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Overunity Machines Forum



To be deleted

Started by nul-points, February 02, 2016, 07:23:16 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.

nul-points

thanks Itsu, appreciated

i understand what you're saying


before i reply, i should make it clear to other visitors that although i'm saying this whole arrangement is > 100% efficient, that relates to total work done (which is one or more kinds of conversion of energy) - all the usual losses apply (I^2R loss, heat loss, etc)

no laws of physics are broken here  - energy is not (and cannot be) created

god might disagree!  :)


i agree that the dissipation of the 'packet' of energy which was temporarily stored within the circuit (without feedback) is doing work (ie. it is still converting that part of the energy which was supplied) - this part of the energy, however, is not being converted into work as part of the circuit - and, at the moment, we don't know by what route it is leaving the system. my guess is that it is converting to heat, or other radiation

the WithFeedback circuit is also storing this part 'packet' of the total energy supplied, just the same, but because the coil field collapse is trying to maintain its original current flow when the transistor switches off the supply, it finds a suitable current path which just happens to be arranged to feedback this current, from the elcap, thro' the secondary, thro' the feedback LED, thro' the battery and back to the elcap

this reverse current is just a standard recharge current for the battery and so some of the recycled energy gets stored in the battery to be available for re-use by the circuit

the value of total work which is done by the 'mysterious', disappearing energy packet, will be the same value as the work done by that packet within the feedback path of the WithFeedback circuit, in the elcap, coil winding. feedback LED & battery

i guess its a bit like using a water-fuelled fuel cell - the fuel supply is water, the cell converts energy from water into Work, Heat, and... water

we could collect the water output and feed it back in with the water input supply and increase the efficiency of the whole system


...but hey, i'm just this guy called nul-points - what do i know?  :)

np
"To do is to be" ---  Descartes;
"To be is to do"  ---  Jean Paul Sarte;
"Do be do be do" ---  F. Sinatra

Void

Quote from: nul-points on December 17, 2018, 05:18:28 AM

before i reply, i should make it clear to other visitors that although i'm saying this whole arrangement is > 100% efficient, that relates to total work done (which is one or more kinds of conversion of energy) - all the usual losses apply (I^2R loss, heat loss, etc)

Hi nul-points. I have already explained that based on the proper measurement approach that Itsu took
with his scope, it is clear that this circuit arrangement is not showing any indications of OU.
Your circuit analysis is incorrect due to your misunderstandings of AC circuits.
Just want to make sure no one is mislead here. All the best. :)


nul-points

Quote from: Void on December 18, 2018, 01:28:22 PM
Your circuit analysis is incorrect due to your misunderstandings of AC circuits.
Just want to make sure no one is mislead here. All the best. :)

hi Void, welcome back

i'm happy to let the members here make up their own minds about the behaviour of this circuit

i find it intriguing that you think this unbalanced biphasic waveform, where the 1st pulse is generated by the draw of the circuit on the DC battery supply, and the 2nd pulse is generated by the action of the coil field-collapse and stored energy in the connected elcap (generating recharging current back through the battery) would be best treated by AC circuit analysis

you're welcome to your opinions, of course - and everyone else is welcome to theirs, too


np
"To do is to be" ---  Descartes;
"To be is to do"  ---  Jean Paul Sarte;
"Do be do be do" ---  F. Sinatra

Void

Quote from: nul-points on December 18, 2018, 02:53:15 PM
i find it intriguing that you think this unbalanced aphasic waveform, where the 1st pulse is generated by the draw of the circuit on the DC battery supply, and the 2nd pulse is generated by the action of the coil field-collapse and stored energy in the connected elcap, generating recharging current back through the battery, would be best treated by regular AC circuit analysis

Hi nul-points. I don't think that at all. I said Itsu's measurement approach is correct (as far as I can see anyway). 
Itsu's measurement approach takes into account what is happening dynamically in the
primary power consuming components in the circuit and should be giving a fairly reasonably
accurate indication of the average power consumption of those components, as long as his current probe
is measuring reasonably accurately that is. It doesn't matter if there are feedback currents or very spiky
wave forms with positive and negative swings or whatever else, this measurement approach will take them into account,
based on my understanding and quite a lot of prior experience in making my own measurements on similar types of circuits
with similar types of complex waveforms.


nul-points

Quote from: Void on December 18, 2018, 01:28:22 PM
Your circuit analysis is incorrect due to your misunderstandings of AC circuits.
Just want to make sure no one is mislead here. All the best. :)

this is the quote of yours i was addressing - don't try to change the subject please!

you said my circuit analysis is incorrect due to my misunderstandings of AC circuits

i say this circuit generates its own unsymmetric biphasic pulses

- its not driven by an externally generated AC waveform

- its not necessary, or appropriate, to use AC analysis

but then you ought to know that, based on your "understanding and quite a lot of prior experience in making [your] own measurements on similar types of circuits with similar types of complex waveforms"
"To do is to be" ---  Descartes;
"To be is to do"  ---  Jean Paul Sarte;
"Do be do be do" ---  F. Sinatra