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Author Topic: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect  (Read 870246 times)

synchro1

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #675 on: March 18, 2013, 11:59:23 PM »
@Deepcut,
 
Make sure the coil is bifilar series wired. Place a load on it like Skycollection's rextifier LED. Domain priority and Barkhausen!

DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #676 on: March 19, 2013, 12:00:57 AM »
Hi everyone,

...

so I freely shared how to connect the many layers of bi-filar pancake coils in a way to raise the self capacitance.

Luc

I should hope so too ! Freely-sharing should be the default and not be said as if one were being especially magnanimous !


atb,

DC.

DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #677 on: March 19, 2013, 12:07:46 AM »
@gotoluc

i just watched his video, he is definitely looking for cash in his pocket and it seems he thinks you've taught him magic ;+}


atb,

DC.


DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #678 on: March 19, 2013, 12:11:55 AM »
@Deepcut,
 
Make sure the coil is bifilar series wired. Place a load on it like Skycollection's rextifier LED. Domain priority and Barkhausen!

Yup, all my coils are bifilar serial.

I don't use LED's though, i am going for a very high time constant and 6 x 3LB coils in order to support a larger range of loads.

I'd appreciate if you could tell me what you think is happening when you use a magnet as a core ?


atb,

DC.



synchro1

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #679 on: March 19, 2013, 12:21:05 AM »
The strong PM core field retards the pole shift in the output coil as opposite approaching magnet poles influence it. This has the same effect as the addition of pancake coils one on the othe to increase "Self Inductance ". This timing retardation generates the propulsion.

DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #680 on: March 19, 2013, 12:22:37 AM »
Sounds good.

I should be able to give that a go tomorrow, cheers synchro :)


atb,

DC.


gotoluc

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #681 on: March 19, 2013, 12:51:22 AM »
The strong PM core field retards the pole shift in the output coil as opposite approaching magnet poles influence it. This is  like the addition of pancake coils one on the other. This generates the propulsion.

Hi synchro1, lets see if I understand you correctly.

Generator coil:
Wind a cylinder (solenoid style) bi-filar series connected coil with a center opening large enough to accommodate a free spinning cylinder diametric polarized magnet in its inside center will result in a Lenz free generator at any rpm?

Thanks

Luc

crazycut06

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #682 on: March 19, 2013, 05:40:10 AM »
Hi everyone,

a warning to everyone. I contacted skycollection around 2 months ago when he started experimenting with bi-filar pancake coils as generator coils. At that time he did not have the delayed Lenz effect.  Some of you may know that I worked with Thane Heins.
I thought skycollection high rpm magnetic bearing motor would be able to demonstrate a good effect so I freely shared how to connect the many layers of bi-filar pancake coils in a way to raise the self capacitance. We exchanged many emails.

To make a long story short, about a week after our exchange he got the effect, so I made some more suggestions and he replied this was all his own ideas. That's when I realized this guy is in it for himself. Notice he does not show how to builds anything.

Just thought I would share that

Luc


That's sad  :(

crazycut06

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #683 on: March 19, 2013, 05:47:18 AM »
Hi synchro1, lets see if I understand you correctly.

Generator coil:
Wind a cylinder (solenoid style) bi-filar series connected coil with a center opening large enough to accommodate a free spinning cylinder diametric polarized magnet in its inside center will result in a Lenz free generator at any rpm?

Thanks

Luc


That's a cool idea, with the main rotor magnet spinning, creating induction to the coil and inside it there's a  free spinning magnet also, causing induction to the coil hmmm... I wonder What would be the effect?


Regards
Cc

ALVARO_CS

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #684 on: March 19, 2013, 09:04:25 AM »
Hello all
I´ve been watching the skycollection videos from the beginning, and although I admire his craftmanship, I cannot say the same of his speech.
Always showing things, and always hiding the main details or the circuit schematics, . . . . fustrating
here is the translation of this last video. . . . (take your own conclusions)

-well
-in this occasion we`re gonna make a small sketch of what is the magnetic induction
-well so. . . the magnetic induction is the difference of potential or the voltage produced through a conductor when it is exposed to a variable field
-well here is the case
-here we have an inductor, but this inductor is a special case because it does not have alternate currents that could disrupt the rotor rotation
-here has been removed (eliminated) mostly the induction generated by the magnets, or the Lenz effect was here eliminated.
-and we´re gonna prove it with this magnets rotor, and we have here four inductors some coils that are driving the motor and the others are inductors
-well we´re gonna test it
- well here the current starts to be generated in the inductors
-practically all of them were turned on
-and as you can see there is no resistance to impede the rotor to turn
-and this is what is consumed in this motor
-we´re making subsequently a calculation about the production in each one of the inductors
-and here the Lenz effect is been deleted
-we have no resistance, just the air
-and this leads me to produce in the future this interesting coil which has not the Lenz effect
-well thank you very much for your attention


regards
Alvaro

DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #685 on: March 19, 2013, 09:31:24 AM »
@Alvaro

Don't be frustrated, his driving circuit can't be very good as he is using 8 watts to spin a very light rotor.

As for his coils, they are bifilar-serial sections connected in parallel - there is no mystery though he obviously wants people to think he's a wizard.

gotoluc advised me to try this config which i have only tried with two sections but it did help.


atb,

DC.


PiCéd

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #686 on: March 19, 2013, 10:17:47 AM »
Hello.

I know that a bifilar coil (or pancakes) does not heat the iron, but what I wanted to know is when a bifilar coil is wound on an iron core of high permeability (nanocrystalline for exemple) and we do the same thing than skycollection is that the primary intensity decreases more than if the permeability where less?
I wonder if a bifilar coil in low frequency can do the same thing as a ordinary coil on high frequency.

This reduction will inevitably accelerate the craft.

Thank you in advance for the answer.

DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #687 on: March 19, 2013, 10:21:37 AM »
@Piced

In my tests, a bifilar-wound, serial-connected coil outperforms a straight-wound coil of the same amount of wire by 400%.

Connect your serial-connected, bifilar sections in parallel and you get acceleration at lower RPM's due to increased current.


atb,

DC.


ALVARO_CS

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #688 on: March 19, 2013, 10:38:16 AM »
@DeepCut
thanks for your answer
Does it work well with an air core ?

DeepCut

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Re: Confirming the Delayed Lenz Effect
« Reply #689 on: March 19, 2013, 10:46:21 AM »
@Alvero

I haven't experimented with air cores. I met with Romero the other day and he says he has got the effect with an aircore, his website is :

http://www.underservice.org

I use very thin laminations of grain-oriented M6 steel with gaps of about 0.2mm between them and this works well.


atb,

DC.