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Overunity Machines Forum



Working Magnetic Motor on you tube??

Started by Craigy, January 04, 2008, 04:11:39 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 13 Guests are viewing this topic.

Yadaraf

.
Omni,

... Q:  Does your rig have an aerodynamic cover like CLaNZeR's

Cheers,  :)

Yada...
.

Omnibus

Quote from: Yadaraf on February 15, 2008, 03:56:15 PM
.
Omni,

... Q:  Does your rig have an aerodynamic cover like CLaNZeR's

Cheers,  :)

Yada...
.

No, it doesn't. Both my rotors were made exactly according to the specifications in Jason's drawings (except for a small cylindrical extension in the center on one of the rotors to allow spinning it via a thread).

sm0ky2

Quote from: JFK on February 15, 2008, 02:49:01 PM
GW = Gear wise
AGW = Antigearwise

Picture the rotor and stator as gears.  ;)


thanks JFK , i was confused because it was often used with the work 'lock'  -> AGW-Lock

i was thinking it was some accronym i had missed.. banging myself in the head now, because that it was something so simple....


the more i watch this device go through its cycles, the more i want to call it "magnetic monopoles". Artifically created by placing like poles facing each other around the stator. - essentially turning 8 magnetic dipoles
(16 poles) into 8 monopoles.  a set of 4 N-monopoles in a cross-pattern,
and a set of 4  S-monopoles in a cross pattern, turned 45-degrees
when the N's are synched up, the stator turns off of the 4 N nonopoles from its N side.
when you synch it up with the S poles, the same thing occurs, just using the 4 opposite points.

the "non-repelling" poles pull the stator around at the moment just before the "dead zone". Then if you watch the lines of flux as the two like poles come together (AGW!!) they begin to compress like a spring - but the force is in the direction of rotation kind of trapping it, so the stator - instead of flipping back the other direction away from its like-pole - turns with the rotor and the lines of flux compress, then expand again as the magnets pass each other and repel away. Along comes the opposite monopole, sucking the stator right back into position.

i know they are not technically magnetic "monopoles". but the field they present, is essentially the same.
at least from the perspective of the stator.
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.

ken_nyus

Quote from: geodan on February 15, 2008, 03:09:03 PM
I have everything but the bearings... I thought that I'd be able to find them locally but no luck... especially 1/2 x 1/4 flanged one to press into the rotor... I can't find 1/2 x 1/8  for the stators either....

could you recommend an online source?? part numbers would be nice too...

I got my stator bearings from bocabearings.com

The all steel ones are 0.5 OD x 0.125 ID x 0.171 wide, I did not find any 3/16 wide which is 0.1875. The space in the standard stator is 0.175 so I figured 0.171 was good.

http://bocabearings.com/main1.aspx?p=product&id=8207&n=SR2A-ZZ_#3

The ones with ceramic balls are 0.1719 wide, again I figured close enough.

http://bocabearings.com/main1.aspx?p=product&id=2793&n=SR2AC-ZZ_#3

Both are ABEC3, which is medium quality.


geodan

Quote from: ken_nyus on February 15, 2008, 07:11:49 PM
Quote from: geodan on February 15, 2008, 03:09:03 PM
I have everything but the bearings... I thought that I'd be able to find them locally but no luck... especially 1/2 x 1/4 flanged one to press into the rotor... I can't find 1/2 x 1/8  for the stators either....

could you recommend an online source?? part numbers would be nice too...

I got my stator bearings from bocabearings.com

The all steel ones are 0.5 OD x 0.125 ID x 0.171 wide, I did not find any 3/16 wide which is 0.1875. The space in the standard stator is 0.175 so I figured 0.171 was good.

http://bocabearings.com/main1.aspx?p=product&id=8207&n=SR2A-ZZ_#3

The ones with ceramic balls are 0.1719 wide, again I figured close enough.

http://bocabearings.com/main1.aspx?p=product&id=2793&n=SR2AC-ZZ_#3

Both are ABEC3, which is medium quality.



Thanks Ken!