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Solid States Devices => solid state devices => Topic started by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 05:02:53 AM

Title: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 05:02:53 AM
Here's a picture of Tesla's first radio: Tesla first transmitted a longitudinal magnet wave, not a transverse Hertzian wave. The transmitter and receiver in the picture are both simple electromagnet coils. The speed of the magnet wave was measured and calculated to be 292,020 miles per second, or 1.5 times the speed of light first by Wheatstone, the inventor of the full wave bridge rectifier. The formula is Pi, 3.14 over 2, times C, (the speed of light)!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 06:16:37 PM

Quote from Jerry Bayles:

"Current transformers are wound in a torus fashion.  Recent tests were performed to determine if the A Vector generated by a pulsed current torus configuration would interact with the gravitational field of the Earth".


Attachment from JLN. They're fireing a needle from a DC capacitor discharge through the ferrite coil windings in parallel:
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: dieter on April 01, 2014, 07:19:47 PM
Interesting, but is there a connection between the 3 things? Also, why are the two coils in the last pic shortened and yet connected to something, I assume the DC pulse? Rather unconventional to say the least...
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 09:03:08 PM
@dieter.

The twin ferrite toroid coils transmit a longitudinal gravity wave, just like tesla's first transmitter did, only better. The tests performed were to determine if Earth's gravitational field reinforced the wave. Jerry Bayles determined it did. The experimentors propelled the needle projectile with tremendous forcé from large capacitor discharges.

The "Solid State Synchro Coil" is a diametric cylinder magnet core stack pulsed at resonance by longitudinal gravity waves. An LC tank tuned output circuit would recieve and reinforce the undulation from the  twin "A" vector toroids. These twin toroids amplify the longitudinal magnet wave far more powerfully than Tesla's original solinoid transmitter did, pictured in the first attachment. These twin toroids would only need a weak signal pulse at the correct resonant frequencies to oscillate the magnet core field.

Imagine suspending a stack of diametric neo magnets horizantally between the conductive coupling spheres of a Tesla wireless transmitter receiver circuit. The longitudinal waves would pass through the magnet stack, expanding and contracting, and forcing flux through a coil wrap around the stack. wireing a capacitor in series to this output winding would reinforce the oscillation at resonant frequency.

The twin toroid coils need to be grounded along with the receiver capacitor, just like in Tesla's magnifying transmitter patent. A virtual ground would work as well, just like the single wire in Tesla's circuit. You can see this single virtual ground wire running between the electromagnets in the picture of  Tesla's first transmitter above!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: dieter on April 01, 2014, 09:19:51 PM
So, are they shortend? If so, why?


Regards


BTW. I am not shure if I even know hat an A Vector or A field is...
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: picowatt on April 01, 2014, 09:25:46 PM
Here's a picture of Tesla's first radio: Tesla first transmitted a longitudinal magnet wave, not a transverse Hertzian wave. The transmitter and receiver in the picture are both simple electromagnet coils. The speed of the magnet wave was measured and calculated to be 292,020 miles per second, or 1.5 times the speed of light first by Wheatstone, the inventor of the full wave bridge rectifier. The formula is Pi, 3.14 over 2, times C, (the speed of light)!

Do you have the source info for the image you provided?

PW
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: jbignes5 on April 01, 2014, 09:30:55 PM
 No the beginning of one toroid is connected in parallel with the other toroid's winding. Both ends are then connected together as well.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 10:29:05 PM
No the beginning of one toroid is connected in parallel with the other toroid's winding. Both ends are then connected together as well.


@Jbigness5,


                 I find that a little vague? Both toroid coils have two ends. You say the beginning of one toroid is connected to the other toroid's winding? Which end of the other toroids winding? Beginning to beginning or beginning to end?
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 10:36:05 PM
Do you have the source info for the image you provided?

PW


http://www.pbs.org/tesla/ins/radiopop01.html
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 01, 2014, 10:42:52 PM
So, are they shortend? If so, why?


Regards


BTW. I am not shure if I even know hat an A Vector or A field is...


Look at the axis of symmetry in this toroid schematic: The field is vectored away from the source along the axis, it dosen't curl around it just keeps going!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: jbignes5 on April 01, 2014, 11:17:35 PM

@Jbigness5,


                 I find that a little vague? Both toroid coils have two ends. You say the beginning of one toroid is connected to the other toroid's winding? Which end of the other toroids winding? Beginning to beginning or beginning to end?


 There is a picture and both toroids are wound with different gauge wire. How hard is it to just look at the gauges soldered to each wire? They are hooked in parallel. There is only two windings of two different gauges. Pretty simple right?

