good work Woopy, that scope is telling something, look at the radiant spike, it looks very good, with that tiny input, i think you have something there.
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Bedini Ferris Wheel Regauging Motor
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Bedini GT3
Woopy,
Good video nice spike. If you would build the Bi-Polar switch you would be free of that supply. Then it would be easy to tap the energy to the cap and switch it back.
John BJohn Bedini
www.johnbedini.net
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Bedini GT3
William,
The energy is collected after the trigger, then collected to the capacitors.
Chuck H will call you in about 15 m
John BJohn Bedini
www.johnbedini.net
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Originally posted by jerdee View PostHello, I’ve been very busy at the University but wanted to give some input when I can. I am all ears John as well, but Dec. just happens to be my busiest month.
First, Please forgive me if this is off track at the moment, but I wanted to share this important find for other people that are researching in this area! Everyone seems to have missed this, including me!!!
I wanted everybody to see what John has mentioned about magnetic amplifiers in respects to his invention as well as comparison to the Hendershott, VTA, and countless others!!!
What did John say that was very important about magnetic amplification? John mentions that “you want to self bias this from the pulse”. (post 131) This means that the half bedini/cole switch only controls the biasing!!! This brings a very interesting and important lesson to light!!! Remember what I learned from my experiment....it took very little input to control the inductance! Imagine the enormous amounts of magnetic amplification.
Where?
Between the differentials of the magnetic fields on the slaves!
The slave coils in asymmetrical geometry are creating potential differences, no need for input!! I had it backwards!!! So again John is teaching us how to switch and control the magnetic field!!!
Catch these streams!!!!
I was originally thinking the slaves were control. I was wrong! I failed to see that the pulse determines the biasing!!! Please, I urge everyone to carefully read everything John has to say!! I missed this myself. I believe most of us are seeing this opposite because of me! I apologize if I have confused everyone with this. We only want to deal with control of magnetic streams. Otherwise we waste our input!!!
Know this is where things get very interesting! John said that Floyd Sweet used a 100 W amplifier for control in magnetic amplification! He was even asked to leave after John found out what Floyd was doing. We don't have to waste a large amount of input to the control windings since we are dealing with the magnification of nature’s magnetic streams. Use the 18AWG. All we want to do is hook are paddles into the del-phi river!!
So again, where is the energy? It’s at the drop below!!! How? Control the del-phi river with an electromegnet stream! Don’t see this? Look at the AWG size wire of both slave coils!!
I certainly don’t want to get anyone off track here. We are all here to learn! Again John I can’t thank you enough, I hope I am going in the right direction, I’m here to learn.
Here is your answer John to why the switch in my post was the downfall and wasting power.
All the best,
Jeremy Burnum
This post has really got my attention because it seems to encompass all of the key points that Charles Steinmetz and Eric Dollard discuss as far as understanding the importance of variation in the square root of negative one.
Sqrt(-1) is representation of capacitance or inductance. Changing the inductance with a mag amp setup like you describe would theoretically allow for excess energy to flow into the system.
Good work Jeremy!
Dave
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The regular bicycle wheel (steel rim) with threaded rod attached and a strip of plastic to form the new wheel works pretty well. The rods (as spokes) are really solid. I used some thin plastic as a temporary wheel to get the spacing right. As soon as it is all done, I will use the thin plastic as a template to drill the holes in the thicker stuff. Probably won't have it all put together until Monday, and then will begin to glue magnets in place, Have my wire ordered, so will begin winding coils as soon as it gets here. This will be about a six foot wheel.Last edited by Turion; 04-20-2012, 03:13 PM.“Advances are made by answering questions. Discoveries are made by questioning answers.”
—Bernhard Haisch, Astrophysicist
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Originally posted by rosehillworksYou may have my wife's ph number the last to numbers of hers is 00 mine is 01 other then that thy are the same she is at work so she will not answer sorry for being off topic Thanks William
@ JB, Thankyou very much for the help. see video on you tube. next will be timing wheel and Bedini/Cole switch with cap dump. Exciting stuff coming guys/gals...
YouTube - 1210102253
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Hi Chuck
Can't really see much on that video its too blurry. I've had my 3 pole kit running for a week now on the 1/2 Bedini cole switch. With 12 volts I can run it on as low as 23ma @2170rpm (1 battery set up). With 36 volts 120ma @ 7500rpm.
MarkLast edited by Mark; 12-11-2010, 03:13 PM.
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Originally posted by John_Bedini View PostWoopy,
Good video nice spike. If you would build the Bi-Polar switch you would be free of that supply. Then it would be easy to tap the energy to the cap and switch it back.
John B
Would like to know whether you meant Woopy could get a self runner when using the Bi-polar switch?
I assume a rechargable battery would still be needed to replace his power supply and those huge voltage spikes stored in the cap could recharge the battery in the off time, this is how you meant and this process could maintain the starting battery energy state, right?
If Woopy used a huge value capacitor instead of the battery, charged up first to 8V or so from a separate supply then use it as an energy source or sink, could he receive a few hours operation from it? I mean the COP of this setup is very near to 1 like 0.999.
Putting this otherwise: the chemical reaction inside the battery may make this setup to have a COP of 1.03 or so, maybe a bit higher but using a huge value capacitor the COP goes just under 1. Are these correct assumptions?
Thanks, Gyula
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Originally posted by Mark View PostHi Chuck
Can't really see much on that video its too blurry. I've had my 3 pole kit running for a week now on the 1/2 Bedini cole switch. With 12 volts I can run it on as low as 23ma @2170rpm (1 battery set up). With 36 volts 120ma @ 7500rpm.
Mark
Thanks
Matt
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Thanks John for the advice
so i made it with quite good basic results, please see the video
I think it is what you suggested , a bipolar switch , is it OK ? or i am wrong ?
But now i have some question marks, as how to pull back this energy back on the input basis?
And much more important yet is the timing, as i can see the Led lamp is much more powerfull when the rotor is slow, but when i replace the leds with a DC small motor i only can get some spinning at higher input voltage (about 10 volts or more) and higher RPM ??
the learning program seems to be long but fascinating
good luck at all
Laurent
YouTube - pulse motor with PMH armature test 2.wmv
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Originally posted by woopy View PostThanks John for the advice
so i made it with quite good basic results, please see the video
I think it is what you suggested , a bipolar switch , is it OK ? or i am wrong ?
But now i have some question marks, as how to pull back this energy back on the input basis?
And much more important yet is the timing, as i can see the Led lamp is much more powerfull when the rotor is slow, but when i replace the leds with a DC small motor i only can get some spinning at higher input voltage (about 10 volts or more) and higher RPM ??
the learning program seems to be long but fascinating
good luck at all
Laurent
YouTube - pulse motor with PMH armature test 2.wmv
Your looking for a good spike. And few of them.
If you set yourself up with a high farad capacitor in the beginning, like a 12 volt 1/2 farad or battery (Maybe) and low farad in the back like you have you can make a cap dump back to the front.
http://www.matthewcjones.com/power/CapDumper.jpg
Thats the cap dumper I was using earlier. It was based on a solid state relay. There are several other ways to do it.
I am not sure how it would sustain itself but it would defendantly lower your over all draw. The cap dumper is a neat thing. IT puts a new twist on things for sure.
Also if you do another video I would like to see the draw on the power supply if possible. Just a request.
Cheers
Matt
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Originally posted by Matthew Jones View PostHow did you wire it up Mark?
Thanks
Matt
I'm still playing with it to see how much lower I can go on input. Any other questions let me know.
Mark
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