@beac310: Thanks for the complement. I started working on a third motor, but it was not turning out. But now I have partner, and have begun rebuilding motor #3. Hopefully I will have some more video in the near future. The rebuild is going slowly. But thanks again for the kind words.
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As I understand it, you don't need to short out your system to have a BEMF or what you call a back spike. When an magnetic field collapses by switching it off or in your set up, disconects, it creates a BEMF simply from the collapsing field. Did you have your setup without a short and did you find it running slower? Additionally, if you use a commutator with a larger diameter or a wieghted perimeter you will get much more torch. Nice nice work Thanks for the vid.
it is my understanding of coils that a coil, like a capacitor, can hold a charge. I have not tried it with out the shorts. I feel that shorting it out, discharges any stored charge. I think this is helpful, maybe not 100% necessary, but helpful. (I could be wrong though).
I don't understand your comment that it works side to side. You only show one side of the commutator. What is on the other side? What are the two brushes connected to at the other end? Do they connect to the same point in the circuit? Are your magnets N/S or N/N? When the coil is shorted does it short the batteries as well? Do you have a diagram or schematic? I drew this thing every way I could think of and could not short the coil without shorting the batteries. I need your help.
I left a message in the first video. You waste a lot of money in batteries. At least only use rechargeable ones. First use an ordinary motor fixed to the rotor to see how voltage the main self can deliver to know how many batteries you really need. Remove the motor. Use the main self to recharge the batteries through a diodes bridge, and to also send a pulse to the boost self at the correct moment (when the main self voltage equal 0 volt, so the batteries send it ) to make rotate the rotor.
@Wickedisadumbass Ummm. thanks, but I am not sure I can call this over unity. It seemed to deplete my batteries instead of recharging them. I have not looked it Bedini stuff yet. I want to get my head around Newmans stuff first.
I pretty much tried most of what your doing and it never worked. Joe claimed at a later point that the segmented commutator was unnecessary. Joe Newman was not an honest man.
Never worked? Do you mean that it never produced more out than put in? I like the results that I am getting. I am not trying for over unity at this time. I just want a super efficient electric motor. I am not quite there yet. But pulsing a coil (non sinusoidal), in my opinion, is the proper way to do it. As far as I understand it, a square(ish) pulse creates a stronger magnetic field.
@detrix42 Each design will have its own inherent properties, Newman's device is HUGE..enough said, sheer momentum it most likely what's helping him with his findings. That being said, a huge back spike it intrisic to his design.
Such a back spike will be caused by collapsing magnetic fields, not the pundage of copper so much, after all, the flux density is usually a function of the number of windings - more windings, large voltage spike.
I have read Joseph Newman's book, and have made my own conclusions. And I have told a friend of mine, that I am doing these experiments to find out what does work and what does not, to prove or dis-prove Mr. Newman. With this setup, I get good RPMs, and a decent torque. If I scale this up by about 10 times, I will have what I am looking for.
please elaborate: How much copper wire (feet or pounds). As far as I understand it, in order to get a big back spike like Newman, you need lots, and lots of pounds. One of his smaller machines had 100lbs of 30awg copper wire. I only have one pound on these replicas. On my third motor (currently not ready for a video), I have two pounds -- still not enough. I plan on adding a lot more, but funding will slow me down.
@kdaveem This may be only partly true; I've watched most of his video materials and have read parts of his books. He seems knowledgable about his approaches, but even delusional people will seems this way.
There are several flukes in his videos that make things fuzzy. One of them is the claim that it would be impossible to turn his rotor by hand, but then he goes and does it.
TheIronStark: Thanks for your advice. My first coil of 30 awg was 430ohms. I suppose I could hook it back up and try it. Yep, I will do just that. Thanks again.
very very good replication but the commutator is not steady and there are a LOT of sparks. Did you put anb 10000 volts cap? How do you recover the backemf and what kind of output do you have?
Thank you. Unfortunately the commutator was poorly constructed. I had a local lumber yard make it and they did not get the center hole more centered. a 6in hole saw costs like $60 USD. I can't afford that yet. The sparks will always be there, at least until I can figure out how Newman is capturing the back spike. At the moment, I am not doing anything special to recover the back spike. I have killed a couple of batteries. :D
I was on the newman machine more than 2 years and i tell you clearly it's Not an easy machine you can google aboul "newman machine jl naudin" you will find ALL the explanation and I was one of the few peoples that was able to mantain the charge of the battery durind that the machine was running. I had made my machine run for night and day for 10 days continuously and at the end the battery was still charged (I dont know how much... but at that point the battery should to be tottally dead. bye
part2: For all the coil you should have (coil1 + coil2) al least 250 homs but 500 it's better (if you want an generator version) instead for a good motor you can have even 50 oms it's ok or less it's ok too. there is too much to say so I can't say anythings in e-mail better a video bye!
there is a few people out there say the newmanmotor does not work
alienhddna 1 year ago
@beac310: Thanks for the complement. I started working on a third motor, but it was not turning out. But now I have partner, and have begun rebuilding motor #3. Hopefully I will have some more video in the near future. The rebuild is going slowly. But thanks again for the kind words.
detrix42 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
REAL Free energy technology exists!But the coverup is very strong,Get the blueprints for a free energy motor at LT-MAGNET-MOTORdotCOM ,Start the energy revolution!
cloudburstlenepmhq 1 year ago
As I understand it, you don't need to short out your system to have a BEMF or what you call a back spike. When an magnetic field collapses by switching it off or in your set up, disconects, it creates a BEMF simply from the collapsing field. Did you have your setup without a short and did you find it running slower? Additionally, if you use a commutator with a larger diameter or a wieghted perimeter you will get much more torch. Nice nice work Thanks for the vid.
nullflux8is 1 year ago
@nullflux8is
it is my understanding of coils that a coil, like a capacitor, can hold a charge. I have not tried it with out the shorts. I feel that shorting it out, discharges any stored charge. I think this is helpful, maybe not 100% necessary, but helpful. (I could be wrong though).
detrix42 1 year ago
I don't understand your comment that it works side to side. You only show one side of the commutator. What is on the other side? What are the two brushes connected to at the other end? Do they connect to the same point in the circuit? Are your magnets N/S or N/N? When the coil is shorted does it short the batteries as well? Do you have a diagram or schematic? I drew this thing every way I could think of and could not short the coil without shorting the batteries. I need your help.
