[QUOTE=jonnydavro;57600]Hi.Today i did an experiment which was suggested to me by MoonSpySudio's.This was to fill my El-tigre satellite with water and see if the two sphere's could overcome the inertia of the water and create a vortex well it can and does.Here is a vid.
YouTube - One magnet no bearing Bedini. Vortex test
Nice experiment Jonny, that is a significant amount of physical resistance to overcome, so there must be some real torque being produced on the satellite.
Now here is a thought, some years ago, I read about a generator that used liquid mercury as the conductor pumped through a magnetic field. I wonder if a test tube of mercury (maybe something safer to work with like ferro magnetic fluid) would become a generator if a magnet was spun within the fluid. Acids, bases and saltwater tend to conduct, so maybe a vinegar or heavy salt water solution or baking soda dissolved in water, might do to prove the concept or perhaps a plating solution of copper or chrome might work
Now to take off the power you might have to insert a conductor at the top and bottom of the fluid. Perhaps some variation of this might make an effective remote generator. Your multi satellite tests seem to indicate that you could operate multiple copies of this contraption which might lead to interesting cumulative results when all the voltage and current was combined.
Device of micro vortex for ferrofluid power generator - US Patent 7105935 Abstract
maybe this is the path we are on but with a simpler apparatus for making it work
Keep thinking outside the box (tube in this case)
I was snooping around a magnet supplier site and saw a cylinder that has an attraction force of 1/2 ton. I wonder how far a flux field we could project with that rascal. And how many and large satellites you could operate with it. I.E. a couple of watts used to drive the mega magnet might permit hundreds of satellites/ ferrofluid generators. Things that make you go hmmmmm.
YouTube - One magnet no bearing Bedini. Vortex test
Nice experiment Jonny, that is a significant amount of physical resistance to overcome, so there must be some real torque being produced on the satellite.
Now here is a thought, some years ago, I read about a generator that used liquid mercury as the conductor pumped through a magnetic field. I wonder if a test tube of mercury (maybe something safer to work with like ferro magnetic fluid) would become a generator if a magnet was spun within the fluid. Acids, bases and saltwater tend to conduct, so maybe a vinegar or heavy salt water solution or baking soda dissolved in water, might do to prove the concept or perhaps a plating solution of copper or chrome might work
Now to take off the power you might have to insert a conductor at the top and bottom of the fluid. Perhaps some variation of this might make an effective remote generator. Your multi satellite tests seem to indicate that you could operate multiple copies of this contraption which might lead to interesting cumulative results when all the voltage and current was combined.
Device of micro vortex for ferrofluid power generator - US Patent 7105935 Abstract
maybe this is the path we are on but with a simpler apparatus for making it work
Keep thinking outside the box (tube in this case)
I was snooping around a magnet supplier site and saw a cylinder that has an attraction force of 1/2 ton. I wonder how far a flux field we could project with that rascal. And how many and large satellites you could operate with it. I.E. a couple of watts used to drive the mega magnet might permit hundreds of satellites/ ferrofluid generators. Things that make you go hmmmmm.
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