Apologize for making a whole new thread on this but have been poking around the board and not quite got this cleared up.
To guide this discussion/request for help I’ll reference two of our guideposts in this field Dr. Lindemann and John Bedini. But first by way of a little more background let me just mention what led to all this.
First off there is a great deal of discussion on what the inductive radiant spike is, with some people arguing, though not so much on this board that it is simply back EMF. I think John Bedini definitively put that position to rest with episode seven of Energy from the Vacuum. I would just add as a very small additional point that I have put single pulses through an air coil captured a single spike in a cap and calculated the joules. I’ve then added an iron core to the air coil and done the same. If the inductive spike is caused solely by the rapid magnetic flux of the collapsing magnetic field, well, adding the iron core increased the magnetic field strength of the electromagnet by what, a couple orders of magnitude. I may be betraying my lack of background in the field but I will just note that gee the “BEMF” didn’t increase by orders of magnitude with a much stronger magnetic field collapsing. All that said “BEMF” has almost become a convention so I will use the term while noting that it is not BEMF but radiant energy being captured.
Recently I was running a small joule thief with the output going into a 640V ceramic capacitor. This was set-up with the backwards diode from the collector pointing to the positive of the cap and the negative of the cap going to the positive charge source. Read where Slayer007 was noting “BEMF” coming off not just the collector but the base and emitter as well, and sure enough there it was though in lesser amounts than from the collector. I then tried reversing the diode back to a normal orientation and found a very curious thing, the ceramic cap charged with negative voltage and when the diode came off the emitter the negative voltage was the same as the positive voltage obtained when the diode was placed in reversed orientation from the collector. Ahhaaaa! so there is not just a “BEMF” when the coil collapses there is “FEMF” as well (both being radiant). Ahaaa, so this is why I see people are using bridge rectifiers so often. If you’ve made it this far, bear with me because here is where it gets interesting and where I get quite confused on the whole matter.
I want to go back first and excerpt a comment from Dr. Lindemann from late 2011,
"The terminology of "Negative Energy" and "Positive Energy" was Tom Bearden's first attempt to inform us all that there was a QUALITY DIFFERENCE between these two manifestations of electricity that the meters were saying were identical. This was a gigantic philosophical leap for most people, at the time, but as usual, Tom was right! Whether "Negative Energy" and "Positive Energy" are the best ways to characterize these differences is not the point."
This goes a long way towards explaining for me why some days my batteries didn’t want to stop charging and other days with the same set-up they looked at me as though to say just what do you think you are trying to do here. I was mixing negative and positive quality radiant energy. To keep terms distinct I will refer to electric polarity as neg/pos polarity and radiant energy as pos/neg quality.
So my first question would be a very practical one, if you take neg or pos quality radiant energy and charge a cap and then discharge the cap. Is the discharge of the cap always plain old positive polarity electricity?
Is there a simple test, besides neg quality radiantly charging a battery and then noting it doesn’t want to charge conventionally for determining whether one is dealing with pos or neg quality radiant energy?
Thirdly, is the pos and neg polarity radiant energy (BEMF, FEMF) captured by placing a bridge rectifier over the collector/emmiter the same as pos/neg quality radiant energy. (If so a bridge rectifier would seem a bad approach for battery charging). Or is it pos/neg polarity, all negative quality, radiant energy. John Bedini really went over my head at points in the Energy from the Vacuum series 7 discussion. He negatively radiantly charged a battery, then showed the problem with positively charging a neg quality radiantly charged battery by converting a Bedini Cole motor to run off pulsed DC, captured the radiant spikes but these were positive quality radiant energy (which didn’t want to charge the previously negatively radiantly charged battery). At some point earlier in the video I believe he circled a bridge rectifier off one coil in a circuit and noted in passing that it was “positive” energy, circled the other coil and said that one was negative energy.
So at this point I have no conceptual framework for guessing whether I am dealing with neg or pos quality radiant energy in a circuit or a simple and/or rapid test to see which one I might be getting. It is a great start to know that if you are mixing the two types your batteries won’t want to charge very well, but I have found I can have, let’s just say very many reasons, for why my batteries may not be charging, up to and including me forgetting to turn the circuit on.
Any thoughts/guidance very deeply appreciated, and by the Way
Congratulations on an AWESOME, AWESOME FORUM. You guys Rock!!!
