Overunity.com Archives is Temporarily on Read Mode Only!



Free Energy will change the World - Free Energy will stop Climate Change - Free Energy will give us hope
and we will not surrender until free energy will be enabled all over the world, to power planes, cars, ships and trains.
Free energy will help the poor to become independent of needing expensive fuels.
So all in all Free energy will bring far more peace to the world than any other invention has already brought to the world.
Those beautiful words were written by Stefan Hartmann/Owner/Admin at overunity.com
Unfortunately now, Stefan Hartmann is very ill and He needs our help
Stefan wanted that I have all these massive data to get it back online
even being as ill as Stefan is, he transferred all databases and folders
that without his help, this Forum Archives would have never been published here
so, please, as the Webmaster and Creator of these Archives, I am asking that you help him
by making a donation on the Paypal Button above.
You can visit us or register at my main site at:
Overunity Machines Forum



Mysterious Resonant Circuit

Started by EMdevices, July 24, 2008, 10:04:51 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

xee

@ EMdevices

Hmmm, most things increase in resistance with temperature. I checked a 75 watt light bulb and it was 14 ohms without power and of course it is about 200 ohms with 120 volts powered.

watts = E^2/R =  120^2/200 = 72

If I did my math right, a 150 ohm carbon resistor will be about 190 ohms when its internal temperature is about 800 C.

EMdevices

@xee,  maybe your right,  I think I got my light bulb measurements backwards.  I did this a while ago.  Good point to check then, I'll follow the advice and go buy a higher power rating resistor.

@grumpy,  I checked it just with the 150 ohm resistor shorted across the 9 volt battery, and it draws around  0.4 amps, and yes things heat up quick, even the battery.  Actually, letting the circuit run for a while (I tried about a minute)  heats the resistor up really good, and I guess the battery warms up a bit too.

gyulasun, thanks for the suggestions

hoppy,  the Vbe voltage swings negative to -10 Volts or so, as can be seen in the scope shots I posted.  I hope nothing will degrade, but it might.  The transistor is certainly operating in a non conventional way.

nul-points

something's not adding up here:

EM measured the load res at 148.7R right?  shorting the load res direct across the 9V battery reads 0.4A on his meter

9v / 148.7R = .0605mA


time to start checking components and meter again, very carefully

all the best
sandy

Doc Ringwood's Free Energy site  http://ringcomps.co.uk/doc
"To do is to be" ---  Descartes;
"To be is to do"  ---  Jean Paul Sarte;
"Do be do be do" ---  F. Sinatra

nul-points

...in fact, if the battery is still at around 6.25V, as shown on the trace, then 6.25/148.7 = .042A

@EM
any chance your reading of 0.4A is actually 0.04A?

just a thought
sandy

Doc Ringwood's Free Energy site  http://ringcomps.co.uk/doc
"To do is to be" ---  Descartes;
"To be is to do"  ---  Jean Paul Sarte;
"Do be do be do" ---  F. Sinatra

gyulasun

Quote from: nul-points on July 26, 2008, 06:26:11 PM
something's not adding up here:

EM measured the load res at 148.7R right?  shorting the load res direct across the 9V battery reads 0.4A on his meter

9v / 148.7R = .0605mA


time to start checking components and meter again, very carefully

all the best
sandy

Hi Sandy,

You happen to have a typo:  9 / 148.7 = .0605 Amper , ok?  (you wrote mA) 
Putting it in mA,  it is 60.5mA.

Otherwise I agree with you.

rgds, Gyula