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Capacitive voltage divider - opposite of CW multiplier

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  • Capacitive voltage divider - opposite of CW multiplier

    I like Donald Smith circuits. I had repeated some of his experiments and it works.

    There is some medium in our world that can be excited using a small amount of energy and give out a greater amount of energy.

    I was not able to make any practical use of this yet and I found no sound scientific explanation of why this is so.

    However what I notice is that many of the free energy circuits output electrical energy in very inconvenient forms. like the output of a famous Don Smith circuit is somewhere around 500 - 1000 Volts. It comes as either dirty and noisy radio frequency AC or DC, if it is rectified with diodes.

    Not very convenient voltage to work with. It needs to be stepped down again if it is AC. Step-down transformers change the resonance qualities of the air-core transformer making the experiment not very clean.

    It is also difficult to measure power output at 1000V radio frequency.


    I NEED HELP designing a charge pump voltage divider that would work like a CW multiplier backwards. A chain of 101 capacitors wired in series is charged with 1200VDC. One capacitor from this chain would have a voltage potential of 12 volts. A circuit would be mechanically or electronically closed
    in such way that capacitors are discharged into the 12 volt load, one after another, then disengaged and left to recharge.

    Building a commutator in home conditions would be difficult so I would like to make a transistor/ mosfet/thyristor version of this circuit where each capacitor is discharged, then disconnected.

    It would also be useful in the future to discharge capacitors and switch them around so minus becomes plus and plus becomes minus. This way their energy can feed the exciting winding directly.

    Help me design a circuit:
    capacitor voltage converter.jpg


    This circuit can also allow an experimenter to measure power output more easily. Knowing capacity, charge time, voltage and few other things, the power output of a free energy device can be measured. Better than making an array of incandescent light bulbs, although one doesn't exclude the other.

  • #2
    The device by William Hyde has output circuits which allow sharp, high voltage pulse rectification:

    hyde

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    • #3
      I want a solid-state device that would allow me to discharge one capacitor at a time in a chain of capacitors in series. This electromechanical device is not exactly what I am looking for.

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      • #4
        In the Hyde device, the part of interest that I refer to is the chain of capacitors and diodes that rectify the output pulses, which was reported to be very high voltage, down to 600V DC.

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