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Zooming in on Bedini's Radiant Spike
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Originally posted by SkyWatcher View PostI posted it in the solid state bedini thread, just reposted hear cause the circuit is working so well, even at 1/2 an amp input the transistor is barely warm and output is very good.
peace love light
Tyson"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Hi Sep.
I scoped my battery yesterday and found the same resonant ring that you have shown. Unfortunately my scope doesnt display it well, but I can definately see it there. I will try to get a photo sometime.
Very interesting. Thanks for posting this"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
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Moved here from the Bedini 10 Coil thread
After seeing the scope shots of some other very low impedance devices, we have seen the same "resonant" ringing after the spike.
I believe it may be signal reflection which occurs from an impedance mismatch.
This seems unusual because we know that the ohmic impedance of an average lead acid battery is in the tens of milliohms or less. It is practically impossible to build a good quality coil that can handle an appropriate amount of power that can match the ohmic resistance of the batteries we are trying to charge so logically the lower you can make the coil's impedance, the closer it will be matched to the batteries impedance. Many believe impedance matching is one of the keys of Bedini's devices.
So why does this ringing appear in low impedance devices that should be more closely matched to the batteries? It would make sense if we took into account how lead acid batterys can behave like inductors because of the momentum of the heavy ions.
Basically, at moment the spike hits the battery, the ions are stationary and so creates a much higher impedance than the battery's internal resistance alone, at lest until the ions start moving. In this sense the battery has similar properties to an inductor.
I am now going to work with the theory that when the impedance of the device is too low for the batteries, we will see this ringing after the spike. If the impedance of the device is too high for the batterys, we either won't see a spike, or there will just be a small spike. When the impedances are matched, we should have the maximum spike amplitude and there will be no ringing.
@Ren -
you asked about how the ringing appears depending on the state of charge and the condition of the batteries.
The ringing isn't effected too much by the state of charge but there is a slight change.
The condition of the batteries does appear to make a difference but I haven't looked into it too much. The batteries I posted the wave from were my usual batteries that have spent their whole lives on bedini type chargers, so I would consider them to be in good condition.
Unfortunately, i only have those good batteries, and a whole load of sulphated batterieson the heavily sulphated batteries there is no spike, but the scope across the charging battery is different. instead of seeing the usual right angle triangle wave, the wave is more like an elipse, gradually rising, then gradually dropping again.
I'm going to have a play around with the coils of the MG3... there is a mild ringing across the battery at the moment and the coils resistance is estimated to be about 166 milliohms. I'm going to wire some of the coils in series to see if I can get an impedance match.
Will let you know how it goes
ps. remember the size of the battery bank Bedini was charging with the 10 coiler?Last edited by Sephiroth; 07-21-2010, 08:02 AM."Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Reuploaded the images in the first post"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sephiroth View PostMoved here from the Bedini 10 Coil thread
After seeing the scope shots of some other very low impedance devices, we have seen the same "resonant" ringing after the spike.
I believe it may be signal reflection which occurs from an impedance mismatch.
This seems unusual because we know that the ohmic impedance of an average lead acid battery is in the tens of milliohms or less. It is practically impossible to build a good quality coil that can handle an appropriate amount of power that can match the ohmic resistance of the batteries we are trying to charge so logically the lower you can make the coil's impedance, the closer it will be matched to the batteries impedance. Many believe impedance matching is one of the keys of Bedini's devices.
So why does this ringing appear in low impedance devices that should be more closely matched to the batteries? It would make sense if we took into account how lead acid batterys can behave like inductors because of the momentum of the heavy ions.
Basically, at moment the spike hits the battery, the ions are stationary and so creates a much higher impedance than the battery's internal resistance alone, at lest until the ions start moving. In this sense the battery has similar properties to an inductor.
I am now going to work with the theory that when the impedance of the device is too low for the batteries, we will see this ringing after the spike. If the impedance of the device is too high for the batterys, we either won't see a spike, or there will just be a small spike. When the impedances are matched, we should have the maximum spike amplitude and there will be no ringing.
@Ren -
you asked about how the ringing appears depending on the state of charge and the condition of the batteries.
The ringing isn't effected too much by the state of charge but there is a slight change.
The condition of the batteries does appear to make a difference but I haven't looked into it too much. The batteries I posted the wave from were my usual batteries that have spent their whole lives on bedini type chargers, so I would consider them to be in good condition.
