Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Free Energy Idea

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    All of you are contemplating a circuit that does not include switched timing. As soon as a capacitor receives a charge that charge should be moved from the capacitor plate back to the entrance of the circuit and reused. If the capacitor is empty it will not have any resistance in fact it can emulate a ground up to 10% capacity as far as current flow is concerned.
    Charging a Capacitor

    Stop thinking about a conventional LCR circuit and create the one you want. Any amount of power can be timed and converted.

    If you have a bit of energy and you use it to generate more while retaining the original energy minus loss, what do you have left? Stop thinking and do.

    Thats it..
    Last edited by Matthew Jones; 08-07-2017, 03:44 AM.

    Comment


    • #32
      Originally posted by Matthew Jones View Post
      All of you are contemplating a circuit that does not include switched timing. As soon as a capacitor receives a charge that charge should be moved from the capacitor plate back to the entrance of the circuit and reused. If the capacitor is empty it will not have any resistance in fact it can emulate a ground up to 10% capacity as far as current flow is concerned.
      Charging a Capacitor

      Stop thinking about a conventional LCR circuit and create the one you want. Any amount of power can be timed and converted.

      If you have a bit of energy and you use it to generate more while retaining the original energy minus loss, what do you have left? Stop thinking and do.

      Thats it..
      ^^^^^
      This. I haven't got around to the timing yet. Or any of the fine details for that matter. I new it was needed but lack the skills to know exactly what is required. It's on my to do reading list. Everybody seems to be fixated on a tank circuit. It was only my intention to use that circuit to detail my thoughts on the viability of the idea. It was never going to be the final solution.

      Comment


      • #33
        Originally posted by Matthew Jones View Post
        If you have a bit of energy and you use it to generate more while retaining the original energy minus loss, what do you have left?
        Nailed it right there, but for some of us, some thinking still required.

        Comment


        • #34
          Back to the coil/capacitor/switch/lamp theme, this diode-plug circuit is coming to my mind. The coil is here also the generator.
          Attached Files

          Comment


          • #35
            Originally posted by Matthew Jones View Post
            ... As soon as a capacitor receives a charge that charge should be moved from the capacitor plate back to the entrance of the circuit and reused. If the capacitor is empty it will not have any resistance in fact it can emulate a ground up to 10% capacity as far as current flow is concerned...
            Exactly. Stop charging the cap to it's full capacity.

            About 270 years ago Ben Franklin observed this about capacitors or Leyden jars:
            “But suspend two or more phials (Leyden jars) on the prime conductor, one hanging to the tail of the other ; and a wire from the last to the floor, an equal number of turns of the wheel (of an electrostatic friction machine) shall charge them all equally, and every one as much as one alone would have been. What is driven out of the tail of the first, serving to charge the second ; what is driven out of the second charging the third ; and so on.” The words in parenthesis are mine.

            He also goes on to note that each 'phial' has a reluctance or resistance to charging.
            If the first cap is charged to 10% with little resistance, as Matt points out, and the second is charged by the first to 9%, and the third to 8% then what do you have?

            One last thing. I firmly believe that the amount of charge in a closed system is finite and cannot be increased unless additional charge is brought in from an external source; such as a battery, generator, from the environment or from the earth.
            Last edited by Cadman; 08-07-2017, 04:18 PM.

            Comment


            • #36
              We have 4 capacitors of equal capacitance. 2 are connected in series to a voltage source and 2 in parallel to another voltage source.
              V = Volts
              C = Capacitance
              Energy of a capacitor = 1/2*CV^2
              Parallel capacitance total for 2 capacitors -> 2C
              Series capacitance total for 2 capacitors of equal capacitance -> C/2

              Energy of the capacitors in parallel: 1/2(2C)V^2 -> CV^2
              Energy of the capacitors in series: 1/2(C/2)V^2 -> 1/4CV^2

              Therefore the capacitors in parallel have 4 times the energy as those in series. Also for every capacitor in parallel is a duplication of energy. So for n capacitors in parallel we have (n/2)CV^2 joules of energy. For example for 10 equal capacitors we have 5CV^2 joules of energy. Thats 10 times the energy of just one capacitor. Or to put it another way. To increase the energy of a single capacitor just increase the capacitance. Although the charging time would increase accordingly.

              An interesting observation. Switch the parallel caps to series for a quicker discharge. Same amount of energy delivered at a faster rate equals increased power.
              Last edited by p75213; 08-08-2017, 12:16 PM.

              Comment


              • #37
                Heres a circuit that might be relevant. Its not quite finished yet so it is untested.

                Its pretty much a pulsed flyback transformer with a small change. The primary pulse helps to charge an ultra capacitor C Ultra. When the top switch is opened, it breaks the primary current, the bottom switch closes, connecting the secondary flyback to C Ultra in series, and helps to discharge C Ultra into the load.




