How many of these follow the schematic that John B posted for the Tesla Switch? How many of them follow a schematic of someone ELSE who actually built one that works? How many of them are just built by people who THINK they understand how and why a Tesla switch works? Do they have diodes in the right place? DO they even HAVE diodes in their schematic? Are they even running the load correctly on the transistors (if they are using transistors) John said the load in the Tesla switch ran DIFFERENTLY on the transistor than what people would normally do. And he discussed HOW to run it.
Just slap something together and post it on YouTube and call it a Tesla Switch because it has four batteries and runs a load. It's kinda like calling a kite an airplane because they both fly. It's bad enough this stuff gets posted on YouTube to perpetuate falsehoods and failure, but then you post it HERE without building it yourself.
In a working system the primaries don't go down, and the secondaries don't go up, except for small fluctuations. But you are able to run a load for free. If there are GAINS in the system, those gains come from the LOAD, not the Tesla Switch itself. How does a gain come from the load? Run in inverter or a boost module (between the positives on a Tesla Switch) AS THE LOAD for FREE, and what do you get coming out of the SECONDARY of either one? You get SOME energy that you didn't have to pay for because you ran it for free. With small batteries like most of these folks are using, 10-20 watts max load is all you will get. Will it run forever? NO But it will run for MONTHS, and during that time you collect FAR more energy out of the secondary of the load than is contained in the four batteries you were using. Which means you could have FOUR MORE batteries all charged up and ready to go. Or you can figure out a method of rotating them through to begin with.
Mechanical switching will give you the BEST results. 3d printers can help with that. I made my first mechanical switch from a piece of large PVC pipe (6" diameter, but smaller will work) that had copper plates glued on the outside and attached by wires on the inside. Then I had caps for each end that had a hole drilled through the center of them for a piece of all-thread. Before I put the cap on the pipe I stuck the all thread far enough through it that I was sure it would go through the pipe and out the hole in the cap on the other end. Then I threaded a nut on each side of the cap and tightened it down using all thread so they wouldn't come loose. This meant when the all thread rotated, the cap would rotate and the pipe it was glued onto would rotate. I did NOT glue the cap on the other end in case I ever needed to get it off to get to the wires inside for any reason.
How do you power the motor without using any energy so that all the energy produced by the Tesla switch is free? That's Simple. A very SImple Motor and circuit. It requires you to use the RIGHT motor. Peter says his attraction motor will do what is necessary. But that requires some machining. Another motor I've worked with will do it too. It not only runs, but can be used to charge up batteries while it is running, so that answers the question of how to charge the batteries you want to rotate into this system. I have built ALL these things, and it's a LOT of work and time and expense to run a 20 watt load basically forever. But if you want to PROVE to yourself that free energy exists, this will prove it. Making two rotors with six 1" diameter by 1/2" neo magnets in them is the HARD part. The rest can be built with the tools most guys have lying around. A hacksaw, a drill, and some tin snips to cut the copper.
I know this works, because I built it. And I will build it AGAIN just to prove the point. Not out of 6" diameter PVC though. The caps for that have gotten RIDICULOUS in price. I will struggle along with 4' since I have some, and have the caps already.
Just slap something together and post it on YouTube and call it a Tesla Switch because it has four batteries and runs a load. It's kinda like calling a kite an airplane because they both fly. It's bad enough this stuff gets posted on YouTube to perpetuate falsehoods and failure, but then you post it HERE without building it yourself.
In a working system the primaries don't go down, and the secondaries don't go up, except for small fluctuations. But you are able to run a load for free. If there are GAINS in the system, those gains come from the LOAD, not the Tesla Switch itself. How does a gain come from the load? Run in inverter or a boost module (between the positives on a Tesla Switch) AS THE LOAD for FREE, and what do you get coming out of the SECONDARY of either one? You get SOME energy that you didn't have to pay for because you ran it for free. With small batteries like most of these folks are using, 10-20 watts max load is all you will get. Will it run forever? NO But it will run for MONTHS, and during that time you collect FAR more energy out of the secondary of the load than is contained in the four batteries you were using. Which means you could have FOUR MORE batteries all charged up and ready to go. Or you can figure out a method of rotating them through to begin with.
Mechanical switching will give you the BEST results. 3d printers can help with that. I made my first mechanical switch from a piece of large PVC pipe (6" diameter, but smaller will work) that had copper plates glued on the outside and attached by wires on the inside. Then I had caps for each end that had a hole drilled through the center of them for a piece of all-thread. Before I put the cap on the pipe I stuck the all thread far enough through it that I was sure it would go through the pipe and out the hole in the cap on the other end. Then I threaded a nut on each side of the cap and tightened it down using all thread so they wouldn't come loose. This meant when the all thread rotated, the cap would rotate and the pipe it was glued onto would rotate. I did NOT glue the cap on the other end in case I ever needed to get it off to get to the wires inside for any reason.
How do you power the motor without using any energy so that all the energy produced by the Tesla switch is free? That's Simple. A very SImple Motor and circuit. It requires you to use the RIGHT motor. Peter says his attraction motor will do what is necessary. But that requires some machining. Another motor I've worked with will do it too. It not only runs, but can be used to charge up batteries while it is running, so that answers the question of how to charge the batteries you want to rotate into this system. I have built ALL these things, and it's a LOT of work and time and expense to run a 20 watt load basically forever. But if you want to PROVE to yourself that free energy exists, this will prove it. Making two rotors with six 1" diameter by 1/2" neo magnets in them is the HARD part. The rest can be built with the tools most guys have lying around. A hacksaw, a drill, and some tin snips to cut the copper.
I know this works, because I built it. And I will build it AGAIN just to prove the point. Not out of 6" diameter PVC though. The caps for that have gotten RIDICULOUS in price. I will struggle along with 4' since I have some, and have the caps already.
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