I am new to Bedini motors, and I am just trying to make friends and learn. I wanted to share a discovery I made. Since I am new to all of this, I don't know if I found something worth sharing or not. I figured the best way to know for sure would be get some feedback from the experts!
Here is the bottom line. I made a Bedini motor, it would not charge. I tried running it to condition the batteries for about 7 days straight and still managed to come up short on voltage. I had to charge the batteries a few times otherwise my wheel would just stop spinning. Changing the resistance didn't help, it would just slow down too much and eventually stop. I could not seem to achieve anything even close to over unity.
Yesterday I was experimenting with an extra Bifilar coil. It is the exact same as my bifilar drive coil (450 turns of 24 gauge and 27 gauge). Well just for an experiment, I put this coil in between the charging battery and the primary battery and I managed to step up my voltage spikes to 700-800 volts per spikes. I found that there is only one possible way to wire the bifilar inductor, otherwise the voltage spikes actually seem to drain the energy from the batteries and create a highly negative voltage spike instead of the one shown below.
I am sharing this because now suddenly, in the last 2 1/2 hours, I have increased my voltage from 21.49 volts, all the way up to 23.28 volts. This rapid increase is like nothing I have ever seen before. Not only has the current draw subsided drastically, but the charge rate is exponentially higher than before. I will need to do some more experimenting, but it appears that I have reached unity or some over unity by simply adding an inductor between the batteries.
Now, I am new to this, and so I might be wrong in my assertions. I just wanted to share my discovery and see if anyone has feedback on this. Please experiment, and copy the diagram below. With one bifilar inductor, I got a 450 volt increase. By using a 2nd single stranded (it was all I had) inductor wired in series with the 1st one, and used only in between the charge battery (neg) and the primary battery (positive) I stepped up the voltage to 800 volts per spike. There seems to be no limit on how many inductor coils can be placed in series in between the charge and the primary battery.
Ok, go easy on me. I am new to this! What do you think? Have I discovered an easy way to boost efficiency or what? At any rate I am very excited! This is only my 2nd Bedini motor and it appears to be working very well!
Here is the bottom line. I made a Bedini motor, it would not charge. I tried running it to condition the batteries for about 7 days straight and still managed to come up short on voltage. I had to charge the batteries a few times otherwise my wheel would just stop spinning. Changing the resistance didn't help, it would just slow down too much and eventually stop. I could not seem to achieve anything even close to over unity.
Yesterday I was experimenting with an extra Bifilar coil. It is the exact same as my bifilar drive coil (450 turns of 24 gauge and 27 gauge). Well just for an experiment, I put this coil in between the charging battery and the primary battery and I managed to step up my voltage spikes to 700-800 volts per spikes. I found that there is only one possible way to wire the bifilar inductor, otherwise the voltage spikes actually seem to drain the energy from the batteries and create a highly negative voltage spike instead of the one shown below.
I am sharing this because now suddenly, in the last 2 1/2 hours, I have increased my voltage from 21.49 volts, all the way up to 23.28 volts. This rapid increase is like nothing I have ever seen before. Not only has the current draw subsided drastically, but the charge rate is exponentially higher than before. I will need to do some more experimenting, but it appears that I have reached unity or some over unity by simply adding an inductor between the batteries.
Now, I am new to this, and so I might be wrong in my assertions. I just wanted to share my discovery and see if anyone has feedback on this. Please experiment, and copy the diagram below. With one bifilar inductor, I got a 450 volt increase. By using a 2nd single stranded (it was all I had) inductor wired in series with the 1st one, and used only in between the charge battery (neg) and the primary battery (positive) I stepped up the voltage to 800 volts per spike. There seems to be no limit on how many inductor coils can be placed in series in between the charge and the primary battery.
Ok, go easy on me. I am new to this! What do you think? Have I discovered an easy way to boost efficiency or what? At any rate I am very excited! This is only my 2nd Bedini motor and it appears to be working very well!
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