Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The GEGENE : a Great Efficiency GENErator with a Tesla bifilar coil

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #91
    Yes Hobby Eon why don't you back the hell off! Farmhand is a much respected member here and you sir/madame and a retarded flamer.

    When did this forum become a forum of ou? is it not a free/renewable energy site?

    yes there are many one here that do believe in the prospect of finding ou and the very best of luck to these guys, i hope one day it is found but i am not a believer so should i just cancel my account and not return also?

    Farmhand please ignore this clown and do not waste your precious time and energy on him/her whatever, clearly a shill who should concentrate on doing his schoolwork and preparing him/her self for adulthood

    Farmhand you have my utter respect and admiration!

    best regards
    The history of science shows that theories are perishable.With every new truth that is revealed,we get a better understanding of Nature and our conceptions and views are modified. - Nikola Tesla

    Comment


    • #92
      Originally posted by Hobby Eon View Post
      That farmhand doesn't react on my statements...
      You are a paid shill and you can deny till you see blue in the face.
      Like a politician or a bankster we don't expect a honest answer from you.
      You are polluting several O.U. forums with literally thousands of postings !
      Sorry to interrupt, but you're barking up wrong tree, mister.
      Farmer (and few among hundreds), one who got guts to point the wrong approach and misleading of ass-cemetery motor's concept, and proved it; they're still in distress trying to find anything to get out of the hole.
      Nothing is wrong in attempting to find the "Physics mistakes", it's just an educational tool , but it has to be done at least on base of what's known already.
      Farmhand the one from not many who's BUILDING this knowledge.

      Love your works on OU.com, buddy.
      Regards.

      Comment


      • #93
        the tesla bifilar coil resonance frequency

        i am new in the energetic forum and i have a serious question about Tesla bifilar coil !

        it's like LC circuit but it have some strange power behavior after some studies i found this coil will resonate two time speed more than it's normal equivalent LC circuit ....

        Comment


        • #94
          Originally posted by SCC3012 View Post
          i am new in the energetic forum and i have a serious question about Tesla bifilar coil !

          it's like LC circuit but it have some strange power behavior after some studies i found this coil will resonate two time speed more than it's normal equivalent LC circuit ....
          I reckon that the best starting point is Tesla's patent, No. 512340 which can be found here:
          PAT2PDF - Free PDF copies of patents: Download and print!

          The patent needs to be read very carefully.

          Comment


          • #95
            Induction hobs - limited time offer

            You might be interested in these £29 induction hobs which will be availble only for a few days:

            Our Offers - Thursday, 17.10. - Induction Hob - Lidl UK

            Comment


            • #96
              Thx wrtner!

              Comment


              • #97
                Originally posted by Blargus View Post
                Thx wrtner!
                Also, Maplin have brought their offer back into store:

                2kW Induction Cooker : Appliances : Maplin Electronics

                Comment


                • #98
                  To Farmhand

                  Your questions are always valid .I for one appreciate them, because they need to be asked.
                  In your post #89 you say the output can be rectified by a single diode, could you please elaborate?
                  I can't see how that would work.
                  Ignore the ones that don't like to answer honest questions.
                  artv

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Sure no probs, I'm glad you consider info on the info's credit not the messenger.

                    I see it like this, the induction cooker rectifies the mains by a full wave rectifier then
                    the DC it stores in a cap is used to pulse the induction coil, So when loaded
                    the main power transfer I think is damped and mostly positive. So I would
                    work out which of the output leads is most positive and put a diode in series
                    with that, then I would connect the other output wire to the ground and to
                    the negative of a capacitor, the rectified output goes to the positive of the
                    cap.

                    Now with the negative of the cap connected to ground the bottom or
                    negative side of the output wave ought to be at ground potential always, this
                    means the rectified output would be always positive and all should be rectified
                    into the cap.

                    Of course I could be wrong I did not try it on an induction cooker.

                    Cheers

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by wrtner View Post
                      Also, Maplin have brought their offer back into store:

                      2kW Induction Cooker : Appliances : Maplin Electronics
                      They've put the price back up again. Now £39. They really have mastered the art of pissing people off.

                      Comment


                      • Measuring output

                        Is this thread still active?
                        I am here to learn - the level of my knowledge can be summed up by volts x amps = watts.
                        I have built a 200mm dia pancake coil with speaker wire laid on edge, so it is not actually a Tesla bifilar, but two flat coils on top of each other.
                        Connected in series and laid on the induction cooker, they drive 5 x 400 watt halogen bulbs.
                        The bottom coil alone drives the same bank of bulbs and the top one can also drive a similar bank at the same time.
                        To compare the input and output I used a consumer meter at the input end and thought I could do the same at the output, but the puff of smoke and blank screen soon told me otherwise!
                        My multimeter shows around 80 volts on the output, but I am unable to read the amps with a clamp type ammeter.
                        My final test was to touch the outputs and find that I felt nothing.
                        How can I reliably test the output?

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Trauts22 View Post
                          How can I reliably test the output?
                          You can connect the output to a standard resistance of some sort, maybe an electric kettle, and measure the temperature rise over a period of time.

                          It should be bilfilar rather than a straight pancake coil.

                          Do you have enough wire to make a second one, place it on top of the first one, and connect that to another load?

                          (Electric kettles are sometimes to be found in recycling centres. You must promise not to use them as kettles - door stops, paper weights, spares, recycled plastic and metal - for legal reasons).
                          Last edited by wrtner; 02-13-2015, 04:44 PM.

                          Comment


                          • ...and another thing, I am pretty sure Jean Louis Naudin speaks about connecting a fairly heavy load at all times. ( I suppose this means a relatively low resistance load).

                            ...and since you have a LC tank circuit connected up to an oscillating source, there will be a resonance issue.

                            Comment


                            • Gegene

                              I wondering why Mr. Naudin doesn't completely close the loop.

                              Why not feed the output from the pancake coil to a step-down transformer, then rectify it, store the charge in a capacitor bank, and then feed it into an inverter, and then the inverter output into the induction stove.

                              From the output from the pancake coil to the input of the induction stove, add the appropriate types and amounts of load to equalize consumption with production.
                              Regards,

                              VIDBID

                              Comment


                              • Induction Stove

                                [VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yXSjl8DFaf0[/VIDEO]

                                Interesting to know how the stove is made.
                                Regards,

                                VIDBID

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X