I've been contacted by Gary Tripp a few times regarding the claims they have a self-running magnetic motor/generator combo. There are some vids and I made it clear that vids are not proof.
Hopefully, they can bring a demo to the conference - even the small table top model. That would be enough to prove the point. I offered to give them 90 minutes on stage if they can show something.
This is the small proof of concept motor I'm talking about: https://vimeo.com/260089450
I believe the coils are bifilar wound together then connected in series like in Tesla's bifilar patent. The rotor has good size magnets.
Most coils are turned so the edge of the coils are facing the magnets and 2 that are angled so the magnets face part of the air cor and part of the edge that are 180 degrees apart from each other.
If it works at all, I think it is an eddy current generator where the magnet induces a counter current to oppose the magnet to push it away similar to the Mervace demonstration from years ago. Mervace said it was powered by a CB remotely, but I"m not sure about that. I recall at Bedini's one of John's friends bringing a model like Mervace that kept itself running without a CB supplying any power to it remotely.
With Turion's experiments - one speed there is some drag, at optimum speed no drag and a little faster, it will unload the prime mover to speed up but with less output. So there are little windows where the counter push may exceed the energy required to push it into the face of the coil's cores. With the Infinity Sav concept, they're air cores so cogging ins't a problem.
Being bifilar, there is a lot of capacitance in the coils - with Mervace's model, it had a capacitor.
Anyway, anyone else have any thoughts on this? I ignore most of these type of claims and video demonstrations because obviously, nobody can verify something remotely in a video. But seeing one of the few possibilities of how it could work, I think it could be plausible.
With their larger versions running on the cart - it is inside out. The magnets are around the perimeter of the generator case and the air core bifilar coils are on the rotor spinning past the magnets.
They're taking pre-orders, but of course I wouldn't spend a penny on something that no third party is verifying and people attending a demo isn't 3rd party verification.
Hopefully, they can bring a demo to the conference - even the small table top model. That would be enough to prove the point. I offered to give them 90 minutes on stage if they can show something.
This is the small proof of concept motor I'm talking about: https://vimeo.com/260089450
I believe the coils are bifilar wound together then connected in series like in Tesla's bifilar patent. The rotor has good size magnets.
Most coils are turned so the edge of the coils are facing the magnets and 2 that are angled so the magnets face part of the air cor and part of the edge that are 180 degrees apart from each other.
If it works at all, I think it is an eddy current generator where the magnet induces a counter current to oppose the magnet to push it away similar to the Mervace demonstration from years ago. Mervace said it was powered by a CB remotely, but I"m not sure about that. I recall at Bedini's one of John's friends bringing a model like Mervace that kept itself running without a CB supplying any power to it remotely.
With Turion's experiments - one speed there is some drag, at optimum speed no drag and a little faster, it will unload the prime mover to speed up but with less output. So there are little windows where the counter push may exceed the energy required to push it into the face of the coil's cores. With the Infinity Sav concept, they're air cores so cogging ins't a problem.
Being bifilar, there is a lot of capacitance in the coils - with Mervace's model, it had a capacitor.
Anyway, anyone else have any thoughts on this? I ignore most of these type of claims and video demonstrations because obviously, nobody can verify something remotely in a video. But seeing one of the few possibilities of how it could work, I think it could be plausible.
With their larger versions running on the cart - it is inside out. The magnets are around the perimeter of the generator case and the air core bifilar coils are on the rotor spinning past the magnets.
They're taking pre-orders, but of course I wouldn't spend a penny on something that no third party is verifying and people attending a demo isn't 3rd party verification.
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