Pulse motor driving a SEC--on "back spike " power
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Uploader Comments (Lidmotor)
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All Comments (18)
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@Lidmotor ok that information just opened up a whole new ballgame for me lol.
all that comes to mind is "fat waves".
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You seem to have over unity here?
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Deep stuff - can I have a direct link please?
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"Just listen to it, this is what it sounds like"
Bwapwapwapwapwapbzzzzzzzzeeeee
eppppp -
Your welcome, the information has been out there for a long time on Bedini's main site on Gabrial Kron. Kron's work is rooted in vector analysis as well as Floyd Sweet.
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that pulse motor is awesome! mind if i try making a modified version with possibly a little guidance?
Magneticitist 1 year ago
@Magneticitist --Go for it but I don't send out circuit drawing or anything. You will have to wing it and build something that is your own. My videos usually give out just enough info for someone to get the idea and then "reinvent the wheel".
Lidmotor 1 year ago
@Lidmotor fair enough! i also wanted to ask your opinion on the differences in wireless output of the SEC circuit and other HV drivers. anything in particular that makes it more efficient ? I know i can achieve the same wireless transfer by using any antenna/receiver setup with HV, but what about the SEC makes it so effective?
from what i can tell the energy being sent to your LEDs is simply "looking for ground" and when u get near or touch it you are stealing from your earth ground.
thanks.
Magneticitist 1 year ago
@Magneticitist ----What is weird about the SEC is that the voltage is not that high (hundreds of volt not thousands) and when you you get shocked off it ----you don't. You get a tiny RF burn. The coupling is capactive and not inductive with the wireless arrangement. The grounding thing is whole other issue. The lights are all fed through an Avenmenko Plug at the end of one wire. Adding a ground path just makes brighter.
Lidmotor 1 year ago
You have to think of this process on the cap as separating positive and negative charges. You are creating a non-equilibrium state. By allowing the potential differences in voltage to be inverted or retroflected, you're causing the cap to have potential from bidirectional longitudinal waves. You have to cause an imbalance for energy conversion. The answer is "simultaneous open and closed paths" to extract energy between any two points or nodes. V and I are zero not following joules law.
jburnum 2 years ago
jburnum----Thank you for explaining that. Now it makes sense. "Simultaneous open and closed paths"
Lidmotor 2 years ago