 How was my explanation Vague? I said hooked in parallel...
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: dieter on April 02, 2014, 01:41:08 AM
It's just, I can see only 3 wires.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: jbignes5 on April 02, 2014, 02:17:54 AM
 The other wire goes through the bigger toroid and connects to the thicker wire at the solder joint. I can spot things like this because I used to solder professionally. It is a common practice among solderers when dealing with two gauges of wire. Also this gives the toroids a rigid connection on the one side helping it to keep them together.

 Sorry for the graininess of the picture. I don't have good software to refocus after the first zoom.. Just using paint to add the wire likeness.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: dieter on April 02, 2014, 02:25:07 AM
Ok,that makes sense.


It's pretty amazing when you consider something is faster than light... I may use this to send the lotto numbers back in time... should work, unless Einstein was wrong.  8)


Regards
 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: jbignes5 on April 02, 2014, 02:48:25 AM


 Here is a better shot of it. I tried using an online service to zoom then refocus. It came out great but the picture didn't save for some odd reason. Go figure
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on April 02, 2014, 02:53:00 AM
@ Synchro,
So you're basically wiring the two toroids the same way you'd wire up a series-wound bifilar coil? 
If this is the case, you're saying that the two toroids are essentially cancelling out one another's magnetic fields and producing longitudinal vectors?

Do you this would be possible with a single trifilar-wound toroid (pulled out of a power supply, I think)? My idea was to connect end B of wire 1 to end A of wire 2 and possibly use the third wire as a pickup coil. 
Bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: jbignes5 on April 02, 2014, 03:10:11 AM
 No they are in parallel wound the same way in parallel it looks like. Much better shot. Got the online tool to do the zoom and focus, had to crop it in paint though. Sorry for all the tries to get it right.

 This shot looks like the wind starts at the right wire. The wind direction goes counter clockwise when looking at the toroid through the hole from smallest toroid to largest. Both look to be wound in the same direction. Just where the thinnest gauge starts going around the toroid the end would be directly behind that. That is where the smaller gauge wire goes in the middle and through the inner hole and continues to the back of the larger toroid and joins with the thicker gauge wire from the back. So these winds are exactly the same and soldered in parallel then soldered to the lead in wires.

 Hope that helps.
 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on April 02, 2014, 03:19:42 AM
Thanks Jbignes5
That's a different animal from what I understood it to be.
Bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: jbignes5 on April 02, 2014, 03:28:34 AM

 Any time... I learned a few things though in this process especially image processing. This opens up a few more possibilities in figuring out these kind of things. Thanks for the opportunity to help out.

 If you are wondering how I figured out the winding it is very simple. Using such thick wire makes the winding split where it starts and ends. The smaller toroid has the split below the right smaller lead in to the toroid. The smaller gauge where the end wind goes to the back toroid is loose. Look at the gap and you will see it.

 The site I used was imagiris.com Pretty good software and it is free!

 Continue with your conversation...
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 03, 2014, 10:02:27 PM
@Jbigness5,


                 Any way you can upload a schematic of the toroid windings?
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 03, 2014, 10:04:22 PM
@ Synchro,
So you're basically wiring the two toroids the same way you'd wire up a series-wound bifilar coil? 
If this is the case, you're saying that the two toroids are essentially cancelling out one another's magnetic fields and producing longitudinal vectors?

Do you this would be possible with a single trifilar-wound toroid (pulled out of a power supply, I think)? My idea was to connect end B of wire 1 to end A of wire 2 and possibly use the third wire as a pickup coil. 
Bob


That's a very powerful application of the Trifilar!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on April 04, 2014, 12:51:04 AM

That's a very powerful application of the Trifilar!
Thanks Synchro
I do have it on my to-do list. It is cleaned up and ready to go. I got the idea after looking at your quadfilar, wondering if a similar thing could be done on the trifi-wound toroid. So far I have only tried a caduceus winding for other purposes (but am aware of its scalar vector producing capability). I'll get to this one when I can.
bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: wings on April 04, 2014, 03:13:34 AM
No they are in parallel wound the same way in parallel it looks like. Much better shot. Got the online tool to do the zoom and focus, had to crop it in paint though. Sorry for all the tries to get it right.

 This shot looks like the wind starts at the right wire. The wind direction goes counter clockwise when looking at the toroid through the hole from smallest toroid to largest. Both look to be wound in the same direction. Just where the thinnest gauge starts going around the toroid the end would be directly behind that. That is where the smaller gauge wire goes in the middle and through the inner hole and continues to the back of the larger toroid and joins with the thicker gauge wire from the back. So these winds are exactly the same and soldered in parallel then soldered to the lead in wires.

