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Bedini Solid State Oscillators

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  • #61
    RE: Schematic

    Originally posted by ren View Post
    Hey Mart do you still need a simple schematic for SS build?
    Aaron has pointed me to one that he has used, but I am open to look at multiple designs before I move ahead. What design did you use?

    Thanks!
    See my experiments here...
    http://www.youtube.com/marthale7

    You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.

    Comment


    • #62
      mine was pretty much the same as JB's schematic, some parts changed due to availability, slightly bigger cap. Oh and its an air core. If you want to do something different, after you build it, run it with air core at a frequency where you can hear it buzzing. Slip a piece of metal into the core and note what happens
      "Once you've come to the conclusion that what what you know already is all you need to know, then you have a degree in disinterest." - John Dobson

      Comment


      • #63
        RE: Schematic.

        Originally posted by ren View Post
        mine was pretty much the same as JB's schematic, some parts changed due to availability, slightly bigger cap. Oh and its an air core. If you want to do something different, after you build it, run it with air core at a frequency where you can hear it buzzing. Slip a piece of metal into the core and note what happens
        Ok so you used the earth battery SS on page 46?

        I just found this video on youtube using a SSG to change it to SS with a 10K resistor.

        YouTube - Bedini School Girl Project OverUnity Solid State Free Energy
        See my experiments here...
        http://www.youtube.com/marthale7

        You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.

        Comment


        • #64
          Ok, building the SS.

          List of parts from Aarons diagram for SS

          Upper left down

          ( Bridge rectifier ) I guess I could use 4001 diodes.
          Capacitor 1.8 UF at 600V
          2sc3281 transistor
          2n3440 transistor
          330 R ( 3)
          4.47 uf capacitor
          555 timer
          23 gauge wire enough for 4,000 turns,
          26 gauge for 2,000 turns
          10K resistor
          RCA3055 transistor
          7 ohm resistor
          10 ohm resistor
          in914 diode

          What I don't know on the schematic is the attached two small pictures what the parts are. One is a resistor ( with either a question mark or a value of 7 ), and the other is a transistor I think, but h11D1 or is it H11P1?

          Please help !

          Thanks!
          Attached Files
          Last edited by theremart; 10-18-2008, 10:05 PM.
          See my experiments here...
          http://www.youtube.com/marthale7

          You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.

          Comment


          • #65
            ss specs

            I would use resistor sizes, etc... as indicated in the schematics in the FEG book.

            The first pic is a H11D1 optocoupler

            The second was 2 resistors I had in parallel for some reason. You only need one and it probably won't be a 10 ohm...you can see some examples on the schematics in the FEG book.
            Sincerely,
            Aaron Murakami

            Books & Videos https://emediapress.com
            Conference http://energyscienceconference.com
            RPX & MWO http://vril.io

            Comment


            • #66
              Hey Mart, Dude check out my comments to Sep in the "24 volt cap pulser" thread. There is a diagram I drew there with step by step instructions for the wiring of the 555 and opto (yes its H11d1) etc.

              You shouldnt use 4001's for the bridge, I think they are only rated for 50v. 4007's or 5408's should do the trick. Pretty much any coil you can get to self oscillate, it doesnt have to be as big as Aarons. Mine is only a 100grams of #22 SWG X 3. Aaron has used a transistor to interupt flow instead of an SCR, and he has used a different cap on the 555 by the looks of it. You can try different cap values across the bridge, the lower the uF the higher the voltage will shoot up to.

              Good luck
              "Once you've come to the conclusion that what what you know already is all you need to know, then you have a degree in disinterest." - John Dobson

              Comment


              • #67
                Guys i just asked about the solid state

                "The schematic you have in the FEG doc is correct, tho the transistor is the wrong one... should be the BD243C. The rest of the schematic is accurate. The frequency it oscillates is far higher than 913hz... its around 3.3khz on the one I built. "

                Ash

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                • #68
                  Thanks!!



                  I sure do appreciate your help.

                  Mart
                  See my experiments here...
                  http://www.youtube.com/marthale7

                  You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    thats what we are here for mart, to look out for each other and help one another, all of us pared together will make it a dark day for the oil cartels

                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Hello guys,

                      I want to ask those of you who built a solid state device according to the Free Energy Generation book. Can you please tell me about the coil? How many windings, what height/width and what size of the core the book recommends?

                      Thanks,
                      gosho

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        All you really have to do is provide a high voltage dc source for the cap. The chopper circuit takes care of the rest. You can use a Cockroft-Walton type circuit that is staged. Its similar to what your doing now but with a couple of inductors and diodes in series instead of just one stage.

