher than 40V which is the limit for the TS317 or LM317 max input alloweable so make sure not to exceed this, otherwise you burn the regulator IC....  use preloading just under 40V output first , then connect the regulator IC and make the looping for a moment and check always the voltage level across the regulator input, assuming you first built already it to give out 18V.