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Longitudinal Wave Experiment to demonstrate Overunity

Started by magpwr, August 16, 2014, 01:12:29 AM

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d3x0r

Quote from: gyulasun on August 17, 2014, 05:43:13 PM
Nope...   for  pulse currents to handle special capacitors are preferred, they are manufactured a bit differently than normal caps.
Try to look for pulse capacitors.  But they have their price...

EDIT A good solution to parallel 5 or more (identical) capacitors to arrive at  the needed value, this way the ESRs parallel also and dissipation becomes less for any individual cap in the paralleled bunch.
so polypropylene film
so what character makes them better?  I tried to find something but just get sales and selling of..




magpwr

Quote from: poynt99 on August 17, 2014, 02:33:29 PM
I looked for your video of that but was unable to find it.

Anyway, if you are generating a substantial inductive kickback on the load side of the circuit, it is possible to knock out the filaments from the same effect seen when a regular incandescent 100W bulb gets "burned out" simply from switching the light on. It can conduct a significant current when cold, and as such experience an electro-mechanical kick against the earth's magnetic field.
Not sure I understand your question, so I'll guess. I would say yes you could probably notice blinking or fading with a bulb driven at 18Hz.

hi Poynt99,

Answer is at high frequency spike you will not notice bulb blinking due to the slow warm up\cool down of heating element\filament even at 10hz.

The only thing upon playing with frequency from 1hz...to10hz after around 7...8hz you will just notice bulb slowly getting brighter that's all.Base on my past research our human eye can't detect blink rate for fast response led after 18hz.



magpwr

Quote from: MarkE on August 17, 2014, 06:14:28 PM
What is the point of your simulation if you are not going to install instrumentation in it to get at least reasonably accurate measurements?  To me that is like doing an experiment without setting up to get good measurements.

hi MarkE,

My explanation  doing a actual experiment and virtual experiment would produce big difference all due to the actual components used\selection and other factors.

My answer is simple no.It's not worth the effort to apply formula for virtual.

"I don't wish to count the chicks until it is sucessfully hatched from actual experiment" :D

d3x0r

Falstad simulator fails miserably.
One module is 117Khz... but more than 1 never sync correctly... and staggering the side connections confuses it even more...



LMD sim falstad, fail

Same Sim more resistors, worse


Doesn't expot correct frequency for clock... or rather it won't read it back correctly... should be 117.2k  not 117.2 . 
doesn't matter; it really fails badly.


I even tried to add tiny resistances(100m) between caps/coils, and large resistanances(50) between driver transformer... but it wouldn't keep the current flowing through the coil/cap sides.

MarkE

Quote from: d3x0r on August 17, 2014, 09:06:25 PM
Falstad simulator fails miserably.
One module is 117Khz... but more than 1 never sync correctly... and staggering the side connections confuses it even more...



LMD sim falstad, fail

Same Sim more resistors, worse


Doesn't expot correct frequency for clock... or rather it won't read it back correctly... should be 117.2k  not 117.2 . 
doesn't matter; it really fails badly.


I even tried to add tiny resistances(100m) between caps/coils, and large resistanances(50) between driver transformer... but it wouldn't keep the current flowing through the coil/cap sides.
You can try adding some large value resistors to ground from each of the nodes.  Try 1 GigOhm to start, and if that does not work drop them down to 1 MegOhm.