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Author Topic: Eddy currents and their implications  (Read 86814 times)

Dave45

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #75 on: July 12, 2011, 09:14:51 PM »
Thanks e2matrix

forest

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #76 on: July 12, 2011, 09:53:54 PM »
Prana and Akasha.
Matter is empty place in Akasha (ether) which is oscillating (and may also rotate). Movement or flow in Akasha is called Prana (life force).
There are various movements/flows,we  even don't know all types yet.

How is matter formed : two Prana waves from opposite places of Universe meet and formulate standing balanced wave - an bubble in Akasha. Oscillating - this is mass, but we can see it only when moves and then it is momentum and energy for us.Moving means imbalance : one of Prana waves is changing form and standing wave (particle) moves .
There is no energy in matter - it moves because of that change of Prana wave due to interaction with Akasha (ether) flows and other matter in Universe.

Oh,sorry, I couldn't resist to post some my thoughts...

Qwert

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Dave45

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #78 on: July 13, 2011, 01:19:32 AM »
This image is from a crt I believe it is the electron being formed from the magnetic field

Dave45

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #79 on: July 13, 2011, 01:21:11 AM »
closeup, I thought I had a better image somewhere hmmm
anyway the upper portion is the magnetic field and the combination of the particles and path of the electron can be seen.

MotovilovDN

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #80 on: July 13, 2011, 02:31:21 AM »
I apologize for how rough this translated formatting is but I will upload this now for anyone waiting.  I have also converted it back to Word .doc format and am trying to clean up a few more things.  I'll upload that later.
Thank you very much, e2matrix. Also put my edited version of the original to this translation for all users.

e2matrix

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #81 on: July 13, 2011, 04:06:29 AM »
Hi MotovilovDN,  I was at this most of the day and finally have a much much better translation in PDF and also Word .Doc format.  I see you just put up an edit.  I have not looked at that yet but the two files I finished now are much better and closer to the original in formatting than the one I uploaded earlier today.  You might take a look at them also to compare to the new one you edited. 
« Last Edit: July 13, 2011, 04:38:34 AM by e2matrix »

e2matrix

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #82 on: July 13, 2011, 04:13:24 AM »
Thank you very much, e2matrix. Also put my edited version of the original to this translation for all users.

MotovilovDN,  The one you just uploaded is in Russian.  The ones I just uploaded were a translation of the one I got earlier today.  Would it be best to translate the new one you just put up?  If that one is an improved version I will gladly translate it also now that I have the procedure down it would only take me a few minutes.   The new setup I have keeps the formatting much better. 

MotovilovDN

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #83 on: July 13, 2011, 04:20:37 AM »
MotovilovDN,  The one you just uploaded is in Russian.  The ones I just uploaded were a translation of the one I got earlier today.  Would it be best to translate the new one you just put up?  If that one is an improved version I will gladly translate it also now that I have the procedure down it would only take me a few minutes.   The new setup I have keeps the formatting much better.
Yes, would it be best to translate the new one.

e2matrix

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #84 on: July 13, 2011, 04:35:59 AM »
Yes, would it be best to translate the new one.

Okay I got those done.  I'll upload those here.  Would it be best to delete the previous ones?  I think I saw what you added in to this new edit and I assume it might be best if I deleted the ones above.  Just let me know. 

e2matrix

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #85 on: July 13, 2011, 04:42:24 AM »
I deleted the earlier ones as I saw no one had downloaded them yet.  I wanted to take care of that before my chance to edit the post timed out.  If there is any reason you would like them (your pre-edit documents) uploaded again I an do that but it is my assumption you will just want the latest one available which you edited.  They are still not perfect in formatting but are much better than the one I put up early today. 
« Last Edit: July 13, 2011, 06:50:33 PM by MotovilovDN »

Dave45

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #86 on: July 13, 2011, 05:07:30 PM »
Coils are the generator, they produce a field that organizes and puts in motion the either, that can be collected, but we have to use a different approach to collect the field. Coils are very inefficient at collecting the field, with a coil there will always be loses.
With permanent magnets there will always be loses because your trying to collect the field outside the magnet where the field expands, it must be done in the core.

I would think a toroid would probably be the best choice because most of the field is pulled into the core.
When you pull energy from the field the either will replace it instantly and we create a sink once this is done energy will be boundless.

Think outside the box
the field must be collected efficiently
it is the field we want, that is the electricity
enough ranting
Dave

MotovilovDN

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #87 on: July 13, 2011, 07:03:53 PM »
I deleted the earlier ones as I saw no one had downloaded them yet.  I wanted to take care of that before my chance to edit the post timed out.  If there is any reason you would like them (your pre-edit documents) uploaded again I an do that but it is my assumption you will just want the latest one available which you edited.  They are still not perfect in formatting but are much better than the one I put up early today.


Work has been done very much.
The latest version of the PDF was the mostpowerful, almost like the original.
There are some minor errors of machine translation. (Company names, theorems and surnames, first names are correct as: "Rohde and Schwarz", "Casimir Gurskiy". And "Theorem of Motovilov" too).
Thank, e2matrix!
« Last Edit: July 14, 2011, 09:06:38 AM by MotovilovDN »

MotovilovDN

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #88 on: September 10, 2011, 07:50:37 AM »
Последние вести этого сайта: появился  доброхот, который выпросил сокращённый вариант моей книги "Теория потоков энергии", обещал перевести на английский и разместить для общего пользования. После того, как перевод с моей помощью пошёл на лад, взял тайм-аут и исчез вместе с доработанным вариантом. Не слышен уже несколько месяцев.

Low-Q

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Re: Eddy currents and their implications
« Reply #89 on: September 10, 2011, 09:15:57 AM »
Coils are the generator, they produce a field that organizes and puts in motion the either, that can be collected, but we have to use a different approach to collect the field. Coils are very inefficient at collecting the field, with a coil there will always be loses.
With permanent magnets there will always be loses because your trying to collect the field outside the magnet where the field expands, it must be done in the core.

I would think a toroid would probably be the best choice because most of the field is pulled into the core.
When you pull energy from the field the either will replace it instantly and we create a sink once this is done energy will be boundless.

Think outside the box
the field must be collected efficiently
it is the field we want, that is the electricity
enough ranting
Dave
A generator is generally speaking a very efficient transformer of mechanical to electrical energy. Even with weak magnets, and bad coils. There is only one thing to keep as low as possible, that is the resistance in the coil windings.

Look at it this way. A weak ferrite magnet is 1m away from the coil. The magnet is spinning with north/south crossing the coil. We can understand that there would not be much energy to harvest from the coil. But the input energy is also very low. With a magnet that far away, it takes litterally no energy to turn it, and litterally no energy out of the coil. Input and output energy corresponds - they are related to eachother and the efficiency are still high.

Vidar.