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Overunity Machines Forum



100 watts output with 60ma input

Started by joellagace, February 03, 2023, 05:28:31 PM

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0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

lota


Hello
That's right. These circuits are also used in solar systems. But without the Neo.  It doesn't work that way with a capacitor.
Greeting
Lota

joellagace

Quote from: r2fpl on February 05, 2023, 08:56:06 AM
The battery is chemical. The pulses excite its ions into action. You recover more capacity from a battery that has lost capacity. There are chargers that repair old batteries and operate on high pulse voltages.
Do a test and connect a large capacitor and then check the efficiency that will no longer exist.

Yes your correct.  I mention this in the video, I mention these are crap old donated batteries that I had to pulse charge for over 2 weeks with a Bedini wheel to bring back to life, I mention this and also mention the high voltage pulses to be chemical reaction inside the battery in the video as well and I mention that this action makes the ions swoosh around and I can even hear that "cold" boil Bedini talks about when I put my ear next to the battery. Interesting stuff!

joellagace

Quote from: lota on February 05, 2023, 08:54:07 AM

Hello
my test. The SCR could also be controlled with a PWM.
Greeting
Lota

Cap-Dump Booster Schaltung - YouTube
https://youtu.be/Zf0Zq3HpwF8

I did this a while back for this circuit as well it works. I used a small motor PWM to control the cap dump with a transistor.
I rectify the half cycle output into a high voltage microwave 1UF capacitor. It takes a fraction of a second or less to fully charge this capacitor to 100 volts.

The Tesla Switched, Is a transistor capacitor dump circuit I built. It discharges this capacitor with very low cycle duty sharp timing pulses.

Here is my version of this cap dump method. I was looking for a auto method that would not take as much energy in extra control circuits so I used the neon dump method instead moving forward. I got the whole charge controller pulse circuit to take 60ma only by keeping things as simple as I can. I'm even thinking of replacing that neon with a 110 volts zener diode.

https://youtu.be/XhZRrqV8OMs




endlessoceans

Hey Joel

Nice work.  Have worked with a lot of these type spike systems and you see similar and very interesting results.  Sometime in my experience you witness a polarizing of components and the battery itself and then the results later are not consistent.

Im not doubting what you are showing.  But if you show a schematic and parts then it helps to replicate and troubleshoot/improve

Regards

garrypm

Great work Joel,


I remember some dweebing looking guy that wore a navy seal cap that had a youtube video demonstrating
exactly what you are showing.


He didn't give away any info though.


He ran a fan and lights maybe but also had an intellingent battery charger recharging the batery via the inverter.


All I remember is his first name was Peter and surname began with S i think.


Keep at it.


Garry