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Lockridge Device - Peter Lindemann

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  • No if you look at the voltage it the coil you get 2 seperate peeks when it comes out. They usually are about half the run voltage maybe just a little less.
    But because you do get some spike type behavior you can run a cap. The largest voltage I got out of it, and that was just letting charge up to the max, was 64.7 volt. Thats running 72 volt system.
    But really thats just from the spikes the true power is alot less.

    If you put a 12 volt load on it it will run about 14 -15 volt at about 1.5 amp. But that slows the motor down.

    Its a funny thing. It all new to me. The point is to get the torque out of it at high rpm so thats what I am shooting for.

    Matt

    Comment


    • Your thinking of incorporating this into your Bouncer project? Should be an interesting marriage.

      Your doing great so far, super work Matt ! Nice video on the little screamin' demon as well, your moving right along.
      ________
      Anal deep
      Last edited by dragon; 05-11-2011, 11:17 AM.

      Comment


      • I am going to walk it through the tests Peter wants first. If nothing else comes of it then I'll put it in the bouncer.

        Thanks
        Matt

        Comment


        • Got my rotor running beter now. @60 volts draw is 500ma and rpm's are 4420. The timing was off a little. I'm pretty sure I could get the same rpm's with 36 volts with more amp draw if I went back to 20awg wire. If the wattage use was the same should I use thinner wire and more voltage or heavier wire and less voltage? I'm going to leave it for now. But my thoughts are to use heavier wire so I dont need as many batteries. What's your advice Peter?

          Mark

          Comment


          • Finished build

            I used super-glue to attach the spring pin islands. I left enough board to clip the anchor to. [Other builders are welcome to do the job more neatly , holes from my earlier attempts got in the way.]

            http://img413.imageshack.us/img413/8167/img0107bq.jpg
            http://img211.imageshack.us/img211/1018/img0109u.jpg

            And then attached the four 14awg leads. Pointed the right-angle spade lugs toward the exit hole and made sure that the braided copper wire to the brushes was not tangled up and move freely.

            http://img248.imageshack.us/img248/8652/img0111li.jpg

            pt

            Comment


            • First run with 2 sets of brushes

              Ran the motor for a few seconds on 13.8vdc, without a recovery battery. Here is the scope trace on the recovery leads:

              http://img695.imageshack.us/img695/4778/img0113tx.jpg

              2ms per horizontal division, 5v per vertical division.

              [removed]

              30 turns of 18awg on what was originally a 10-pole, 2 magnet 12VDC motor rated for 10A

              pt
              Last edited by pault; 01-25-2011, 02:00 PM. Reason: incorrect configuration

              Comment


              • I am working on a small step up circiut. So you can drive off of one battery. I'll post it when I get going.

                Matt

                Comment


                • Advice needed

                  If I understand correctly, I shouldn't run my batteries harder than their C20 rate for any appreciable amount of time. Currently the biggest battery I've got is 7.5Ah, with a C20 of 0.375A. This looks too low to run the motor w/o damaging the battery, given the results thus far.

                  So, I probably need to acquire something more hefty. I have a bunch of choices. I've only been really active in this field since the conference (and only half-way through monopole3).

                  Would someone with more experience like to suggest what might be the most useful of the below choices (which are roughly the same price)?

                  a) 20Ah slab + tripler circuit
                  b) 3A 30V variable bench supply (+ doubler or tripler circuit)
                  c) 10A 0-250VAC variable transformer + fwbr + fat cap
                  d) automobile (or other?) battery (+ tripler)
                  e) Use what I've got (are we going to reduce current draw in future manifestations?) + tripler.
                  f) ???

                  Thanks
                  pt

                  Comment


                  • None of the Above

                    Originally posted by pault View Post
                    If I understand correctly, I shouldn't run my batteries harder than their C20 rate for any appreciable amount of time. Currently the biggest battery I've got is 7.5Ah, with a C20 of 0.375A. This looks too low to run the motor w/o damaging the battery, given the results thus far.

                    So, I probably need to acquire something more hefty. I have a bunch of choices. I've only been really active in this field since the conference (and only half-way through monopole3).

                    Would someone with more experience like to suggest what might be the most useful of the below choices (which are roughly the same price)?

                    a) 20Ah slab + tripler circuit
                    b) 3A 30V variable bench supply (+ doubler or tripler circuit)
                    c) 10A 0-250VAC variable transformer + fwbr + fat cap
                    d) automobile (or other?) battery (+ tripler)
                    e) Use what I've got (are we going to reduce current draw in future manifestations?) + tripler.
                    f) ???

