My original experiement is still going.
For 3 days now i believe. I have been running the original version of this circuit. My battery has lost nothing in voltage on a very weakly charge. The battery has a self standing voltage of 10.2 and is still there while running an led for days. The voltage is still the same. I am gonna run this for a week but I was wondering what the self discharge of a lead acid battery of 12 ah design would be. Seeing that it is a 12 volt battery normally and this battery is at 10.2 volts it would mean that there is very little left in the battery yet it is still the same voltage as I started with after 3 days of running the led.
I guess this got me thinking about what we could do with the 3v or so that is across the terminals of the caps and I came to the conclusion that we could run a ton of things like cmos maybe? With enough parallel caps we could run much more for free.
Since I am waiting to get more leds I wanted to know if someone could do some tests for me on parallel leds. I wanted to know if someone could read the resistance of the led in parallel if there is any. Because I had five leds in parallel and this worked great until I had a mishap.
As for my description of what is happening inside the caps well thats the only thing I could come up with from my observations. Just from the voltage readings we can tell whats going on. The only thing that is being consumed here is a very very small amount of leakage current thats why I brought up the idea of using super caps or ultra caps seeing that they have a smaller leakage then these cheap-o aluminum caps. One thing is for sure we need polarized caps to enable the flow in certain directions with a parallel plate to induce the voltage on. I think we have a very tiny Potential(voltage) pump here and that is evident by the power of the plates getting better with more parallel caps that are used, this could be akin to the gas engine with multiple pistons in parallel. The more of them there are the more powerful the action is between the plates.
For 3 days now i believe. I have been running the original version of this circuit. My battery has lost nothing in voltage on a very weakly charge. The battery has a self standing voltage of 10.2 and is still there while running an led for days. The voltage is still the same. I am gonna run this for a week but I was wondering what the self discharge of a lead acid battery of 12 ah design would be. Seeing that it is a 12 volt battery normally and this battery is at 10.2 volts it would mean that there is very little left in the battery yet it is still the same voltage as I started with after 3 days of running the led.
I guess this got me thinking about what we could do with the 3v or so that is across the terminals of the caps and I came to the conclusion that we could run a ton of things like cmos maybe? With enough parallel caps we could run much more for free.
Since I am waiting to get more leds I wanted to know if someone could do some tests for me on parallel leds. I wanted to know if someone could read the resistance of the led in parallel if there is any. Because I had five leds in parallel and this worked great until I had a mishap.
As for my description of what is happening inside the caps well thats the only thing I could come up with from my observations. Just from the voltage readings we can tell whats going on. The only thing that is being consumed here is a very very small amount of leakage current thats why I brought up the idea of using super caps or ultra caps seeing that they have a smaller leakage then these cheap-o aluminum caps. One thing is for sure we need polarized caps to enable the flow in certain directions with a parallel plate to induce the voltage on. I think we have a very tiny Potential(voltage) pump here and that is evident by the power of the plates getting better with more parallel caps that are used, this could be akin to the gas engine with multiple pistons in parallel. The more of them there are the more powerful the action is between the plates.
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