Marko Rodin Permanent Monopole Magent (biased Poles)
Uploader Comments (theUMMCorg)
All Comments (50)
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The South Pole is still there.
But the waves are flowing BETWEEN the atoms making up the measuring device.
In order for the Pole Finder to register a wave, it has to bounce OFF the probe of the measuring device.
But if the waves are so ordered and low that they flow between the atoms... then how is the device going to give you an accurate reading?
It's not.
Which will give you the False Impression that a monopole exists.
It doesn't. No such thing as a 1 sided coin.
You need a nanoscopic probe.
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@theUMMCorg Thank you for that very informative answer. The other question that I have is, "Can you tell me if a Rodin coil produces a counter EMF spike like a conventional coil does when an applied voltage to it is shut off?
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make the coil levitate and you will have something worth viewing. Otherwise, zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz!
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@obaeyens Actually he does at 0.45
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I want to see this North/South detector actually showing that it can detect a South pole. He only shows the North pole detection, but he never demonstrates that the detector is not broken. My best bet is that this detector does not work.
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@TheUFOeffect Yeah I forgot about that when I posted my comment and didn't feel like explaining what I meant. ^_~
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@ElectricGravity: The permanent magnet would attract to the coil if on, and it would obviously attract to the metal object being tested.
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@kmarinas86 a halbach array is not a monopole, it has a north and south pole, they are both just on the same face of the array ... rub two fridge magnets together and you'll see what i mean
That is truly an amazing demonstration. I never thought I would ever see an actual monopole magnet in my lifetime, not to mention the means by which one can be constructed. I have an idea how I could apply this concept in a revolutionary motor design, and my question is, "Does the Rodin coil, in producing a monopole magnetic field, use less electrical energy than an equivalently-sized conventional coil that produces a dipole magnetic field? And if so, how much less do you believe it is?"
vidbid1 6 months ago
@vidbid1 Yes. "The Rodin Coil" uses approx. 90% less copper, air core (significant weight reduction), and focuses the fields in the center (Exp. 4 amps into the coil = 290 amps out of the center)... FluxThruster(dot)
com
theUMMCorg 6 months ago