Added: 1 month ago
From: rickfriedrich
Views: 1,271
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  • For the guy who was asking the questions who I removed let me say this. I do not tolerate people who are pushy or who accuse people or who say things that are not true. I will respond to your questions when I get the time. What is it with people, you put a video up and suddenly I'm owned by people as if I have to do everything they ask. I will continue to show more and more things as we have time to do that.

  • Hi, I showed this to my dad who's a Dx radio enthusiast / Ham radio enthusiast and has built computers from d-i-y soldering kits, and he wanted to know how much a kit like this would cost?

  • @youarelackluster The kit is sold in the link on the description above. Base price is $169 and goes up with options. Total with aluminum flywheel and rotor, larger circuits and extra generator coils is $281.

  • Very impressive Rick! Could you add more incandescent light bulbs as resistance in place of the pot to avoid baking it?

  • @CGaquamarine3 Yes, we will show that soon.

  • Hi Rick, 2Amps X 12v from input battery minus 2Amps X 12v to LEDs&bulb&pot = torque + charging batteries.I like radiant mathematics!Well done.

  • @MsAlexbobo Yes, 24W of LED, heat, plus some torque remaining. The charging of the 100 volts of batteries is free.

  • Rick, thanks for responding. I eagerly await to see the back charging!

    Do you have any idea how much of the two amps is being used for charging the batteries and how much is used for the lights?

    Thanks

    Tony

  • @fathershand The batteries are not connected to the to the generator coils or LEDs at all. They are totally isolated. The two amps is only used to power the motor, the gen coils run off the brushless motor. The primary battery powering the motor is in series with the charging batteries and they are not being charged by it as that is not possible. See the circuit on bedini_monopole3 group. Something else is charging the batteries and it is not with amps. We call this negative energy.

  • Thanks for sharing

  • Holy crap that's impressive!

  • Very nice,Thank you for sharing Rick.

    V

  • Thanks for this video, Rick. Good stuff!

    The main coil has 26 AWG and 19 AWG wire. The two slave coils have 19 AWG and the 3 generator coils have 19 AWG wire. Is this correct? On the main coil, how many layers of the trigger wire do you create before you add in the power wire in bifilar fashion?

    I noticed that the charge battery was dropping pretty quickly. Is there a way to redirect the BEMF from the trigger to the run battery to prolong it's charging ability?

    Thanks for the great work!!

  • @fathershand Motor coils have 19, with master also having 26. Gen coils are either 29, 30 or 31 wire depending on what we are using for the kits. We did 4 layers on the master coil of #26 wire before beginning to paralleling the 19 wire with it. This gives easier start up. I tried three coils altogether. The others are too hard to start with. No the charge battery wasn't dropping fast, it was just pulling 2A. We will show shortly the back charging the primary.

    Thanks!

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