Thanks
PoppyNumber1 1 year ago
@PoppyNumber1: To better explain this check out my thread on overunity
I can't post web sites here. Go to overunity and search for my name detrix42.
I have three threads. I do not have the second motor any more. though I could possible rebuild it. But it would be a few weeks. or more.
detrix42 1 year ago
I left a message in the first video. You waste a lot of money in batteries. At least only use rechargeable ones. First use an ordinary motor fixed to the rotor to see how voltage the main self can deliver to know how many batteries you really need. Remove the motor. Use the main self to recharge the batteries through a diodes bridge, and to also send a pulse to the boost self at the correct moment (when the main self voltage equal 0 volt, so the batteries send it ) to make rotate the rotor.
cedddd2001 1 year ago
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. I am exploring the possibilities of the newmann design. If we all share we ALL gain! .....happy motoring Scott :O)
scooterscottii 1 year ago
@Wickedisadumbass Ummm. thanks, but I am not sure I can call this over unity. It seemed to deplete my batteries instead of recharging them. I have not looked it Bedini stuff yet. I want to get my head around Newmans stuff first.
detrix42 1 year ago
I pretty much tried most of what your doing and it never worked. Joe claimed at a later point that the segmented commutator was unnecessary. Joe Newman was not an honest man.
kdaveem 1 year ago
Never worked? Do you mean that it never produced more out than put in? I like the results that I am getting. I am not trying for over unity at this time. I just want a super efficient electric motor. I am not quite there yet. But pulsing a coil (non sinusoidal), in my opinion, is the proper way to do it. As far as I understand it, a square(ish) pulse creates a stronger magnetic field.
detrix42 1 year ago
@detrix42 Each design will have its own inherent properties, Newman's device is HUGE..enough said, sheer momentum it most likely what's helping him with his findings. That being said, a huge back spike it intrisic to his design.
Such a back spike will be caused by collapsing magnetic fields, not the pundage of copper so much, after all, the flux density is usually a function of the number of windings - more windings, large voltage spike.
jadaro2600 1 year ago
I have read Joseph Newman's book, and have made my own conclusions. And I have told a friend of mine, that I am doing these experiments to find out what does work and what does not, to prove or dis-prove Mr. Newman. With this setup, I get good RPMs, and a decent torque. If I scale this up by about 10 times, I will have what I am looking for.
detrix42 1 year ago
@detrix42
I meant my motor did operate but it did not
put out more power than it consumed no
matter how fancy my commutator was.
GrantsPassTVRepairs 1 year ago
please elaborate: How much copper wire (feet or pounds). As far as I understand it, in order to get a big back spike like Newman, you need lots, and lots of pounds. One of his smaller machines had 100lbs of 30awg copper wire. I only have one pound on these replicas. On my third motor (currently not ready for a video), I have two pounds -- still not enough. I plan on adding a lot more, but funding will slow me down.
detrix42 1 year ago
@kdaveem This may be only partly true; I've watched most of his video materials and have read parts of his books. He seems knowledgable about his approaches, but even delusional people will seems this way.
There are several flukes in his videos that make things fuzzy. One of them is the claim that it would be impossible to turn his rotor by hand, but then he goes and does it.
jadaro2600 1 year ago
I have a blog of sorts on a site called overunity, check it out.
detrix42 2 years ago
TheIronStark: Thanks for your advice. My first coil of 30 awg was 430ohms. I suppose I could hook it back up and try it. Yep, I will do just that. Thanks again.
detrix42 2 years ago
you're exited,and well you should be!
Congratulations on your success.
You are clearly on the right track. Keep going! I'me very interested in your progress
zoomy46 2 years ago
very very good replication but the commutator is not steady and there are a LOT of sparks. Did you put anb 10000 volts cap? How do you recover the backemf and what kind of output do you have?
Stark*
TheIronStark 2 years ago
Thank you. Unfortunately the commutator was poorly constructed. I had a local lumber yard make it and they did not get the center hole more centered. a 6in hole saw costs like $60 USD. I can't afford that yet. The sparks will always be there, at least until I can figure out how Newman is capturing the back spike. At the moment, I am not doing anything special to recover the back spike. I have killed a couple of batteries. :D
detrix42 2 years ago
I was on the newman machine more than 2 years and i tell you clearly it's Not an easy machine you can google aboul "newman machine jl naudin" you will find ALL the explanation and I was one of the few peoples that was able to mantain the charge of the battery durind that the machine was running. I had made my machine run for night and day for 10 days continuously and at the end the battery was still charged (I dont know how much... but at that point the battery should to be tottally dead. bye
TheIronStark 2 years ago
part2: For all the coil you should have (coil1 + coil2) al least 250 homs but 500 it's better (if you want an generator version) instead for a good motor you can have even 50 oms it's ok or less it's ok too. there is too much to say so I can't say anythings in e-mail better a video bye!
TheIronStark 2 years ago