this video made me think of something that I saw in another video a while back: the video is, "Contact: Extraterrestrial Experiences of Billy Meier (7of10)" (and start watching @ 4:50 until the end)
(I don't really understand this kind of stuff... but I find the Rodin Coil very interesting, nonetheless!) :)
yes and you could also divide the frequencies by 3 - 6 - 9 ratio in order to get to measure the absolute zero point of the magnetic field. i.e 0 hz 120hz and 240hz make 360hz zo one signal is 120Hz the other on 240Hz. Then if the output signal is a 360 sinewave you might be on to something?
I see the damped oscillation too. I can see it is very much a function of the load I put on the secondary. As the load approaches infinity ohms, the oscillation is greatest. When there is a low resistive load, the oscillation doesn't occur and we see a waveform just associated with pulsing the coil.
This is the behavior of any LC circuit. The L is your coil, the C is stray capacitance from the wire. Also 80 KHz is above what most audio amps will reproduce faithfully without some filtering kicking in.
Very good demonstration! Transforming signals like this will be very useful in many ways. I wonder - can the signal transformation be reversed, looking forward to seeing your tests with PWM and sine wave input. I wonder if we recorded the sine wave output here, from a sound signal as input, can we reproduce the sound signal by putting that sinewave back in?
I have. With this particular coil the output could actually decrease a lot depending on what frequency was being put it against the constant input in the other coil.
However, I was using square waves and it looks as if sine waves are the way to go with the Rodin Coil, and who knows, maybe it would work better at higher frequency harmonics.
So is it possible to change a square wave to a sine wave by this?
healer378 5 months ago
What happens with the Rodin coil output if you put the same square wave pulse into the circular coil? i.e. the reverse of what you have done here
levettp 1 year ago
this video made me think of something that I saw in another video a while back: the video is, "Contact: Extraterrestrial Experiences of Billy Meier (7of10)" (and start watching @ 4:50 until the end)
(I don't really understand this kind of stuff... but I find the Rodin Coil very interesting, nonetheless!) :)
ravensmomscorp76 1 year ago
How many watts is your amplifier? rms
teddybear114 2 years ago
yes and you could also divide the frequencies by 3 - 6 - 9 ratio in order to get to measure the absolute zero point of the magnetic field. i.e 0 hz 120hz and 240hz make 360hz zo one signal is 120Hz the other on 240Hz. Then if the output signal is a 360 sinewave you might be on to something?
RayJoel2007 2 years ago
I see the damped oscillation too. I can see it is very much a function of the load I put on the secondary. As the load approaches infinity ohms, the oscillation is greatest. When there is a low resistive load, the oscillation doesn't occur and we see a waveform just associated with pulsing the coil.
morpher44 2 years ago
This is the behavior of any LC circuit. The L is your coil, the C is stray capacitance from the wire. Also 80 KHz is above what most audio amps will reproduce faithfully without some filtering kicking in.
sjh7132 2 years ago
Have you measured the power out to power in yet?
Anothercoilgun 2 years ago
Very good demonstration! Transforming signals like this will be very useful in many ways. I wonder - can the signal transformation be reversed, looking forward to seeing your tests with PWM and sine wave input. I wonder if we recorded the sine wave output here, from a sound signal as input, can we reproduce the sound signal by putting that sinewave back in?
geminitric 2 years ago
I'm curious what running audio through this would do to the audio?
storre 2 years ago
I have. With this particular coil the output could actually decrease a lot depending on what frequency was being put it against the constant input in the other coil.
However, I was using square waves and it looks as if sine waves are the way to go with the Rodin Coil, and who knows, maybe it would work better at higher frequency harmonics.
magenpies 2 years ago
be cool if you could put 2 different frequency into and then see the b field
great work
5stars
crob227 2 years ago 2