The next step
And while I am thinking about it, let me throw something else into the mix.
How many of you have actually run a motor on the negatives of two batteries to see what you can achieve when running on the potential difference between two sources of power? (24 volts on one side of motor and 12 volts on the other) What REALLY happens to your primaries when you do this? Does it really extend your run times as I have been saying it can? Does the motor REALLY act as a generator putting out more than it used to run?
Who has tried it with caps? They are a source of power aren't they? Do THEY work as well? You folks who haven't done this need to do it. You need to believe deep down inside that all this is real.
Now think about this....does the rectified output of a generator have a positive and a negative? Come on, does it? Is that a source of power?????? If you add a 12 volt battery do you not have TWO sources of power, both with a positive and a negative that you can run your drive motor between on the potential difference? I'll tell you a little secret. You now have a problem most of you have NEVER has before. You now have TOO MUCH power. You have to put a load on your run battery or it gets TOO much. The problem becomes winding one generator coil that gives you the potential difference you need without blowing up your battery. I have seen it on some of the stuff I have done.
I've given you some information, but here is the big question. If you run your motor on the rectified output of the generator in the manner I have described, does the generator see it as a load? I await your answer. Honestly, I am still messing with this, and would like for a few others to mess with it too. But, can you say looped (self runner)????
Dave
And while I am thinking about it, let me throw something else into the mix.
How many of you have actually run a motor on the negatives of two batteries to see what you can achieve when running on the potential difference between two sources of power? (24 volts on one side of motor and 12 volts on the other) What REALLY happens to your primaries when you do this? Does it really extend your run times as I have been saying it can? Does the motor REALLY act as a generator putting out more than it used to run?
Who has tried it with caps? They are a source of power aren't they? Do THEY work as well? You folks who haven't done this need to do it. You need to believe deep down inside that all this is real.
Now think about this....does the rectified output of a generator have a positive and a negative? Come on, does it? Is that a source of power?????? If you add a 12 volt battery do you not have TWO sources of power, both with a positive and a negative that you can run your drive motor between on the potential difference? I'll tell you a little secret. You now have a problem most of you have NEVER has before. You now have TOO MUCH power. You have to put a load on your run battery or it gets TOO much. The problem becomes winding one generator coil that gives you the potential difference you need without blowing up your battery. I have seen it on some of the stuff I have done.
I've given you some information, but here is the big question. If you run your motor on the rectified output of the generator in the manner I have described, does the generator see it as a load? I await your answer. Honestly, I am still messing with this, and would like for a few others to mess with it too. But, can you say looped (self runner)????
Dave
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