Added: 4 months ago
From: DanielNunezMind
Views: 1,205
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  • for how long can it run producing how much power does it produce?

    what is blocking this from being a true free energy generation technology?

  • you're measuring output after the led's are drawing power. You need to measure what it outputs before hooking up your led's. It's like measuring the voltage from a wall socket, then measuring it after hooking up a 60watt lamp.

  • I really cant wait until you amplify this :)

  • @marta1983able Thank you for the support; if this unit is run through an amplifier, I am sure that we can easily power lamps and such. More tests to come very soon. Blessings. :)

  • @DanielNunezMind

    1. Use a scope to measure each LED drive voltage. Measure the difference btwn 2 chnls (1 on anode other on cathode). You should measure 2.5 to 3.5 volts difference between the two probes. If LED is driven by AC then insert a 0.01 or 0.1 ohm resistor in series with the LED calculate the current(V/R); It is highly unlikely u can light a LED with 334 mv. That voltage is less than the drop of a schottky diode which is about 400mv. - Friendly circuit designer.

  • This is nice but without a total lux (light reading) and watt reading compared against a normal LED driver circuit for supper bright LEDs the test is meaningless. The voltage displayed without the amperage has no real test value as it is the power/watts are what matter. Also the off voltage of an already excited LED is much lower than the on voltage so an LED can remain lit at lower voltages once turned on.

  • @geomatrix11 Without getting overly technical, I know that I haven't found a lighting system online that can produce light for a month straight on one single charge of any given batttery. I mainly like to measure in terms of performance when dealing with this radiant type energy. I have more videos that go into further detail based on my recent progress if you wouldn't mind having a look. Blessings.

  • Schematic!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • High frequency will light leds with easy. I have witnessed this before. Free I doubt it but what you have is resonace. Coils will resonate at certain voltages and frequncy. Even a coil unplugged from source such as ignition coil will still have a static voltage. But the merit in this is that you have leds lighting but high frequencies will burn the leds out faster if you push them past a certain frequncy.

  • @egn83b Hello friend, you stated very well how electricity usually works. Keep in mind, these coils have never been fully tested before; therefore, there is no comparison unless you test one for yourself. Testing and comparing will be the answer to these questions. Besides, an ignition coil does not use .001 amps at 300mv. The closest I have found to this type of overunity was in dealing with joule thief circuits. Even those operate better with this coil. More research is happening. Blessings.

  • @DanielNunezMind What I'm infering is the behavior, Not missing the point of project. The coil needs to explored more in configured wiring. I do believe you have something different here but, other things do come into play into with this circuit. The joule theif is one of the common things that will do the same behavior as your coil from witnessing it. What I see from your work is a new kind of ion accerator. Telsa idea's to me were ion based power insted of "conventional current power". :-)

  • @egn83b Dear reader: Unplugged ignition coil has no static voltage. LEDs can operate at very high freqs. Cautions: do not exceed rated drive current,voltage and temp (exceptions-can be overdriven with low duty cycle pulses). A FRIENDLY circuit designer

  • i'm not totally sure, but this coil design doesn't look like abha to me. abha should have 4 turns in one 360 degree cycle, and this one looks like that have 2 only?!

  • @artepakt Hello friend, Randy Powell approved, so I'm sure its good. Maybe not the end all, but good enough. B Blessings.

  • @DanielNunezMind hmm, ok cool, it looks similar to 9x9 abha or something, but i'm not sure if that's the one... i don't see the relation with that 24 'connectors' in that case..:S

    anyway, it looks ultra double mega awesome! \o/ :)

  • thats one big nicelooking coil there :) - cool work man, i wish i had the knowledge to look into more of such stuff

  • @wubabooya Thank you friend, I have no problem teaching or making these coils for anyone. The knowledge is open source. Blessings.

  • soo awesomee! great work!

  • @swiftwind33 Thank you very much, I appreciate the compliment. Blessings.

  • Amazing man, this is the shit right here, please reassure your measurements are correct and conduct a different experiment if possible, im about to spread this like hot bread!

  • dear friend, 3.0 to 3.4 V actually means it's optimum operation range. Try to power the LED's with that voltage without the coil.

  • @Mikeontube Thanks for the feedback Mike. The lights will not turn on from the input power directly. It is the same effect as turning on a neon bulb with that small power source, not supposed to happen! Please check out my other videos for that confirmation. I have been trying the same thing a number of different ways just to be certain. Blessings. :-)

  • Great stuff mate. Will post to some other vortex enthusiasts!

  • @jimboot2 Thank you Jim, I appreciate that. Blessings.

  • Thanks mate for shareing.keep ot up!;)

  • awesome!

  • Great stuff mate, keep on with the experiments, i love watching this stuff.

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