What we may not have figured out yet is, are the gutted or un-gutted Cfls the better way to go??? Both work, but which works best for our application? As not everyone can afford the 7.5 watt or higher wattage led bulbs.
What appears to be the case so far is that the 12 volt led bulbs are the most efficient, over all other bulbs, more so than the 110/220 Cfls, or incandescent, or even the higher voltage leds bulbs. As there is no need to jack the voltage way up, just to bring it back down, thus waisting energy. The more components a circuit has, the less efficient it will be, as each resistor, diode, or even transistors will produce a loss. But, when I mention transistor heat, I'm using 25 to 65 watt Cfl bulbs, and 50 watt incandescent bulbs, those do get a bit hot. Not the 13 watt Cfl, or small 7 watt incandescent bulbs, or any led bulb, as they all stay cold.
All these inverter circuits are working in a very similar way. They are ALL just simple pulsing oscillators, including the open ended Exciter circuits. So I think that the most important aspect is the permeability of the cores, and the proper turns ratio. In the link below is a list of the different perm materials and frequencies that ferrite cores work at. In order to maximize our output, we need to consider these things, also.
There are ferrite cores with much higher perm, not just a few hundred, or a couple thousand U. As well as the air cores, which may be best used for the Cfls. Lynx Steam proved that even the air cores can work very well, and can produce even higher watt/lumen output than the best commercial transformer/driver made.
You can see in Mopozco's 6 Cfl video that he actually went too far on the secondary turns ratio of his hand wound fly-back transformer and his output can blow the lights out, when using 12v. So, it's important to give them the right and proper voltage and current, and not too much voltage and too little current. But, that all depends on the input source. What works for an AA is not the same as when using a 12v car battery, or a 24v, or 36v source.
My goal and intention is to light my house, all the time, day or night, and to do this on practically nothing, no budget.
Not an easy task... but, I'm getting there. Thanks for your help.
Ferrite cores materials and permeability:
Fair-Rite Materials
What appears to be the case so far is that the 12 volt led bulbs are the most efficient, over all other bulbs, more so than the 110/220 Cfls, or incandescent, or even the higher voltage leds bulbs. As there is no need to jack the voltage way up, just to bring it back down, thus waisting energy. The more components a circuit has, the less efficient it will be, as each resistor, diode, or even transistors will produce a loss. But, when I mention transistor heat, I'm using 25 to 65 watt Cfl bulbs, and 50 watt incandescent bulbs, those do get a bit hot. Not the 13 watt Cfl, or small 7 watt incandescent bulbs, or any led bulb, as they all stay cold.
All these inverter circuits are working in a very similar way. They are ALL just simple pulsing oscillators, including the open ended Exciter circuits. So I think that the most important aspect is the permeability of the cores, and the proper turns ratio. In the link below is a list of the different perm materials and frequencies that ferrite cores work at. In order to maximize our output, we need to consider these things, also.
There are ferrite cores with much higher perm, not just a few hundred, or a couple thousand U. As well as the air cores, which may be best used for the Cfls. Lynx Steam proved that even the air cores can work very well, and can produce even higher watt/lumen output than the best commercial transformer/driver made.
You can see in Mopozco's 6 Cfl video that he actually went too far on the secondary turns ratio of his hand wound fly-back transformer and his output can blow the lights out, when using 12v. So, it's important to give them the right and proper voltage and current, and not too much voltage and too little current. But, that all depends on the input source. What works for an AA is not the same as when using a 12v car battery, or a 24v, or 36v source.
My goal and intention is to light my house, all the time, day or night, and to do this on practically nothing, no budget.
Not an easy task... but, I'm getting there. Thanks for your help.
Ferrite cores materials and permeability:
Fair-Rite Materials
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