                    Thanks
                    pt
                    Dear Pault,

                    Most of these suggestions are inappropriate for this motor. It needs short, sharp, high current pulses to operate properly. The best supply is what Matt is using, which is a string of 12 volt Garden Batteries. If you restrict the current at the supply, the motor won't behave properly. Even though Matt's motor is showing 1 amp on the ammeter, don't be fooled. This analog meter is really showing an average draw that is more like 10 amps with a 10% duty-cycle.

                    This motor requires big current pulses to operate, so there are NO PLANS to reduce current in the future. This is not a Bedini SSG, it's a high torque, high speed electric motor!

                    Your best bet is option "C" with a cap after the FWBR of at least 100,000 uf. Even with this, the Variac will "moan" when the pulses go through!

                    Make sure you have the recovery brushes in place before using this supply. Good luck.

                    Peter
                    Last edited by Peter Lindemann; 01-25-2011, 07:21 PM.
                    Peter Lindemann, D.Sc.

                    Open System Thermodynamics Perpetual Motion Reality Electric Motor Secrets
                    Battery Secrets Magnet Secrets Tesla's Radiant Energy Real Rain Making
                    Bedini SG: The Complete Handbook Series Magnetic Energy Secrets

                    Comment


                    • @pault
                      You gotta look at inrush currents.
                      Say if your motor is wound with 20 awg, maybe 100ft, and your running 72 volt your looking at something like 72 amp pulse for the first one, The inrush. Then your looking at something like 15 amp pulses after that when your induction takes hold.
                      The pulse may take 1 millisecond and the off time is like 9 ms.Then you average out your 15 amp pulse over 10 ms and it look like 1.5 amp on an analog meter.
                      Thats all just an example of course but you get the point.

                      It why it is hard to say that something overunity or not. Pulse motors induction is a whole'nother ball game.

                      If you have string of 7.5 amp hour batteries that add up to the voltage you need you'll be fine. Those batteries won't be harmed at all.

                      I'm running 6 4.5 amp hour batteries and they are 6 years old. Brought back to life from a monopole and abused every day. They still have 95% capacity for there rating.

                      Hope that helps some
                      Matt

                      Comment


                      • Braking test

                        Hi Matt

                        thanks very much for your great work here.

                        Just a question , can you simply apply a hand braking on your rotor to see if per the same applied voltage . the amperage goes strongly up ( i mean more than double and more ) or it stay almost stable.
                        I would like to check if you get the same results as per my experience in this video

                        thanks

                        and good luck at all
                        YouTube - lockridge test 1

                        Laurent

                        Comment


                        • It goes up. I have already burnt several holes in my glove trying to slow it down. The amperage can go up as high as 2.2 amp. But and that takes the motor down to around 2400 rpms.
                          Thats the GLOVE TEST mind you.

                          What you are doing is more a pulse motor. Using a hall sensor and and transistor or whatever will have that effect. All monopoles act the same.
                          I am not sure how to explain it but I have seen the effect your showing several times. Reed motors, Hall motors and trigger wires all seem to display this. The coil chokes the flow of current or something along those lines.
                          With a brush if you slow the motor down the brush stays in contact longer so there fore the current has more time to flow and its rate increases.

                          I am starting a pony break tomorrow. I am going to try to do some torque tests that way.

                          I have trying to come up with a way to fire 2 times per rotation every 180 deg without rewiring everything. So far no progress just a few fires.

                          I am pretty convinced I will have to just use one wire and keep increasing the voltage.

                          Cheers
                          Matt

                          Comment


                          • Matt Why not use a set of points like your simple motor, and only interrupt the power just before and through the set of brushes at 90* and do the same for the set at 270* this would let you pulse two times every revolution, this way if the ends of your coil are connected 90* apart on the commutator you can bridge to trailing brushes at each of those to points this would let you collect the spikes like your simple motor if you open the points before the brushes go out of contact

                            William.
                            Last edited by rosehillworks; 01-26-2011, 03:03 PM.
                            William Reed

                            Comment


                            • It the windings that prevent it not the brush's.
                              The way you wind the zig zag it want to go into attraction at 180 degrees.
                              So you can only let it pulse 1 time per revolution.

                              It works well, look at what Mark is getting out of it his.

                              Matt

                              Comment


                              • Thanks Matt. I will keep working at the bench,

                                William
                                William Reed

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