 Hope that helps.
 

be sure that the torus coil have a return winding otherwise the vector potential effect is vanished .... at the end you have a one coil that have an axial inductive effect :


Figure 3 of this section shows the most common toroidal winding. It fails both requirements for total B field confinement. Looking out from the axis, sometimes the winding is on the inside of the core and sometimes it is on the outside of the core. It is not axially symmetric in the near region. However, at points a distance of several times the winding spacing, the toroid does look symmetric.[/font][/size][4] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toroidal_inductors_and_transformers#cite_note-4)[/font] There is still the problem of the circumferential current. No matter how many times the winding encircles the core and no matter how thin the wire, this toroidal inductor will still include a one coil loop in the plane of the toroid. This winding will also produce and be susceptible to an [/font][/size]E[/font][/size] field in the plane of the inductor.[/font][/size]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toroidal_inductors_and_transformers (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toroidal_inductors_and_transformers)

Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 04, 2014, 03:20:16 AM
be sure that the torus coil have a return winding otherwise the vector potential effect is vanished .... at the end you have a one coil that have an axial inductive effect :


No matter how many times the winding encircles the core and no matter how thin the wire, this toroidal inductor will still include a one coil loop in the plane of the toroid. This winding will also produce and be susceptible to an [/font][/size]E[/font][/size] field in the plane of the inductor.[/font][/size]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toroidal_inductors_and_transformers (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toroidal_inductors_and_transformers)


Here's JLN's circuit diagram:
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: wings on April 04, 2014, 03:29:45 AM

Here's JLN's circuit diagram:
are the two toroid winding sense opposite ... this can work ... = you have two coil loop with opposite coil effect = 0
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 04, 2014, 06:39:23 PM
@Wings,


Here's some input on two toroidal coils of different radius:

Two coils toroïdales of different radius powered in AC.

Output:
 
1) Coils 'B' inside the air gap of the coils toroïdales, the form U of these coils allows reducing the effect of the law of Lenz (producing scalar waves? according to Bearden the scalar waves perturb the field of the Aether: therefore this mounting will be more effective).
2) Coils 'A' to the exterior one coils toroïdales, equally for the type coils 'B' these coils allow the passage of current of a direction on a spire and of inverse direction on the other spire, being given that the spires are very near of each one other: the back EMF will be reduced to see annihilated.
A big question remains without response: The currents induced in the coils 'B' and 'A' will they have a tension and an intensity that surpass (Over Unity) those injected in the toroïdales coils?
Such are my reflections on A-Field.


Link to the original Quadra Test:


http://www.rafoeg.de/20,Dokumentenarchiv/30,Wissenswertes/,Gravitationstheorien/Telos_Experiment.pdf (http://www.rafoeg.de/20,Dokumentenarchiv/30,Wissenswertes/,Gravitationstheorien/Telos_Experiment.pdf)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 04, 2014, 08:00:14 PM

On running AC current through the toroids:

"Magnetic induction can occur in a zero curl magnetic vector potential field, as the toroid illustrates.  The only requirement is a time changing field".


Apparently, reversing the direction of the longitudinal wave can cause magnetic induction!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: wings on April 05, 2014, 04:30:05 AM
@Wings,


Here's some input on two toroidal coils of different radius:

Two coils toroïdales of different radius powered in AC.

Output:
 
1) Coils 'B' inside the air gap of the coils toroïdales, the form U of these coils allows reducing the effect of the law of Lenz (producing scalar waves? according to Bearden the scalar waves perturb the field of the Aether: therefore this mounting will be more effective).
2) Coils 'A' to the exterior one coils toroïdales, equally for the type coils 'B' these coils allow the passage of current of a direction on a spire and of inverse direction on the other spire, being given that the spires are very near of each one other: the back EMF will be reduced to see annihilated.
A big question remains without response: The currents induced in the coils 'B' and 'A' will they have a tension and an intensity that surpass (Over Unity) those injected in the toroïdales coils?
Such are my reflections on A-Field.


Link to the original Quadra Test:


http://www.rafoeg.de/20,Dokumentenarchiv/30,Wissenswertes/,Gravitationstheorien/Telos_Experiment.pdf (http://www.rafoeg.de/20,Dokumentenarchiv/30,Wissenswertes/,Gravitationstheorien/Telos_Experiment.pdf)
I prefer this document
http://www.reocities.com/Area51/Starship/9201/ortho/ortho.html
but take care if you winding a toroid starting from one point all around up to the same point at the end you have also one virtual single loop coil that induce EM on the torus axis , this why you have to wind a return coil back to the initial point in order to have just vector potential effect .
   

Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 05, 2014, 06:29:25 PM
@Wings,


            Very interesting document on "Aether Control" by Rick Andersen!


Here's a quote from you:


"but take care if you winding a toroid starting from one point all around up to the same point at the end you have also one virtual single loop coil that induce EM on the torus axis , this why you have to wind a return coil back to the initial point in order to have just vector potential effect".


Judging from that, it might make more sense to simply wind a bifilar and connect it in series like a Tesla Coil. What do you think?
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 07, 2014, 09:10:58 PM

I found this to be of high importance from "Aether Control":


"There's a net direction of "A-field flow" through the center hole of the donut-shaped toroidal coil.
There's a so-called "North" and "South" direction. The A-field's "lines of potential" flow into the center hole on one side, concentrate there, then flow out on the other side and broaden out into larger loops that eventually converge back into the coil. So, although the magnetic (B) field of a toroid is circular in shape and contained almost entirely inside the toroid itself, the magnetic vector potential (A-field) is TOROIDAL in shape, like an enlarged version of the coil itself-- and composed of, presumably, toroidal loops of aether itself, in a preferred direction through the toroid"!


The toroid projects the magnetic "A" field vector potential in a specific direction through the center of the toroid!


Start viewing this video at 2:57; I was powering the neo sphere with the toroid spiral coil. It shot out like a cannon ball!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XMfCpUzq_g (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XMfCpUzq_g)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: wings on April 07, 2014, 10:26:06 PM
@Wings,


            Very interesting document on "Aether Control" by Rick Andersen!


Here's a quote from you:


"but take care if you winding a toroid starting from one point all around up to the same point at the end you have also one virtual single loop coil that induce EM on the torus axis , this why you have to wind a return coil back to the initial point in order to have just vector potential effect".


Judging from that, it might make more sense to simply wind a bifilar and connect it in series like a Tesla Coil. What do you think?

I think that what is important is to go back winding to the starting point , no 0° to 360° winding but: 0° -> 360° back to 0° :)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 07, 2014, 11:15:31 PM
@Wings,


Right! That's exactly how I wound those spiral toroids.


What's important is to understand the difference between the toroidal "A" vector, and the pulse from a solenoid  coil pole? The North and South poles are in line at 180 degrees in the  Toroidal magnetic "Smoke Ring", whereas they're at 90 degrees in the solinoid. The poles are trailing one another in the magnet wave!


The speed of the longitudinal gravity wave is Pi/2.C! This equals 292,020 miles per second. Magnetic resonance is a function of PI, or 3.14 according to Jerry Bayles unified field theory. We're measuring speed in time units per second, so the oscillating speed of the magnet wave turns into factors of Pi or 6.28 hrz to start. These scaler wave magnetic frequencies were tested by Jerry and conform to the classic longitudinal wave theory of Laplace.


This means that a pulsed toroidal "A" vector magnet wave would beat a laser beam to a receiver by a factor of nearly fifty percent! Pulsing a stack of diametric neos with a toroidal magnet wave at resonant PI frequencies should oscillate the neo stack field like Jerry's homopolar balance magnets!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on April 08, 2014, 04:12:01 AM
It occurred to me, that the magnet wave must have been projected by the Bifilar Bedini Spiral Toroid Coil used by me to spin my magnets, not projected by the the spinning magnet. The magnet spinner merely helped pulse the "Spiral Toroid Coil".

The stack of diametric neo's has a neutral zone for the magnet wave to traverse. My "Synchro Coil" failed to perform on the bifilar spool. The Toroid coil in combination with the wraped stack of diametric neo's produced the overunity results. I believe now that all the magnet spinner did was pulse the "Spiral Toroid Coil", generating the longitudinal wave, and that a solid state pulse would work as well!


I'm pretty sure the magnet core output coil picked the magnet waves up from the Toroid power coil behind the magnet spinner after close analysis, not the spinning magnet. 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil" or "Vacuum Quadrode Amplifier".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 03:42:32 AM




In this video by Tinselkoala, we see him powering a spinner with a pure sine wave where the hertz equals the RPM.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFOFhCWGJcs (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFOFhCWGJcs)


First question: What would his COP be if he ran the current through the coil and into a storage capacitor instead of shorting it to ground?


