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Author Topic: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations  (Read 408574 times)

resonanceman

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #45 on: April 15, 2008, 09:09:19 PM »
@ Gary:

Thanks for the explanation on the caps.  I was not sure.  That is a cool link too, I bookmarked it for future reference.  I was just amazed at the second type of super cap I found with 3,000 F, I thought that 5.5 F or 10 F was big, but 3,000?  I can't wait to play with some of these.  Thanks.

Bill

Bill   

I hope  to  build a simplified version of a Tesla switch  sometime in the not to  distant future .

I  still have a lot to learn before I am ready to  try something  that complex .


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Be careful  with those  big caps ...... seems to me  one of those things could kill  you a dozen  times over .......  even having  9 lives wouldn't help much       :)


gary

kevolts

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #46 on: April 15, 2008, 09:13:27 PM »
Hi all I was doing some research on hooking up super caps in series, from what I read if you hook up more than 3 super caps in series you will need to balance the voltages. I also did some research into this the best I could come up with is one site. http://www.icd-asia.net/super_cap.html


@ Jim I read on the other discussion that your LED lit up bright, so bright it hurt your eyes, I think the same thing happened to Bill if I am correct with his super cap when he showed it to his friend. Could it be that the rods are giving off more power than our instruments are indicating?

@Bill those super caps are amazing, I wonder how much is for the 3000 Farads one.


Kevin

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #47 on: April 15, 2008, 09:54:31 PM »
@ Gary:

Thanks for the warning on the larger caps.  I already learned (or almost) this when I was a kid and took a tv apart. ZAP!  Learning how it could still shock me when it was unplugged was my first introduction to things electrical and electronic.  I don't recommend this way of learning however.

@kevin:

If you go to Maxwell Technologies website (I don't have the link handy) there is a link to their retailers in the US. (I think there were only 2)  I didn't get to check the prices but I imagine they are pretty high, but the prices on the new super caps are falling every day.  Yes, I read the same thing somewhere on the more than 3 caps in series situation.  I too think there is somehow more power going into my cap than I am measuring...possibly it is the added ac component doing this? I really don't know but for a while have suspected the same thing.

Bill

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #48 on: April 15, 2008, 10:14:38 PM »
For anyone that has not seen them on the other Earth battery topic, I am posting some links to videos on Metacafe.  (The newer folks might have missed them)  Not that they are that great...I am working on another video now that will, hopefully, be better.

Earth Battery Experiments III:http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1235734/earth_battery_experiments_iii/

Earth Battery Experiments :http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1235712/earth_battery_experiments/

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #49 on: April 16, 2008, 08:23:22 AM »
@ All:


Here is a repeat of my supercap LED circuit.  In case someone has not seen it.  It is very simple.  So simple, even I could do it.  the cap is .22F and 5.5v.

Bill

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #50 on: April 16, 2008, 08:34:12 AM »
Here is another picture.  This is the LED circuit sitting on my kitchen table after being disconnected from the earth cell for about 15 minutes.  It is just running off the capacitor.  I did a test to see how long it would stay illuminated, and it was "on" for about 2 hours.  It was not this bright but did stay bright for about 45 minutes and then went down from there.

Bill

Pardon

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #51 on: April 17, 2008, 06:21:24 AM »
[
What   is your  E-cell like?

I believe that   stubblefield  was working  with more than   galvanic  reactions .    I am looking for   similarity's  between   the earth  battery and   radiant energy  receivers  .


gary



[/quote]

My Cell is just an earth cell using copper and zinc.

