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Author Topic: Spinning magnets with radio waves.  (Read 25128 times)

Pirate88179

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Re: Spinning magnets with radio waves.
« Reply #30 on: April 28, 2013, 06:36:32 AM »
TK:

http://www.magnet4less.com/index.php?cPath=1_14&osCsid=a868f027ba7724ab79125c2c77ca7a49

This is where i got my sphere neo mags from.  Reasonable prices and good service.  The only problem I ever had with a sphere neo is getting it started.  It has poles and you have to spin it and allow it to position it such that the poles are where you want them to be.  I tried one in a plastic tube and it spun so fast that it ate through the tube and flew across the room and might have hurt someone had they been there.

Good luck and be careful.

Bill

synchro1

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Re: Spinning magnets with radio waves.
« Reply #31 on: April 28, 2013, 02:39:53 PM »
@Tinselkoala,

                     A sturdy PVC coupling works best as a spin chamber coil sleeve for a high speed neo sphere. The PVC coupling is practically indestructable and easy to seal. PVC couplings are made from stronger material then the pipe, and sized to fit any diameter coil core.
 
« Last Edit: April 28, 2013, 06:13:16 PM by synchro1 »

synchro1

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Re: Spinning magnets with radio waves.
« Reply #32 on: May 15, 2013, 04:47:49 AM »
Tinselkoala is spinning a magnetic rotor with over 6kv of high voltage current:
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrl4_wREFJ8

Pirate88179

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Re: Spinning magnets with radio waves.
« Reply #33 on: May 15, 2013, 07:33:23 AM »
Yes, I saw that video.  I can't believe that he got a pencil to spin in such a stable manner.  5,000+rpm.  Unreal.  Nice work.

Bill

Lakes

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Re: Spinning magnets with radio waves.
« Reply #34 on: May 15, 2013, 09:39:25 AM »
I can see a few people wanting to replicate this one :)

Good and interesting stuff Tk.

synchro1

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Re: Spinning magnets with radio waves.
« Reply #35 on: May 15, 2013, 06:13:19 PM »
The "Mendicino" levitating platform is very well suited for a Faraday generator. The pencil point contact is a natural output electrode. An axial polarized magnet disk attached to a larger diameter copper disk and a copper axel cap sleeve that makes contact with the interior hole of the copper disk. Contact brushes for the outside rim of the larger diameter copper disk, complete the generator.

The  real advantage is, the generator disk magnet can double as a levitator on the contact point end. Anticipate high amperage low voltage "Lenz Free" output. Huge contrast to the very high voltage input. COP should be awesome. The amazing feature of Faraday's generator is that the field remains stationary even though the magnet's spinning!

TK's innovative breakthrough is a major achievement. No one has ever powered a motor with static electricity before. The contrast between power voltage and output amperage couldn't be more extremely stark in this kind of  "TK Faraday Levitating Motor Generator" setup! A ball bearing collar around the outside of the copper disk may reduce brush fricion on the disk edge if substituted for contact brush.
 
Youtube:
 
TinselKoala .              7 hours ago            I'm wondering about eddy currents too. I'm going to try to get a homopolar generator segment going on this thing next.
 
Starting a new thread for TK. "Mendicino Homopolar".