Secondly: What about the frequencies higher than his cheap paper clip axle can stand up to. Floyd Sweet ran up in the megahertz?


The sine wave is powering the spinner so the sine wave should also oscillate at least that much flux in a fixed PM core. The velocity of the magnet spinner is increasing with the rise of frequency. This is a money for nothing situation, because we don't need additional input power to accelerate the magnet  spinner! This effect, power of flux from increased frequency alone continues above Tk's spinner's top end. A solid state circuit would work much better, and allow for much higher frequencies.


 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 05:06:19 AM
Here's a question: Is a wide diameter solenoid air core coil of only one turn of thick wire; Is it a solenoid coil or might it also qualify as a toroid? Would it project a toroidal "A" vector in one direction down the center line?
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 02:00:45 PM
This coil generates "Magnet waves" with a sine wave signal. What effect does it's toroidal characteristics have on the coil's field.


                                      "Magnetic induction can occur in a zero curl magnetic vector potential field".
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 02:40:41 PM
The self resonating frequency of the thick wire bifilar primary should be tuned to permanent magnet field resonance. Jerry Bayles has determined that magnets reach resonant peaks at intervals factored by PI(3.14) and are irrational. Jerry oscillates Chiral satellite magnets at these rates.


Permanent magnet fields react differently to specific frequencies, like 7.8 hertz. There are higher reaction frequencies, but they are not linear or even proportional. They're a factor of the speed of the magnet wave which exceeds the constant C and includes the radical PI factor.


The question remains: What is the optimal operating frequency for this circuit? Sine wave hertz, self resonanting primay bifilar coil frequency, and the optimal resonating harmonic frequency of the permanent magnet field all need to match on the broadcast end.


The Primary needs to loop over the ends of the magnet for the diametric magnet to recieve the magnet wave on the perpendicular. I first thought we could wrap the the primary directly around the middle of the tube. This would project the "A" vector in the wrong direction in line with the field. The magnet needs to stand up in the center of the primary, so the magnet wave hits it at 90 degrees! 


We're forced to select from only a small range of specific operating frequencies, maybe two or three! One is optimal!


We can "Egg Crate" these Coils and magnet receiver generators then circulate and collect the same sine wave oscillating current to power them at the cost of signal and resistive loss alone. This would make a free running kilowatts range generator.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 04:01:16 PM
"Sweet claimed something on the order of 1:3,000,000 over-unity. The input power to his device was 10 VAC at 29 uamps (290mWatts) at 400 hertz. The output had been loaded to as high as 3,000 Watts".


Looks like Floyd may have alredy been there and done that! Floyd didn't have Neo Magnets, so he tried to soup the Barrium Ferrite up. We don't need to do that.


Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 08:13:48 PM
Have a look at the toroid votexing around a single wire loop:


I think a series bifilar of two thick wire side to side, would generate a toroid field like a spiral where one wire ran around the outside of the other.
Lying a two wire speaker wire sideways one time around an large aire core would give the spiral toroid dimensions. Twisting the wire would give the coil a strong toroid vortex. I tested just these kinds of toroid spirals. A thick wire one would work fine, just twisted into a fairly large loop!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 04, 2014, 08:51:20 PM
I think the primary should be a spiral series bifilar toroid of two strands of thick 16 gauge insulated household wire. The strands could be twisted like a Spanish Knot tied around a plunger handle on one end, and a fence post on the other. Twist until a knot appears then trim and  connect the splice. It should resemble a phone cord. Maybe 4 or 5 inches in diameter. One loop and one loop only! This meets all the criterion. A low voltage hi amperage spiral series bifilar toroid, with a powerful "A" vector. A two minute job, and Voila, the perfect magnet wave generator coil!.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 01:45:22 AM
The central feature of the "Spiral series bifilar" is that it projects a field on ONE SIDE ONLY. Also, the field has the strength of both poles, but only the polarity of one. On top of that, there's an "A" vector that projects a gravity wave longitudinally from the center outward toward infinity!


