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



PhysicsProf Steven E. Jones circuit shows 8x overunity ?

Started by JouleSeeker, May 19, 2011, 11:21:55 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 30 Guests are viewing this topic.

gyulasun

Quote from: hyiq on June 03, 2011, 06:35:42 PM
....
So just to confirm, move the diode in Circuit V5 in Reply #174 to the other side of C3? So the Cap is not affected by the diode?
....

Yes,  that is what I thought as a good step but my brain did not work fully last night and did not consider that a forward biased diode (from battery 4V) just conducts continuously and is a few Ohm resistance...  so any small AC coming from the circuit towards the battery will pass unrectified...
sorry for this.
So a series diode even in the negative rail would not catch the AC either...
a different approach like nul-points series coils put in the rails may be a step in the good direction, the series coils increase inner impedance of the battery from AC point of view.  But it seems still difficult to catch the very small AC current or voltage amplitudes...

Gyula

hyiq

Quote from: gyulasun on June 04, 2011, 06:50:59 AM
Yes,  that is what I thought as a good step but my brain did not work fully last night and did not consider that a forward biased diode (from battery 4V) just conducts continuously and is a few Ohm resistance...  so any small AC coming from the circuit towards the battery will pass unrectified...
sorry for this.
So a series diode even in the negative rail would not catch the AC either...
a different approach like nul-points series coils put in the rails may be a step in the good direction, the series coils increase inner impedance of the battery from AC point of view.  But it seems still difficult to catch the very small AC current or voltage amplitudes...

Gyula

Hi Gyula, and All,

Yes you are right. Early tests show a huge increase in output by simply winding and wiring the coil like a Tesla Series Connected BiFilar Coil.

Voltage goes way up.

4 Volts / 9 Turns = 0.4 reoccurring. This is the voltage between each winding on a single filar coil.

In our case, whats the Math for this?

2 Squared / 0.4 Squared = 4 / 0.16 = 25 times more efficent..... Interestingly a Tri-Filar Coil only makes it 9 times more efficent.

All the best

  Chris


hyiq

Hi All,

This is the best Circuit to date. I will get some measurements through soon. But this is considerably better than my last results. Nikola Tesla's Bi-Filar coil makes a huge difference to the output. See last post.

All the Best

  Chris

xee2

Quote from: hyiq on June 04, 2011, 09:20:48 PM

This is the best Circuit to date.


Good research. Do you think the way you wound the coil is better than just doubling the number of turns on L2?


nul-points

Quote from: hyiq on June 04, 2011, 08:26:16 PM
[...]
Early tests show a huge increase in output by simply winding and wiring the coil like a Tesla Series Connected BiFilar Coil.

Voltage goes way up.
[...]
  Chris

interesting to have confirmation of this, Chris - i wind my coils like this,also

unidirectional wind per layer, with next layer interleaved in same direction -  a part turn to get back to start each time

then repeat for each/any next two 'layers' - etc

thanks
np


http://docsfreelunch.blogspot.com
"To do is to be" ---  Descartes;
"To be is to do"  ---  Jean Paul Sarte;
"Do be do be do" ---  F. Sinatra