That motor won't help either. I'll explain.
If you use an inductive load on the tesla switch, you have a BEMF effect that will reduce the collected current. Transformers are the worst. Motors are bad but they have less of an effect as only one side of convetional motor makes the BEMF. Here's why..
I probably need to diagram this..but
In regular motor you have 2 poles present from permanent magnets. Your winding on the rotor create the other 2 poles for attraction or replusion or both in one pass. You could have 1 of three combinations in motor.
Replusion motor like pulse motor create the highest amount of BEMF do to the inductive spiking. The simplest form of this is a bifiliar pulse motor with the scondary windings disconnected from a power source and hooked to bridge rectifier.
The BEMF left over after the coil is charged creates a false ground. If this type of load is put on a ONE WIRE coil that energy is still present and has to be disapated by the incoming energy. This creates a ground scenerio. In which your loosing energy.
Pushing away from Multi poled motor acts the same.
An Attraction/Replusion motor Pulls the coil into place then switches the polarity and pushes it away. This also creates an equal amount of BEMF, BUT... Some BEMF does not show up under a Tesla switch. The BEMF produced will actually flow out of the system without disapating our current. But you still get a fair amount and it still causes this ground scenerio.
A pure Attraction Motor performs the best. The coils in the rotor are always charged opposite of the magnet. And so do to the state of the communtator they can never align but are always trying. Pulling in....
This produces the lowest amount of BEMF. Only the coil that is trying to line up to the north magnet creates BEMF that will not flow. The BEMF created on the south poled magnet does not show up in negative way. It actually adds voltage to the system rasing the potential in the coil.
I should probably add that that this is how I see it working with the aid of Oscope. I also measure the battery voltage and line amperage to help determined the more efficient of the setups.
The best possible Tesla switch/motor combanation I have been able to think of and test is a standard tesla switch driven with relays and the motor is permanent attraction but with the same pole on both sides of the motor.
I used 2 south pole magnets for stators and 2 coils independant of each other, both pulling into the magnets both charged to the north. The other thing that matters is how you wined the coils.If the switch is running the load from the ground side, You want a counter clockwise winding. The power from the ground side of the batterries goes into the start of the coil... charges the coil...then exits from the end of the coil back into the power recovery side.
I've only been able to test it once, It caused a good charging effect in the batterries. And the batterries maintained a room temperature. But the motor failed early and I haven't built another one yet.
Right now I am trying to work on semi solid state switching with high power transistors. This has turned to a whole new mess that kept me scratching my head for a couple of months now. But I got it worked and soon as its built and stable and tested, I'll post it. Then I'll rebuild the motor.
A big thing to understand in the Tesla Switch is the fact that it makes any load an open loop system. But you have to watch what and when enviromental energy flows into the system. Negative energy and Positive energy from the electron cannot co exist on the wire at the same time. They cancel each other out. But the positive energy from the HOLE current doesn't seem to have this effect when negative energy enters a system. They seem interact well. Maybe because they are all really the same thing, I don't know. You got to find that combination of Load and system that allow for the enviromental energy to stay in the system with out disapating the positive energy your using to do work with. Or ideally do work with the negative energy and gain more everytime you do. but....
Hope you guys follow what I am saying..
Cheers
Matt
If you use an inductive load on the tesla switch, you have a BEMF effect that will reduce the collected current. Transformers are the worst. Motors are bad but they have less of an effect as only one side of convetional motor makes the BEMF. Here's why..
I probably need to diagram this..but
In regular motor you have 2 poles present from permanent magnets. Your winding on the rotor create the other 2 poles for attraction or replusion or both in one pass. You could have 1 of three combinations in motor.
Replusion motor like pulse motor create the highest amount of BEMF do to the inductive spiking. The simplest form of this is a bifiliar pulse motor with the scondary windings disconnected from a power source and hooked to bridge rectifier.
The BEMF left over after the coil is charged creates a false ground. If this type of load is put on a ONE WIRE coil that energy is still present and has to be disapated by the incoming energy. This creates a ground scenerio. In which your loosing energy.
Pushing away from Multi poled motor acts the same.
An Attraction/Replusion motor Pulls the coil into place then switches the polarity and pushes it away. This also creates an equal amount of BEMF, BUT... Some BEMF does not show up under a Tesla switch. The BEMF produced will actually flow out of the system without disapating our current. But you still get a fair amount and it still causes this ground scenerio.
A pure Attraction Motor performs the best. The coils in the rotor are always charged opposite of the magnet. And so do to the state of the communtator they can never align but are always trying. Pulling in....
This produces the lowest amount of BEMF. Only the coil that is trying to line up to the north magnet creates BEMF that will not flow. The BEMF created on the south poled magnet does not show up in negative way. It actually adds voltage to the system rasing the potential in the coil.
I should probably add that that this is how I see it working with the aid of Oscope. I also measure the battery voltage and line amperage to help determined the more efficient of the setups.
The best possible Tesla switch/motor combanation I have been able to think of and test is a standard tesla switch driven with relays and the motor is permanent attraction but with the same pole on both sides of the motor.
I used 2 south pole magnets for stators and 2 coils independant of each other, both pulling into the magnets both charged to the north. The other thing that matters is how you wined the coils.If the switch is running the load from the ground side, You want a counter clockwise winding. The power from the ground side of the batterries goes into the start of the coil... charges the coil...then exits from the end of the coil back into the power recovery side.
I've only been able to test it once, It caused a good charging effect in the batterries. And the batterries maintained a room temperature. But the motor failed early and I haven't built another one yet.
Right now I am trying to work on semi solid state switching with high power transistors. This has turned to a whole new mess that kept me scratching my head for a couple of months now. But I got it worked and soon as its built and stable and tested, I'll post it. Then I'll rebuild the motor.
A big thing to understand in the Tesla Switch is the fact that it makes any load an open loop system. But you have to watch what and when enviromental energy flows into the system. Negative energy and Positive energy from the electron cannot co exist on the wire at the same time. They cancel each other out. But the positive energy from the HOLE current doesn't seem to have this effect when negative energy enters a system. They seem interact well. Maybe because they are all really the same thing, I don't know. You got to find that combination of Load and system that allow for the enviromental energy to stay in the system with out disapating the positive energy your using to do work with. Or ideally do work with the negative energy and gain more everytime you do. but....
Hope you guys follow what I am saying..
Cheers
Matt
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