Tinselkoala informed me that he felt the magnet would heat up from induction. I countered that the adiabatic cooling of the permanent magnet from demagnetization would at least neutralize that effect.  It might look like a licorice twist looped end to end. The magnet core receiver
coil  would drape in front of the upright primary like a window box, right in line with optimal magnetic exposure.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 01:57:04 PM

This video demonstrates the fundamental interaction between A.C. current and magnets. A permanent magnet in fixed position would undergo flux oscillation from the same signal, and return the power through output windings:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBCXHP_qmRw (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBCXHP_qmRw)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 02:50:37 PM

Dave is spinning a neo tube with a sine wave at 70 hertzl What would happen if we stopped the spinning neo magnet and wrapped it with copper wire windings. Would we gather power from those output windings standing still?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQ7Ax_b6S4k (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQ7Ax_b6S4k)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 03:08:55 PM
Dave's video shows how the sine wave spins the tube magnet, but the current wire doesn't know it's there. There's no such thing as "Lenz Drag" here! The current's not effected by the magnet! We can remove the magnet and the input draw remains unchanged.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 03:34:03 PM
Retrod Dave's Degausser Coil does the same thing as the two wire spiral series bifilar I just designed. Dave took the coil apart, and I think they used LITZ, but it comes out to be the same thing. It's necessary to the run sine wave through a magnetic multiplier coil like either of those kinds of coils to amplify the field. Alone, just the A.C. in a wire won't do anything to effect a magnet.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 06:45:49 PM
There's a COP 20.00 (2000) times the power thread on the Forum. Arron's team aledges they're transverting RMS. I bet they sustain a D.C. coil field that is oscillated by the sine wave in a nested magnetic coil, coupled with secondary output windings. The power formula needs an additional calculoidal  co-ordinate to factor in the magnetic field that is spontaneously generated by the current itself. This is the portion of the reactive power they use.   


Overheating's a major problem for them. The soloution is to pulse the secondary with reverse current enough to cause adiabatic cooling and generate demagnetization output.


It's easy to spot the cheap trick they used to calculate their COP. They just don't count the A.C. input current they run back through the coils to the source ground, instead of building an inverter storage capacitor circuit.


With an inverter storage capacitor, and adiabatic demagnetization circuit, it holds potential!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on August 05, 2014, 09:10:13 PM
I think the primary should be a spiral series bifilar toroid of two strands of thick 16 gauge insulated household wire. The strands could be twisted like a Spanish Knot tied around a plunger handle on one end, and a fence post on the other. Twist until a knot appears then trim and  connect the splice. It should resemble a phone cord. Maybe 4 or 5 inches in diameter. One loop and one loop only! This meets all the criterion. A low voltage hi amperage spiral series bifilar toroid, with a powerful "A" vector. A two minute job, and Voila, the perfect magnet wave generator coil!.
Synchro,
Don't the magnetic fields from current travelling in opposite directions in the series-wound parallel winding cancel eachother out?  Because of this, I would expect it to be a high voltage, low current coil.
Can you explain why this would be a high amperage coil?
 
Also, when you say "magnet wave" are you referring to scalar vectors that would be produced by a swbf winding?
Respectfully,
Bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 09:58:18 PM

@Bob,


         This is a broad subject. Let's start here: The fields are cancelled in the series bifilar, but it broacasts a "Magnetic Vector Wave". Secondly, the toroid has the same effect; So by combining them we multiply the effect. Thick wire carries more amperage and higher amperge helps generate stronger magnet waves.


Fig. 14.3
Coils used to emit fields and potential:

A A standard coil emits electric and magnetic fields in the space around it.
B In the bifilar coil the electric and magnetic fields are cancelled, and electric scalar and magnetic vector waves are produced.
C The torroidal coil has the same effect.
D The Möbius coil produces only scalar waves.

The information on coil properties is from Abraham (1998)


"Null-potential waves, "scalar waves", are defined as potential couples (φ0,A0), the generated physical fields of which are completely cancelled by destructive interference".
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 10:34:27 PM
@Bob,


I stated that the series bifilar toroid has the strength of two poles off to one side and nothing on the other. More precisely it's "The focal point of the vectored magnet wave" that has the power of two poles. The "A" vector focal point field is not a coil field. It's like a "Smoke Ring". The wave is longitudinal, one pole trails the other, so what you measure is a "South Pole" heading toward you, and the north pole is trailing and hidden!


Naturally, you need to choose some way to power the coil! Pulsed D.C. or Sine wave field collapse are needed to power this coil! Regular D.C. is no good.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 05, 2014, 11:45:16 PM
@Bob,


         I hope I'm helping to crack the riddle. Once more: The series biflar cancels it's mutual fields out, but projects a tight vectored field outside the coil from pulse collapse. This lying down magnet wave is south pole leading. It's tighter than a "laser" according to Eric Dollard, I can confirm this from fishing for it!.