I can use a water cell (copper and zinc in a jar) and wire them in series then connect that to my earth cell and get a very good voltage readings.  what i can seem to get is amps. each cell wheather its an earth cell or water cell has much higher mamps readings.

its just magic seeing the voltage going through my earth cell. my rods are about 6 feet apart.

as an update i added caps to everything i could think of in many different configurations. still no useable mamps.

my next earth cell will be a 9 inch copper pipe buried about 3 feet deep. connected by a 18 gauge copper wire. i will keep you posted

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #52 on: April 18, 2008, 08:55:20 PM »
Well, I finally got outside and buried the larger of my two coils. Results as follows:

vdc: .83
mA: 39      (This number falls off quickly to about 32 mA.)
vac: 1.1

All in all, the numbers are a little better than when wet sitting on my kitchen table.  We will see what happens over the next few days. I will see if it will run the LED circuit, charge a few caps, etc.  Very nice weather here today although we had a 5.4 earthquake at 4:40 a.m. and a pretty good aftershock at about 10:15 a.m.

Bill

jeanna

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #53 on: April 18, 2008, 09:46:43 PM »
we had a 5.4 earthquake at 4:40 a.m. and a pretty good aftershock at about 10:15 a.m.

Bill
woah an earthquake in Kentucky? That is a rare event isn't it?
5.4 is pretty big too??

jeanna

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #54 on: April 18, 2008, 09:57:10 PM »
@ Jeanna:

Actually, the epicenter was in southern IL but it was recorded as 5.4 here.  Good sized quake.  Yes, pretty rare for this area, I believe this is the largest since sometime in the 60's.  (Largest one since I have lived here)  My cat did not  appreciate it at all.  I am doing some testing today in hopes that the quake shifted all of the telluric currents into my area for huge cell output.  Hey, it could happen...couldn't it? Ha ha.

Bill

jeanna

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #55 on: April 18, 2008, 10:39:09 PM »
I am doing some testing today in hopes that the quake shifted all of the telluric currents into my area for huge cell output.  Hey, it could happen...couldn't it? Ha ha.

Bill

Sideways rain right now. I'm glad I was out this morning.

You know, bill, you have always had the highest readings of any of us. Mine have always been at least .1 or .2vdc and amps too below yours for what seem similar probes.

Maybe the piezo pressure that builds up before a quake gives a boost to probes or coil.
I just had a peek at the usgs eq site and the fault goes between near you to memphis.

Perhaps this is part of NS's secret. Hopefully it just gave him the impetus to go for it, and we can all get some decent electricity from our ground with his coils.

jeanna

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #56 on: April 19, 2008, 01:40:22 AM »
@ Jeanna:

The fault you mentioned is the New Madrid fault line.  That is the one that a quake in the 1800's made the Mississippi river run backwards.  This quake was not associated with that fault.  There is another one up near IL somewhere which caused this one, according to the news.

Sadly, my buried coil is now putting out less than when I buried it. a lot less!!!  I will give it a few days to see if anything changes.

Bill

Cap-Z-ro

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #57 on: April 19, 2008, 02:54:59 AM »

Thanks Bill, I wondered that myself...I think Stubblefield had the most reliable system of all the free energy concepts.

Regards...


jeanna

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #58 on: April 19, 2008, 04:47:31 AM »
There is another one up near IL somewhere which caused this one, according to the news.

Sadly, my buried coil is now putting out less than when I buried it. a lot less!!!  I will give it a few days to see if anything changes.

Bill
Nevertheless, I will be watching your results closely (as if I wouldn't have anyway  ;) ) Whatever the name of the fault that let go the fact that you were jumping and I wasn't means it probably did more to your coil than to mine.  ;D ;D

Think of it this way, if the NS coils can predict eq's, they will be required in every front lawn. ;D

(usgs put the epicenter right over the line from KY into IL. I am curious about what that is. If you know, feel free to pm me. I am glad you mentioned it. I still haven't heard back from my sister in Springfield, IL    ah, patience!)

jeanna

Pirate88179

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Re: Stubblefield coils (bifilar) and speculations
« Reply #59 on: April 20, 2008, 05:06:37 PM »
@ Jeanna:

I may have to dig my coil up and try to plant it deeper this time.  It is only in the ground a little more than halfway, which might really be affecting it in ways I don't understand.  Spring is the time for planting and I am planting coils.  My neighbors think I am strange...they might be right.

Bill