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I see that shorting the secondary does something to my set up, as well.
That is also normally how I have to kick-start the system, at times. But, at first I get the lower stage of resonance, and after a minute or two, the second resonance point kicks in, and the Cfl bulbs get much brighter. I suspect that even though I'm feeling little to no heat on any of the transistors used, that as they warm up, the second resonance point comes up and takes over. I can also make this higher resonance point show up by shorting the primary coil to the secondary. But, if the whole system is still cold, this kick-start of the secondary resonance point does not work until a couple of minutes go by and it all warms up at the lower resonant point. All I'm using is three transistors, and no other components in a combined multi coil circuit. I'll show some pics, soon.
Is there a mistake on the latest drawing you just posted? Is the wire going to the center tap supposed to be connected to the wire going to the top of the pot? That looks like it is shorting out one half of the primary windings. The earlier drawings did not show that connection.
Respectfully,
Carroll
PS: I guess you fixed it while I was writing the post. Sorry.
Just because someone disagrees with you does NOT make them your enemy. We can disagree without attacking someone.
maybe a supercap is more receptive to the spike.i've got a half arsed theory that instantly on swich off isn't the best time to feed a pulse to a battery.maybe current has some sort of pseudo inertia or something within a battery.just a gut feeling more than anything else.power on.
Last edited by hotrod68r; 03-06-2013, 10:12 AM.
Reason: clarification
Is there a mistake on the latest drawing you just posted? Is the wire going to the center tap supposed to be connected to the wire going to the top of the pot? That looks like it is shorting out one half of the primary windings. The earlier drawings did not show that connection.
Respectfully,
Carroll
PS: I guess you fixed it while I was writing the post. Sorry.
Sorry
I saw that and changed it.
It is supposed to pass the wire.
maybe a supercap is more receptive to the spike.i've got a half arsed theory that instantly on swich off isn't the best time to feed a pulse to a battery.maybe current has some sort of pseudo inertia or something.just a gut feeling more than anything else.power on.
I think it's the rest-time.
Drain a quick pulse and let the battery idle for recovery and the pushing the pulse back into it.
do your scope shots show a rest period?i'm under the impression there wouldn't be one.could be wrong.this circuit is my best so far for return v input with a transistor.i'll get a supercap and try it.maybe power off while your asleep --improved circuit details and schematic (post 9022) on pages 301-302--
do your scope shots show a rest period?i'm under the impression there wouldn't be one.could be wrong.this circuit is my best so far for return v input with a transistor.i'll get a supercap and try it.maybe power off while your asleep
Yes, you are right.
There isn't any rest between drain and charge current but there is a 15mS rest inbetween those events and the battery idles.
8:00 this morning the battery was at 11.24v
And when I disconnected the JT it jumped up to 11.43v
The Supercap due to it's ESR cannot deliver a current over 260mA.
But at 12v the mosfet-JT has a peak current of only 133mA in a 2.5mS pulse.
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