Yes, by all means anyone who has something to contribute to the discussion, please do so. My experiments are continuing but I have had no more obviously anomalous behavior in any of the configurations I have tried. Rectifying the output to DC and using a load resistance makes it easy to compute the power and obvious that the there is no power gain, or at least no measurable power gain. Even though I was getting up to around 4 watts of power going into the output transformer, after the transformer I can't get more than about 1 watt. I have tried both the 30 turn and 13 turn secondaries and power wise both seem about the same.
This is a problem I have heard mentioned by John Bedini, overunity is only obvious if the efficiency is also high enough. If you have a device with 5% efficiency and COP 10, then you will still only have 50% of the input power and cannot loop the device. So far all the simple ways that Zelina mentioned for generating cold electricity have very low efficiency. Charging a capacitor near a Tesla coil (or Slayer exciter) by means of an avramenko to ground certainly works, but very very slowly and at very low efficiency. I got out my Tesla primary and secondary and hooked them up to a Slayer circuit and built a small receiver circuit with a cap and two avramenko diodes. I started off with a 10K load resistor on it and even right at the top of the secondary I could only measure about 0.4 mW of power. It's hard to do anything useful with less than a milliwatt. I also built a small Joule thief circuit next to the cap/avramenko receiver to run the output through a transformer to see if there is any COP>1 gain. The Joule thief lights up the LED's if the arrangement is close enough to the resonating secondary but it doesn't seem like there is any obvious power gain. I have included a picture of this "COP meter" circuit, note that a wire to ground between the two avramenko diodes is necessary for operation.
This is a problem I have heard mentioned by John Bedini, overunity is only obvious if the efficiency is also high enough. If you have a device with 5% efficiency and COP 10, then you will still only have 50% of the input power and cannot loop the device. So far all the simple ways that Zelina mentioned for generating cold electricity have very low efficiency. Charging a capacitor near a Tesla coil (or Slayer exciter) by means of an avramenko to ground certainly works, but very very slowly and at very low efficiency. I got out my Tesla primary and secondary and hooked them up to a Slayer circuit and built a small receiver circuit with a cap and two avramenko diodes. I started off with a 10K load resistor on it and even right at the top of the secondary I could only measure about 0.4 mW of power. It's hard to do anything useful with less than a milliwatt. I also built a small Joule thief circuit next to the cap/avramenko receiver to run the output through a transformer to see if there is any COP>1 gain. The Joule thief lights up the LED's if the arrangement is close enough to the resonating secondary but it doesn't seem like there is any obvious power gain. I have included a picture of this "COP meter" circuit, note that a wire to ground between the two avramenko diodes is necessary for operation.
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