Unfortunately, i only have those good batteries, and a whole load of sulphated batterieson the heavily sulphated batteries there is no spike, but the scope across the charging battery is different. instead of seeing the usual right angle triangle wave, the wave is more like an elipse, gradually rising, then gradually dropping again.
I'm going to have a play around with the coils of the MG3... there is a mild ringing across the battery at the moment and the coils resistance is estimated to be about 166 milliohms. I'm going to wire some of the coils in series to see if I can get an impedance match.
Will let you know how it goes
ps. remember the size of the battery bank Bedini was charging with the 10 coiler?
during the pendulum experiment he talks about the impedance of the energizer compared to that of the battery.
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Originally posted by Sephiroth View PostI am now going to work with the theory that when the impedance of the device is too low for the batteries, we will see this ringing after the spike. If the impedance of the device is too high for the battery, we either won't see a spike, or there will just be a small spike. When the impedances are matched, we should have the maximum spike amplitude and there will be no ringing.
Interestingly I was thinking about this yesterday, Impedance matching is always used where energy transfer is involved. But If you make your coil impedance too low compared to your battery, this means that your battery capacity to absorb energy is less than the ability of your coil to deliver energy, and this may heat up your battery and kill it if left much on the output of your device.
Inversely, if your coil has more impedance than you battery, the battery may not seem to charge very well, so there must be a reasonable relation between battery capacity and coil wire size.
Try charging small batteries with your normal energizer and see what I mean. It will heat up and may even die after a while, if left on the output.
It might be a useful idea to make a table that associates coil wire size with the battery size to be charged. No?
For Example:
Battery Capacity 1Ah, Wire Size #31
Battery Capacity 10Ah, Wire Size #21 or 10x #31 for a multifilar coil
Battery Capacity 100Ah, Wire Size #11 or 10x #21 for a multifilar coil
Elias
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Looks like my theory was wrong... but not too far off.
It appears the spike is actually a result of the inductive impedance mismatch. The higher the inductance of the battery compared to the coils, the larger the spike will be. Or in other words, the lower the inductance of the coil, the greater the spike. I now believe that when the inductive impedances are matched, then there will be little or no spike.
Other factors will most likely be fastest possible switching and the power at cut off.
I still think the ringing is signal reflection, but since the inductive impedance mismatch appears to be desirable (to generate the spike), other ways are needed to eliminate the ringing so the battery receives the full force of the field collapse. Reducing the parasitic capacitance of the circuit is a possibility.Back to the lab....
"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Originally posted by Sephiroth View PostIt appears the spike is actually a result of the inductive impedance mismatch. The higher the inductance of the battery compared to the coils, the larger the spike will be. Or in other words, the lower the inductance of the coil, the greater the spike. I now believe that when the inductive impedances are matched, then there will be little or no spike.
Won't coil spike depend on battery impedance? Higher inductance coil = higher spike, higher battery impedance = higher spike?
From what data you conclude that?
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These types of spikes are actually an area depiction of the energy stored in the inductor. If you were to plot the cm² of your scope that would be shaded inside the envelope of the primary spike, you would have a pictorial of the energy contained in that spike.
So the trade off is amplitude for time. A really wide spike will have a much lower amplitude as compared to a really narrow spike for the same energy stored in the inductor.
How is energy stored in the inductor? When voltage is applied across the inductor, a current begins flowing. That current is low at first, and then climbs over time with a steep rising curve that levels out as the inductor becomes charged. When the current nearly reaches its peak, the inductor has charged up practically as much as it can for that circuit and the charge is held suspended in the magnetic field surrounding the inductor. Adding resistance in series with an inductor will allow it reach its maximum current faster but it also limits the stored energy because the maximum current is reduced or limited by the resistor. The output impedance of a battery acts as such a resistance, limiting the total current that can flow through an inductor or wire.
So what determines how wide that spike is? Part of that is determined by how rapidly you turn off the current flow. The more abruptly you turn off the flow, the faster the collapse of the magnetic field. The faster the collapse, the narrower the spike. And of course it follows, that the narrower the spike, the taller the spike as mentioned in the opening paragraph.
