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Overunity Machines Forum



Microwave oven fanr as pick up coil?

Started by antimony, February 20, 2016, 04:19:02 PM

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0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

antimony

Hi, i have a bunch of microwave oven fans that i wanted to use as pick up coils like a guy on YouTube called Anguswangus.
I have been studying this guys past progress for some time, and i have learned a lot from his videos.

So if someone havent checked his channel out yet, search his name on YouTube and listen to his 'free energy systems examined' where he share what he learned.

Anyway,  what i wanted to ask was just if someone here have tried these as pick ups, and also, how do you wire them?

He uses a motor to drive his rotor.

Thanks in advance. 

AlienGrey

Quote from: antimony on February 20, 2016, 04:19:02 PM
Hi, i have a bunch of microwave oven fans that i wanted to use as pick up coils like a guy on YouTube called Anguswangus.
I have been studying this guys past progress for some time, and i have learned a lot from his videos.

So if someone havent checked his channel out yet, search his name on YouTube and listen to his 'free energy systems examined' where he share what he learned.

Anyway,  what i wanted to ask was just if someone here have tried these as pick ups, and also, how do you wire them?

He uses a motor to drive his rotor.

Thanks in advance.

Angus me coat up ?  have you got a link?

sm0ky2

Quote from: antimony on February 20, 2016, 04:19:02 PM
Hi, i have a bunch of microwave oven fans that i wanted to use as pick up coils like a guy on YouTube called Anguswangus.
I have been studying this guys past progress for some time, and i have learned a lot from his videos.

So if someone havent checked his channel out yet, search his name on YouTube and listen to his 'free energy systems examined' where he share what he learned.

Anyway,  what i wanted to ask was just if someone here have tried these as pick ups, and also, how do you wire them?

He uses a motor to drive his rotor.

Thanks in advance.

For the sake of simplicity, we should not call these "microwave oven fans".
Which that ARE found inside microwave ovens,
they are ALSO found inside nearly every other rotary household appliance, or anything with a fan in it...
Stand-alone (oscillating) floor fans, Vaporizer units, dehydrators, ionizers, etc.

This is a standard synchronous A/C induction motor.
Aluminum (solid-state, no-coil) Rotor.

the inductor is made of several stacked steel plates.
there is a thick, single wire coil, wrapped around a segment of one side
and a coil with thin wire, and a large number of coils, on the other.
and an aluminum rotor, with angled grooves, carved into it.

It is by far the most efficient A/C motor mankind has yet to invent (and sell commercially at an affordable price!)

here is a picture of some


I was fixing a shower-rod, slipped and hit my head on the sink. When i came to, that's when i had the idea for the "Flux Capacitor", Which makes Perpetual Motion possible.

antimony

Yes, i know, but i wanted you to know where i got them from, so it may be easier for you to help me.

I havenĀ“t yet found how to wire these up as pick up coils.

Thanks for the response. :)

AlienGrey

What do you mean a pick up coil ? and not all fans  are the same, and have you got a link, some whee on this DB is a device like this but some clever guy shows he replaced the alloy core with a Neo to produce energy is that what your after ?