To guide this discussion/request for help I’ll reference two of our guideposts in this field Dr. Lindemann and John Bedini. But first by way of a little more background let me just mention what led to all this.
First off there is a great deal of discussion on what the inductive radiant spike is, with some people arguing, though not so much on this board that it is simply back EMF. I think John Bedini definitively put that position to rest with episode seven of Energy from the Vacuum. I would just add as a very small additional point that I have put single pulses through an air coil captured a single spike in a cap and calculated the joules. I’ve then added an iron core to the air coil and done the same. If the inductive spike is caused solely by the rapid magnetic flux of the collapsing magnetic field, well, adding the iron core increased the magnetic field strength of the electromagnet by what, a couple orders of magnitude. I may be betraying my lack of background in the field but I will just note that gee the “BEMF” didn’t increase by orders of magnitude with a much stronger magnetic field collapsing. All that said “BEMF” has almost become a convention so I will use the term while noting that it is not BEMF but radiant energy being captured.
Recently I was running a small joule thief with the output going into a 640V ceramic capacitor. This was set-up with the backwards diode from the collector pointing to the positive of the cap and the negative of the cap going to the positive charge source. Read where Slayer007 was noting “BEMF” coming off not just the collector but the base and emitter as well, and sure enough there it was though in lesser amounts than from the collector. I then tried reversing the diode back to a normal orientation and found a very curious thing, the ceramic cap charged with negative voltage and when the diode came off the emitter the negative voltage was the same as the positive voltage obtained when the diode was placed in reversed orientation from the collector. Ahhaaaa! so there is not just a “BEMF” when the coil collapses there is “FEMF” as well (both being radiant). Ahaaa, so this is why I see people are using bridge rectifiers so often. If you’ve made it this far, bear with me because here is where it gets interesting and where I get quite confused on the whole matter.
I want to go back first and excerpt a comment from Dr. Lindemann from late 2011,
"The terminology of "Negative Energy" and "Positive Energy" was Tom Bearden's first attempt to inform us all that there was a QUALITY DIFFERENCE between these two manifestations of electricity that the meters were saying were identical. This was a gigantic philosophical leap for most people, at the time, but as usual, Tom was right! Whether "Negative Energy" and "Positive Energy" are the best ways to characterize these differences is not the point."
This goes a long way towards explaining for me why some days my batteries didn’t want to stop charging and other days with the same set-up they looked at me as though to say just what do you think you are trying to do here. I was mixing negative and positive quality radiant energy. To keep terms distinct I will refer to electric polarity as neg/pos polarity and radiant energy as pos/neg quality.
So my first question would be a very practical one, if you take neg or pos quality radiant energy and charge a cap and then discharge the cap. Is the discharge of the cap always plain old positive polarity electricity?
Is there a simple test, besides neg quality radiantly charging a battery and then noting it doesn’t want to charge conventionally for determining whether one is dealing with pos or neg quality radiant energy?
Thirdly, is the pos and neg polarity radiant energy (BEMF, FEMF) captured by placing a bridge rectifier over the collector/emmiter the same as pos/neg quality radiant energy. (If so a bridge rectifier would seem a bad approach for battery charging). Or is it pos/neg polarity, all negative quality, radiant energy. John Bedini really went over my head at points in the Energy from the Vacuum series 7 discussion. He negatively radiantly charged a battery, then showed the problem with positively charging a neg quality radiantly charged battery by converting a Bedini Cole motor to run off pulsed DC, captured the radiant spikes but these were positive quality radiant energy (which didn’t want to charge the previously negatively radiantly charged battery). At some point earlier in the video I believe he circled a bridge rectifier off one coil in a circuit and noted in passing that it was “positive” energy, circled the other coil and said that one was negative energy.
So at this point I have no conceptual framework for guessing whether I am dealing with neg or pos quality radiant energy in a circuit or a simple and/or rapid test to see which one I might be getting. It is a great start to know that if you are mixing the two types your batteries won’t want to charge very well, but I have found I can have, let’s just say very many reasons, for why my batteries may not be charging, up to and including me forgetting to turn the circuit on.
Any thoughts/guidance very deeply appreciated, and by the Way
Congratulations on an AWESOME, AWESOME FORUM. You guys Rock!!!
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