So, for really big spikes you need:
1. A lot of energy stored in the inductor
2. Really fast shut off.
Now let's say we are going to use that spike to recharge or shock a dead battery back to life. First of all, we need to recognize that the spike exists as a separate power source when it develops. It is as if we charged up a component with energy, and now that component is able to power something on its own. We have seen this with batteries and capacitors that store energy - and we can take them out of the circuit and use them later - but for inductors it is not quite so easy because the storage requires continuous current to keep the field in place. But for all three, batteries, capacitors and inductors, they are all independent power sources once charged up. Because the spike is a separate power source, it will produce its own current, and that current is looking to flow back to the other side of the inductor because that is the reference for that independent power source. When we use a diode and allow the spike to form on the cathode of that diode, then the spike is unable to flow back through the inductor and is forced to find another path - in this case through the dead battery being revived.
If the dead battery has enough inductive reactance, then it can change how the spike energy is dissipated by delaying the current flow into the battery. Conversely, if the battery has very low impedance, then the energy that would normally present itself as a spike will simply be siphoned off into the battery before a spike can be formed. So when it is connected, the dead battery definitely impacts the spike in some measure. And this interaction will change as the battery is revived. As a battery becomes charged, the ability to pass reverse current will diminish and this will be seen by the spike as a high impedance and the spike will tend to increase in amplitude.
The best match would be to determine how much energy the battery can absorb in a few microseconds and choose an inductor that can store that energy. Then tune the circuit to only be ON long enough to charge the inductor, and OFF long enough to allow that energy to flow into the battery completely. The switch should turn off as fast as possible. And of course, you will want to ensure that your switch and diode can support the amplitude of the spike.
"Amy Pond, there is something you need to understand, and someday your life may depend on it: I am definitely a madman with a box." ~The Doctor
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Originally posted by Harvey View PostSo, for really big spikes you need:
1. A lot of energy stored in the inductor
2. Really fast shut off..
Originally posted by Harvey View PostAs a battery becomes charged, the ability to pass reverse current will diminish and this will be seen by the spike as a high impedance and the spike will tend to increase in amplitude.
More charge = lower impedance.Last edited by sucahyo; 07-27-2010, 03:59 AM.
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Ringing
If the spike is isolated from the inductor by a diode, then we can expect the ringing of the inductor to be removed from the equation for the most part. There will be some residual because of small amplitude at the anode of the diode, but this is negligible.
So, when ringing is measured on the cathode of the diode that feeds the dead battery, then it is caused by one of two sources.
1. The wire inductance
2. The battery inductance
Both of these play a factor and the amount to which it applies is frequency dependent. This is because the inductive reactance is frequency dependent.
But the real crux of the matter is how much energy is being dumped into the battery and how much is being applied to charge it. When a sufficient amount of energy is dumped into the battery and it is unable to use it then it gets dissipated in other ways like heating and kinetic motion or flexing of the plates etc. You can even get them to sing and dissipate the energy via sound waves if you get it just right. What would be awesome, would be to dump a single spike into the load (dead battery) and have it fully absorbed and converted to charge. But that would be a perfect situation.
In reality, large energy discharges over short periods of time correspond to large current flow. Large current flow in a conductor (including lead plates and electrolytes) creates magnetic fields the eventually collapse and perpetuate the current flow that can actually produce BEMF across those pseudo-inductors and that induces the ringing back and forth until the energy is fully absorbed. This can really be interesting when the series capacitive reactance of the battery matches the inductive reactance of the wires and produces a resonant condition. Perhaps this is what John was referring to when he said the battery needed to resonate.If so, then perhaps that would be desirable and maybe even necessary in removing lead sulfate from the plates and reviving bad batteries.
"Amy Pond, there is something you need to understand, and someday your life may depend on it: I am definitely a madman with a box." ~The Doctor
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Hi Harvey
Have you done much work with Bedini type chargers?"Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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Originally posted by sucahyo View PostBattery inductance?
Originally posted by sucahyo View PostWon't coil spike depend on battery impedance? Higher inductance coil = higher spike, higher battery impedance = higher spike?
So Lower inductance coil = higher spike
Higher impedance battery = higher spike
The overshoot, which is the spike, is created through the load having a much higher impedance than the source. In this case, this impedance is inductive.
Originally posted by sucahyo View PostFrom what data you conclude that?Last edited by Sephiroth; 07-27-2010, 08:16 AM."Theory guides. Experiment decides."
“I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.”
Nikola Tesla
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