Here's a interesting "Toroid Monopole" video:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnpylPuC4Cc&list=UUo4TZccCL4Y6reMBGJSl0NQ
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 06, 2014, 06:58:38 PM
The spiral bifilar toroid blows a "Magnet Wave Smoke Ring", the hole in the smoke ring is the hidden north pole that powers the vortex. 0,A0) The paired couples. Born from the destruction of two mutual fields!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 06, 2014, 09:51:39 PM

The definitive video on the secret of the "Quantum Quadrode Amplifier": Imagine a powerful neo diametric tube magnet with output coils wrapped through and around the bore hole, positioned stationay where the compass is and fed the  same oscillating sine wave! Anyone wonder if the magnet core coil can exert any kind of Lenz drag on the bifilar A.C. current? We can gang the  "Lenz free" magnet coils up in spoke pattern to maximize output, right?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd5w8KhYrQk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd5w8KhYrQk)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 06, 2014, 11:14:15 PM
Here's a patent for something very close to my new idea:
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 06, 2014, 11:59:44 PM
The big difference between TK's spiral and the QQA is that the thick wire spiral bifilar toroid primary projects a field far enough away from the coil to prohibit the magnet core output coil from reaching back and raising impedance in the primary as the magnet coils would do on the TK's bifilar spiral, and the ferrite cores in the invention above.


A resonating LC tank would sustain a coil field in these magnet replacement coils for practically nothing. Might take a tuner capacitor to keep the adjusted resonating frequency in harmony with operating system hertz.  There's no draw on these coils because they don't do any work. The work is done on this coil field by magnetic induction from the sine wave reactive field. The spiral bifilar primary has no magnetic field in the coil because the mutual fields canceled out. The oscillating field comes from the A.C. current and the reactive field is amplified through the bifilar torus when the collapse occurs. Magnetic field forming reactive collapse and frequency are directly proportional. Higher A.C. frequencies would generate higher output!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 07, 2014, 12:43:38 AM
TK said he thinks it would heat up. My answer to this problem would be to build a twin, and reciprocate the two to include an adiabatic cooling cycle. This would require splitting the output bifilar, pausing the primary A.C. current, and pulsing the magnet with D.C.. The second bifilar winding would collect the demagnetization output, and return it to the source capacitors. This would cool the magnet. The sister coils would be on the A.C. magnetic induction heat producing output cycle. One side generates current while heating up and the other side while cooling down! 


Rather than a permanent magnet core, a D.C. coil with a sustained field, and Barium Titinate core would maximize the output from the cooling cycle.


I believe this is what the RMS transverter circuit's like that Aaron's sponsoring at over 40 times OU on Energetic Forum.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: MarkE on August 07, 2014, 01:59:12 AM
TK said he thinks it would heat up. My answer to this problem would be to build a twin, and reciprocate the two to include an adiabatic cooling cycle. This would require splitting the output bifilar, pausing the primary A.C. current, and pulsing the magnet with D.C.. The second bifilar winding would collect the demagnetization output, and return it to the source capacitors. This would cool the magnet. The sister coils would be on the A.C. magnetic induction heat producing output cycle. One side generates current while heating up and the other side while cooling down! 


Rather than a permanent magnet core, a D.C. coil with a sustained field, and Barium Titinate core would maximize the output from the cooling cycle.


I believe this is what the RMS transverter circuit's like that Aaron's sponsoring at over 40 times OU on Energetic Forum.
I hope you build it and show your results.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on August 07, 2014, 04:01:25 AM
The spiral bifilar toroid blows a "Magnet Wave Smoke Ring", the hole in the smoke ring is the hidden north pole that powers the vortex. 0,A0) The paired couples. Born from the destruction of two mutual fields!
Synchro1,
Thanks for the thoughtful explanations. I think we're on the same page, however I appreciate the detail you've provided. I can't help but think of Stan Deyo's smoke ring demos when speaking about anti-gravity.  There's also the question of scalar energy and communication broadcast.  In theory, if you're pulsing your bifi spiral ring, an identical ring properly configured should be able to receive transmitted energy and translate it into data or electricity, if I understand Tesla correctly (Pat 645 576, 1900:  http://www.teslauniverse.com/nikola-tesla-patents-645,576-transmission-of-energy (http://www.teslauniverse.com/nikola-tesla-patents-645,576-transmission-of-energy)).  I'll continue to watch your thread and progress with interest.
Bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 07, 2014, 03:14:36 PM

There 's a "Smog Harvester" and a "Transverter" in this video. The smog harvester is an oscillating LC tank circuit with a tunable inductor, that receives power from the A.C. current in the bifilar primary. The frequency of 400 hertz is tuned into by the "Harvester's" adjustable ferrite inductor core.