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          You are probably right, but I can not claim to have any insight about this radiant energy stuff and I agree with Mr. Bedini when he says "first do exactly as I say, then experiment".

                          Regards

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            I would second that, John states its the wave form.

                            Here is a quote form the old board, so any circuit wont work

                            "I used both the 3 x 23 awg at 1/2lb spools and 3 x 18awg at 1lb spools... Built as that schematic shows, you should see between 3khz to 6khz with the 3 x 18 at 1lb with the welding rod in the coil. The 555 timer output on Johns was somewhere between 3-15hz is all... allowing significant time to build a voltage in that tiny 3.3uF cap. There is significant voltage built up in the relative ratio of the oscillators self oscillation and the discharging of the cap via the SCR... I could see it get up to over 100volts easy... and if I shut off the scr portion it would go over 700volts pretty fast... The spikes on the scope were right around 700 volts the whole time... tho the little bd243c wouldn't get warm and I wasn't using any heat sink. "

                            -------------------------------------

                            I have made my first solid state charger, using the schematic from page 46 of the FEG book. I have been able to resurrect 2 old deep cycle batteries so far that where beaten up pretty bad in a solar system (bulging, high impedance etc.) I used a microchip to turn on the opto coupler instead of the 555 chip because I thought I might be able to get better performance by using a higher duty cycle than the 50/50 from a 555. I have not found a setting yet that works better than 50/50. Here are the specs:

                            Tri-filar wound
                            450 turns Awg #23 copper magnet wire
                            3/4" R60 welding rod core
                            913hz oscillations on cap
                            cap dump every 200ms
                            peak voltage on cap 270v
                            In the book (pg 109) it says the oscillator should be at 25Khz. Mine doesn't get anywhere near that, only 914hz. I wonder if anyone else has had one run that fast.

                            John Bedini’s Answer

                            You did great, the waveforms are correct. for the Iron core it's working fine, air core is next 2.5 k to 25 Khz. Measure the radiant current and wave form by using a coil to pass the discharge wire through. be very careful if you get it up in power as it is close to your nerve impulses. The stair step looks just like Beardens analogy. Great work keeps going. That waveform can do wonders not fully explored yet. That is Tesla's time wave that he talked about. Great scope shots. Thanks for posting this. You can bias the core with a week magnet, power will increase in only one direction try it you will see. you can control the Bloch wall of the coil, additive energy sucked from the magnet.

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              Thank you, Ashtweth. Where is this old board, is it still alive? Maybe I could read some useful discussions there.

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                Solid state...

                                Mouser #: 610-2N3584
                                Mfr. #: 2N3584
                                Desc.: Power Transistors NPN High Power


                                Availability
                                1 Ships Now
                                $5.07 $5.07

                                Mouser #: 863-BD243CG
                                Mfr. #: BD243CG
                                Desc.: Transistors Bipolar- General Purpose 6A, 100V, 65W NPN
                                RoHS: RoHS Compliant By Exemption



                                Availability
                                1 Ships Now
                                $1.23 $1.23

                                Mouser #: 782-H11D1
                                Mfr. #: H11D1
                                Desc.: Optocouplers HV Phototransistor
                                RoHS: RoHS Compliant



                                Availability
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                                $1.15 $2.30

                                Mouser #: 526-NTE955M
                                Mfr. #: NTE955M
                                Desc.: replacement Linear ICs DIP-8 18V TIMER
                                RoHS: No



                                Availability
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                                $1.86 $1.86

                                Mouser #: 526-NTE2328
                                Mfr. #: NTE2328
                                Desc.: replacement Transistors NPN AUDIO PWR OUT
                                RoHS: No



                                Availability
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                                $10.24 $10.24

                                Mouser #: 771-ICM7555CN/01
                                Mfr. #: ICM7555CN/01
                                Desc.: Programmable Oscillators/Timers CMOS TIMER GEN-PURPOSE
                                RoHS: RoHS Compliant


                                Availability
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                                $0.48


                                ---------------------------


                                Ok this is what I have so far on building the SS from the FEG book.


                                Next question, do I need 2W resistors? I just want to build this right.

                                For the SCR, I guess I should get 1 or 2 because they burn out easy? I was hoping to do 24V with this...


                                Thanks..
                                Last edited by theremart; 06-27-2008, 09:52 PM.
                                See my experiments here...
                                http://www.youtube.com/marthale7

                                You do not have to prove something for it to be true. However, you do have to prove something for others to believe it true.

                                Comment

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