Hidden power maybe in the flywheel/shaft housing or has I posted before in the cap is the best plaice maybe that's y its charging before you start to spin it.
if the meter were powering it, then it would have less than 12 volts and the meter would have shut down due to the power drain. multimeters run off button cell batteries, no way this large motor could ever run on those.
I think the meter is charging the cap. It'll do that if you try to measure resistance instead of voltage. Take out the the meter and use an LED. Let's see if the motor spins then.
possibly, but then you have to weigh motive. Bedini himself invented this and i know at least four or five people that successfully replicated it. these guys are not out to make a buck, they are just sharing info, and trying to help a devastating energy problem... for free
Also, Mr. Bedini himself couldn't duplicate what Mike's did, and showed us where he thought the hidden battery was: in the SSR casing, since the SSR wasn't doing anything anyway.
No, it runs on a cap, but after it uses up the energy you put into hand starting it, it will eventualy stop. If you can provide a link to a video (besides Mikes or Mine) that show's just a cap running a Window Motor, that would be very helpful. Thanks,
im currently working on my regular SG and possibly one of Mr. Lindemanns "X" rotor motors, from his Electric Motor secrets DVD. he gave me some good pointers, and i have all the materials now. He told me that the "S" style didnt work very well.
Hidden power maybe in the flywheel/shaft housing or has I posted before in the cap is the best plaice maybe that's y its charging before you start to spin it.
theDaftman 3 years ago
hidden power is in the cap
theDaftman 3 years ago
The cap started charging before you spun the motor.
Damn! I thought this this was real! I think you hid the battery in the shaft. Probably a small hearing aid battery.
4freenrg 3 years ago
if the meter were powering it, then it would have less than 12 volts and the meter would have shut down due to the power drain. multimeters run off button cell batteries, no way this large motor could ever run on those.
Flyingwigs 4 years ago
"if the meter were powering it, then it would have less than 12 volts"; you mean 12 Ohms, right?
kudortamas 3 years ago
I think the meter is charging the cap. It'll do that if you try to measure resistance instead of voltage. Take out the the meter and use an LED. Let's see if the motor spins then.
kudortamas 4 years ago
I think it's a cool, low powered motor. I believe Mike's replication had hidden power.
joe1001101 4 years ago
possibly, but then you have to weigh motive. Bedini himself invented this and i know at least four or five people that successfully replicated it. these guys are not out to make a buck, they are just sharing info, and trying to help a devastating energy problem... for free
bccritters 4 years ago
Yes, there have been many replications. But none that run off of a cap. Maybe one of these days!
joe1001101 4 years ago
Also, Mr. Bedini himself couldn't duplicate what Mike's did, and showed us where he thought the hidden battery was: in the SSR casing, since the SSR wasn't doing anything anyway.
joe1001101 4 years ago
hmm, thats the first time i heard that Bedini couldnt run the SSG Window motor on a cap.
bccritters 4 years ago
No, it runs on a cap, but after it uses up the energy you put into hand starting it, it will eventualy stop. If you can provide a link to a video (besides Mikes or Mine) that show's just a cap running a Window Motor, that would be very helpful. Thanks,
joe1001101 4 years ago
im currently working on my regular SG and possibly one of Mr. Lindemanns "X" rotor motors, from his Electric Motor secrets DVD. he gave me some good pointers, and i have all the materials now. He told me that the "S" style didnt work very well.
bccritters 4 years ago