Originally posted by Guntis
View Post
Sounds more or less similar to this device built by Don Smith:
http://www.free-energy-info.co.uk/Chapt3.html
http://www.tuks.nl/pdf/Reference_Mat.../Don_Smith.pdf
Page 69/70:
This is a small table-top device which looks like it is an experiment by a beginner, and something which would be wholly ineffective. Nothing could be further from the truth. Each of the eight coils pairs (one each side of the rotating disc) produces 1,000 volts at 50 amps (fifty kilowatts) of output power, giving a total power output of 400 kilowatts. It's overall size is 16" x 14.5" x 10" (400 x 370 x 255 mm). In spite of the extremely high power output, the general construction is very simple:
The device operates on a fluctuating magnetic field which is produced by a small low-power DC motor spinning a plastic disc. In the prototype shown above, the disc is an old vinyl record which has had holes cut in it. Between the holes is an area which was covered with glue and then sprinkled with powdered neodymium magnet material. It takes very little power to spin the disc, but it acts in a way which is very much like the Ecklin-Brown generator, repeatedly disrupting the magnetic field. The magnetic field is created by a neodymium magnet in each of the sixteen plastic pipes. It is important that the change in the magnetic flux between the matching magnets on each side of the disc is as large as possible. The ideal rotor material for this is "Terfenol-D" (tungsten zirconate) with slots cut in it but it is so expensive that materials like stainless steel are likely to be used instead.
http://www.tuks.nl/pdf/Patents/UfoHo...GB2130431A.pdf
While quite different in it's particular design, the essential principle is the same: wobbling / triggering / modulating the microscopic permanent magnets (either aligned or unaligned) in a material / electron cloud in order to be able to tap the energy contained in the static electric field emitted by these atom-sized magnets. This energy is converted by these atom-sized magnets from the ZPE field, as described by Prof. Turtur: http://www.wbabin.net/physics/turtur1e.pdf
Comment