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Veljko Milkovic + piezoelectric + ssg

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  • Veljko Milkovic + piezoelectric + ssg

    Hello everybody,

    What would you think of a small Two Stage Oscillator clicking an ignition piezoelectric from the lighters, and send that spark through a coil to push the pendulum (which would have a magnet on it)..

    Then after the spark goes through the coil it could be gathered with a ssg circuit and .... and then I don't know what to do with it... since the piezoelectric voltage is more than 1KV (As I understand), and the radiant spike of that going through a coil and then collapsing would be a lot bigger, where do I send that spike? Where do I put it? Caps? Lower voltage caps?

    best,

    Alvaro Hernandorena

  • #2
    Hi alvarohn,

    Have you tried to fire a coil by using the spark from an igniter? I haven't tried it but I am pretty sure the current is so low it will do nothing in the coil. Power is more than just volts. There also has to be some current with the volts or the volts are pretty much useless. I would suggest you make a light weight wheel with very easy to turn bearings like from an old cd player and then mount a couple of magnets on it so it will be balanced and then try to get a coil to move one of the magnets with the spark from an igniter. If you can find a coil with several thousand turns of really fine wire you might be able to get it to move the magnet. Let us know what you find. You have an interesting idea. You have me wondering now if it can be made to work.

    Respectfully, Carroll
    Just because someone disagrees with you does NOT make them your enemy. We can disagree without attacking someone.

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    • #3
      Check Magluvin YT channel using caps from backemf to charge coil and boost spin in ur case spark from lighter....
      Im using the ignition coil but at a lesser degree this i will use for the cap switching to charge coils Cool Power YT
      Im using ssg output to power an ignition coil which goes to an spark gap relay then to the transformer with a bi filar coil ( Cool Power 2 YT) No switching yet



      ENERGY AMPLIFICATION
      totoalas
      Last edited by totoalas; 09-09-2013, 10:17 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        firsts steps

        Originally posted by citfta View Post
        Hi alvarohn,

        Have you tried to fire a coil by using the spark from an igniter? I haven't tried it but I am pretty sure the current is so low it will do nothing in the coil. Power is more than just volts. There also has to be some current with the volts or the volts are pretty much useless. I would suggest you make a light weight wheel with very easy to turn bearings like from an old cd player and then mount a couple of magnets on it so it will be balanced and then try to get a coil to move one of the magnets with the spark from an igniter. If you can find a coil with several thousand turns of really fine wire you might be able to get it to move the magnet. Let us know what you find. You have an interesting idea. You have me wondering now if it can be made to work.

        Respectfully, Carroll
        Carroll tnx for the reply, last night I started to do tests, first I wannted to see if I could store the spark from the igniter inside a cap, but I could not! the capacitor does not get any charge at all!!! Now I am wondering that maybe I need a bridge rectifier beetween the igniter and the cap to store the energy.

        First I tried with a 220 uf 200 V cap that didn't get any charge, then I changed to 1 uf cap 400 volts that didn't get anycharg either,..

        But in one of the tests the spark went in my fingers and... there is definitly some energy going on because I got my fingers shocked.

        Have anyone tried to store a spark inside a cap? does it need a bridge rectifier???

        best

        Alvaro Hernandorena

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by alvarohn View Post

          Have anyone tried to store a spark inside a cap? does it need a bridge rectifier???
          A spark is essentially DC. No bridge rectifier needed.

          But you would be hard pushed to find a cap rated at the necessary voltage which had any appreciable capacity. The 1KV caps at RS have a capacity in the nanofarad range.

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