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Pulse Motor (Charging Dead Battery 02) 054

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Uploaded by on Oct 16, 2007

Charging a dead battery 02

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Howto & Style

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Uploader Comments (kubikop)

  • Mr Madhacker, you are talking nonsense...

    Downstairs I have 2 batteries being charged, both at 14.6v using a similar unit as Kubikop that only outputs 10v... I dont know why....

  • It may be the amps over time....

    Ps Great videos, sounds like your having the crack doing em!

  • I like your videos Kubikop.

    To charge any battery you need 2V more than its potential. Looking at your meters you only hit 13 once and then you were charging at 11-12, which can only possibly hit the 9 you are getting. You don't need a motor/switch to charge a battery, it works much better when you charge 1 battery in parallel from 2 in series. I have 2 nicads that light 2 LEDs forever (well over a week now) good luck!

  • Thanks,

    It does make sense that 2v extra charges as my nokia phone has a 3.6v battery and it needs a 5v + voltage to charge it.

    That may be an amps thing though?

    Made me think to get my old phones out the cupboard though. I will charge one phone battery with another see how it goes.

    Cheers

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All Comments (6)

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  • on a ssg it isnt the voltage or current that charges the battery. Bedini has repeated that this device does NOT produce free energy. the circuit is merely intiating an event that causes batteries to charge "spontaneously". the energy does not show up on meters. only in the batteries.

  • Can you mail me Tesla's Circuit?

    That guy should have lived for ever......;-)

  • btw, you usually need 2 in series to get a good result. Unless my meter's broken both of my nicads happily hold 3 volts a piece, and as i can run 2 LEDs off 2 batteries... and the minimum voltage is 1.7 im told. The batteries should charge in seconds. Its teslas switch circuit design.

  • im quite sure its volts as you said it needs 5v for a 3.6 and it explains the 9v charge you got. As i read off my nicads the amperage only affects the rate of charge.

    Beers! :D

  • Thats interesting but I am certainly not talking nonsense. As far as I know (and I love to be wrong because I learn something new) you need 2V potential difference to get a charge. Maybe you can explain how you managed to overcharge these batteries. I've experimented with collapsing magnetic fields with 4x COP and only 25% duty cycle. Thats the only way I have found to produce a high enough voltage to charge. Maybe these systems take advantage of that unknowingly.

    Best wishes

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