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Overunity Machines Forum



Muller Dynamo

Started by Schpankme, December 31, 2007, 10:48:41 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 195 Guests are viewing this topic.

Magluvin

Quote from: chalamadad on October 03, 2011, 10:37:44 AM
Hey Kone,

I can short both peaks with the reed, that's when I get about 80V. Although it does sound promising this still ain't enough. At least I don't know how to deal with it yet. I have the same DC converter that Romero had. When I hook that up to the output I am having just 2-3 Volts again. After all those small bipolar caps are filling to 250V almost instantly. But 4.7 or 22 µF won't do it.

Remember I am playing just with a generator coil. No input pulse. That is yet to come when I'm gonna try your coil-shorting circuit.

Actually the 4.7uf (or more ) at 250v can discharge a lot of power into a drive coil(lower ohm preferably). Its just getting the reed not to stick is the big problem. Transistor time.  One that can handle the voltage and peak amperage. And the trans can be driven by a reed.   ;]

Mags

konehead

Hi Chalamadad

You wrote that the "small bipolar caps" go up to 240V but to me, bipolar caps mean AC-type caps, with no pos and neg leads to them.
If this is so, they dont work with "holding" the power you make from coil-shorting at peaks - they will only show that high voltage but it "evaporates" very quick and will vanish for some reaon that I dont know why for sure - AC type caps are not what you want to capture the power - they need to be DC type, and the coil-shorting needs to be rectified first too - I use a FWBR of high voltage rating...now the voltage will "stick" in those caps....
Also important that you cannot at this "1st stage" of filling the caps, to simply hit a load with them in a continuous-fashion,

or put any sort of resistance across the caps throughout the coil-short filling process of coil  - any bit of resistance kills the whole effect - so I am guessing that DC to DC convertor is killing the effect of filling caps from the resistance of it... 

you need to do something to isolate those caps from the source (source is coils being shorted) whenever the caps do hit a load ("2nd stage")...

this isnt the same thing as what Romero had happen where the rotor wants to speed up like crazy when that big cap running motor is filled up by all the gernator coils thorugh the bridges - and why he had to use the DC to DC convertor just to control the runaway-speedup....

this is a different thing where caps fill up fast and with high volts without reflecing as extra motor draw, and maybe some slower-style speed up too like you got, but the caps being filled must be disconnected from the source (coils) whenever they hit load 
otherwise they will just make extra draw to motor coils or the motor spinning the rotor happen for whatever power is being taken out("reflection")
other alternative is to fill caps A with coil shoritng  and these dump into caps B and only caps B hit load when cap A is disconnected from caps B .....

chalamadad

Hey everyone,

made another video. One of my driving coils has started singing.  ;)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIlndSDIyGc

T-1000

Quote from: chalamadad on October 06, 2011, 03:07:00 PM
Hey everyone,

made another video. One of my driving coils has started singing.  ;)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIlndSDIyGc

Good stuff :)

And congratz, you got excited environment just like in Joule Ringer or Tesla Coil!
Now pick up all those free oscillations back to capacitors and see if you can power motor itself.

chalamadad

Quote from: T-1000 on October 06, 2011, 04:03:43 PM
Good stuff :)

And congratz, you got excited environment just like in Joule Ringer or Tesla Coil!
Now pick up all those free oscillations back to capacitors and see if you can power motor itself.

Thanks, T.

I am excited too. :D Hope this the effect we are looking for.

I was trying it with a battery a minute ago, dunno what happened but the cap (think it was the cap) of my driving circuit blew up. Luckily not the one with the ringing coil. Better be hooking up one or two diodes when feeding back to the battery.

From what I've measured at DC converter output I am OU: 12V x 4Amps = 48 Watts. Not putting in more than 16-20 Watts max. But I will probably not be able to use all the output without destroying the resonance or rotor stopping completely.

Wonder if the induced spikes can be shorted at peak as Kone suggests. This could really lead to an enormous power increase.

Chal