Tesla's Simulator Brain
In Tesla's autobiography, he talks about how he had to discipline his mind to put reality into his fantasies lest he do something similar to what he did as a child in which he jumped off the roof of his parent's home holding nothing but an umbrella! Ouch!
Once he was a young man, he could simulate a device in his head so realistically that he could tell an assistant how to build it and it would work the first time, every time. That's what I hope I'm doing. It's just taking me a tad longer than however long it took Tesla to do the same thing 'cuz I have to self-teach myself electrodynamics using the simulator as my guide and people like Eric Dollard to confirm and explain my experiences.
Micro-Cap trial demo for free forces me to keep my experiments small and simple.
To answer a prior question of yours concerning "do I use the Fibonacci ratio in my 1.67 Ohm resistor?" No, I use it to regulate the voltage ratio versus the current of what is supplied to the twin motors of a RAV4 EV from 2002: 345V vs 206A at full throttle. This data I got from the R&D which Toyota authorized Alan Cocconi, of AC Propulsion to develop based on the 2003 model year of the RAV4EV. AC Propulsion built EV race cars and inventor of the motor controller for the GM EV-1 portrayed in the "Who Killed the Electric Car" movie and silent partner behind Elon Musk's Tesla.
https://youtu.be/2CV5Y5QkI_8?t=1010
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ldm...youtu.be&t=237
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=ebox+tom+h...ffsb&ia=videos
Originally posted by BroMikey
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Once he was a young man, he could simulate a device in his head so realistically that he could tell an assistant how to build it and it would work the first time, every time. That's what I hope I'm doing. It's just taking me a tad longer than however long it took Tesla to do the same thing 'cuz I have to self-teach myself electrodynamics using the simulator as my guide and people like Eric Dollard to confirm and explain my experiences.
Micro-Cap trial demo for free forces me to keep my experiments small and simple.
Originally posted by BroMikey
View Post
To answer a prior question of yours concerning "do I use the Fibonacci ratio in my 1.67 Ohm resistor?" No, I use it to regulate the voltage ratio versus the current of what is supplied to the twin motors of a RAV4 EV from 2002: 345V vs 206A at full throttle. This data I got from the R&D which Toyota authorized Alan Cocconi, of AC Propulsion to develop based on the 2003 model year of the RAV4EV. AC Propulsion built EV race cars and inventor of the motor controller for the GM EV-1 portrayed in the "Who Killed the Electric Car" movie and silent partner behind Elon Musk's Tesla.
https://youtu.be/2CV5Y5QkI_8?t=1010
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ldm...youtu.be&t=237
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=ebox+tom+h...ffsb&ia=videos
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