                Edit ....... Had a chance to try out the circuit, and it didn't make any gains, so I don't recommend trying it.
                Attached Files
                Last edited by lotec; 08-19-2017, 02:24 AM.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Ooops sorry there p75213, it looks a bit disjointed me posting that circuit there after your last post. I wasnt trying to take things in a different direction. You must have got yours in while I was doing mine. Let me know if you want me to delete it.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Originally posted by lotec View Post
                    Ooops sorry there p75213, it looks a bit disjointed me posting that circuit there after your last post. I wasnt trying to take things in a different direction. You must have got yours in while I was doing mine. Let me know if you want me to delete it.
                    Of course not. It all adds to the mix.
                    Last edited by p75213; 08-08-2017, 12:10 PM.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Originally posted by p75213 View Post
                      ...
                      Switch the parallel caps to series for a quicker discharge. Same amount of energy delivered at a faster rate equals increased power.
                      Would it not be better to charge the 3 caps in series and then discharge sequentially?
                      Initially move 10% of charge from the source, then discharge 10% from the first, then 9% from the second, then 8% from the third.
                      Total discharge 27% minus losses.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Capacitor energy

                        Originally posted by p75213 View Post
                        We have 4 capacitors of equal capacitance. 2 are connected in series to a voltage source and 2 in parallel to another voltage source.
                        V = Volts
                        C = Capacitance
                        Energy of a capacitor = 1/2*CV^2
                        Parallel capacitance total for 2 capacitors -> 2C
                        Series capacitance total for 2 capacitors of equal capacitance -> C/2

                        Energy of the capacitors in parallel: 1/2(2C)V^2 -> CV^2
                        Energy of the capacitors in series: 1/2(C/2)V^2 -> 1/4CV^2

                        Therefore the capacitors in parallel have 4 times the energy as those in series. ...
                        Hi p75213,

                        You forget that for the series connection the voltage doubles so the total energy is the same for 2 caps in parallel as 2 caps in series.

                        bi

                        {edit}


                        Energy of the capacitors in parallel: 1/2(2C)V^2 -> CV^2
                        Energy of the capacitors in series: 1/2(C/2)(2V)^2 -> CV^2
                        Last edited by bistander; 08-08-2017, 01:26 PM. Reason: Added equations

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Originally posted by bistander View Post
                          Hi p75213,

                          You forget that for the series connection the voltage doubles so the total energy is the same for 2 caps in parallel as 2 caps in series.

                          bi

                          {edit}


                          Energy of the capacitors in parallel: 1/2(2C)V^2 -> CV^2
                          Energy of the capacitors in series: 1/2(C/2)(2V)^2 -> CV^2
                          Each cap in parallel has voltage V and the total voltage is also V.
                          Each cap in series has voltage V /2. Therefore the total voltage is V.

                          The series connection would have to have double the source voltage to achieve the same energy output. Or if their were n similar parallel caps it would need n times the voltage source.
                          Last edited by p75213; 08-08-2017, 09:43 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Originally posted by Cadman View Post
                            Would it not be better to charge the 3 caps in series and then discharge sequentially?
                            Initially move 10% of charge from the source, then discharge 10% from the first, then 9% from the second, then 8% from the third.
                            Total discharge 27% minus losses.
                            Maybe somebody else would like to comment on this because I don't know. You could be right though.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Voltage

                              Originally posted by p75213 View Post
                              Each cap in parallel has voltage V and the total voltage is also V.
                              Each cap in series has voltage V /2. Therefore the total voltage is V.

                              The series connection would have to have double the source voltage to achieve the same energy output. Or if their were n similar parallel caps it would need n times the voltage source.
                              You didn't specify V was total voltage and constant. In fact your interesting observation at the end of that post implies a higher total voltage for the series connection, doesn't it?

                              Originally posted by p75213 View Post
                              ...
                              An interesting observation. Switch the parallel caps to series for a quicker discharge. Same amount of energy delivered at a faster rate equals increased power.
                              Why would anyone use series connected capacitors unless it was to get a higher total voltage?

                              bi

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Originally posted by p75213 View Post
                                Each cap in parallel has voltage V and the total voltage is also V.
                                Each cap in series has voltage V /2. Therefore the total voltage is V.

                                The series connection would have to have double the source voltage to achieve the same energy output. Or if their were n similar parallel caps it would need n times the voltage source.
                                bistander is correct in his statement, but you are also correct, because of your given scenario (same source voltage to charge both capacitor arrangement).

                                I have a similar project where in I have a clock to switch 2 transistor alternately, one to charge the capacitor in parallel and one to discharge them all in series (your idea), the difference is I have Inductors in between capacitor in series, and a bunch of diodes to avoid short circuit and to redirect the "Energy" flow where I want it., But my intention was not so that I will have increase power output (because its the same amount of energy). but to make a High voltage DC pulser without using traditional transformer diode configuration, because that way I can control the frequency better.

                                If you want I can share the schematics, but I haven't built the actual device yet, so no promise on efficiency.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X