TK then debuts his "Transverter", with another oscillating LC tank circuit, and a neon bulb for load. Wiring a tuner capacitor to the inductor would allow the transverter to change oscillating frequency like the 'Smog Harvester". This would be identical the power receiver I just described to replace the Permanent Magnet. 


The Reactance formula includes frequency as a function of Reactive power. Therefore, Tinselkoala should double the output in his tunable oscillating receivers by doubling the frequency from 400 to 800 hertz picked up from the primary. This should double the output, without any additional input, because we're using power generated by the current in the wire from twice the sine wave field collapses!



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZ8Gl8KXXto&list=UUZFlznLV3IyePfbc2TfDetA (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZ8Gl8KXXto&list=UUZFlznLV3IyePfbc2TfDetA)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: stupify12 on August 07, 2014, 04:18:43 PM
Interesting information. Keep this thread updated.


Meow  ;D ;D
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 07, 2014, 04:32:28 PM
@Stupify12,


Thank you!


Tinselkoala can supply us with definitive "Proof of Concept" of the overunity effect and validation of Aron's group, simply by placing current reading probes on his  adjustable ferrite core "Smog Harvester" LC tank, then increasing sine wave oscillation frequency in his generator signal, then tuning to the higher frequency with the "Smog Harvester" inductor and measuring for higher output.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 07, 2014, 10:15:14 PM

Danial Nunez reports OU of 484%:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40ZGg2ofoFQ&list=UUo4TZccCL4Y6reMBGJSl0NQ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40ZGg2ofoFQ&list=UUo4TZccCL4Y6reMBGJSl0NQ)

From TK's recent Youtube comment:

"Using those new measurements which still show a 72 degree phase angle, I still get a COP of 4.5 to 1".

What a coincidence!


This is the kind of recovery circuit we're talking about: D.C. to A.C. inverter, stepped down to LC resonance then Amplified received by the LC output
stepped up and rectified and stored as D.C.
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on August 08, 2014, 03:56:29 AM
Synchro1
Quick question - if you're hitting the Hubbard-like coil & core arrangement with AC at coil resonance, do you still have to contend with Lenz' law in the windings on the cores in series?
Bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 08, 2014, 04:49:33 PM
Definitely! The invention would increase impedance and generate heat. Lot's of it!


The working principle behind the bifilar vectored field , is that we're allowed to position the receiver coil at a distance from the primary, that cancels any "Lenz effect" back on the primary, unlike the Hubbard failure, allowing for over unity output.  The primary vectored field can reach the receiver coil with a magnetic field, but the receiver coil can not reach the primary with it's BEMF to cause trouble.


Thane Heins isolates the primary in his bi-toroid transformer, to multply the power in multiple secondaries. 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 08, 2014, 05:50:21 PM
Borrowing from the Hubbard design; We can erect four spiral biflar toroid primaries in a box configuration. The four primaries would run off the same inverter signal. Now we have four receivers, and fully four times the output, for parctically the cost of one! The current doesn't do any work, it just recycles through a transformer, recifier back to the storage capacitor.


Coupled with variable receiver output coil frequency, so power can be adjusted by increasing resonace, we have the multiple ouput coils envisioned by Hubbard, along with his loop circuit. The resonant adjustable receiver capacitors, the multple ouput coils, and the loop circuit. This is the finished design!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 08, 2014, 08:11:42 PM
Just when I thought I had the finished product, I Imagined a Geodesic type "Rodin Coil" receiver in the center, surrounded by a sphere of "Serial Bifilar Toroids" vectored inward, in series, out of BEMF range, same circuit, but merely one tuning capacitor for the single receiver coil, and one control knob for both A.C. primary frequency and receiver resonance.


This would really look futuristic right? What an impressive looking reactor core that would make for some 'Star Trek" saga!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on August 08, 2014, 09:25:04 PM
Borrowing from the Hubbard design; We can erect four spiral biflar toroid primaries in a box configuration. The four primaries would run off the same inverter signal. Now we have four receivers, and fully four times the output, for parctically the cost of one! The current doesn't do any work, it just recycles through a transformer, recifier back to the storage capacitor.

Coupled with variable receiver output coil frequency, so power can be adjusted by increasing resonace, we have the multiple ouput coils envisioned by Hubbard, along with his loop circuit. The resonant adjustable receiver capacitors, the multple ouput coils, and the loop circuit. This is the finished design!
I'm hoping I'm understanding you correctly:
- 4 series-wound bifilar coils running off the same signal (kind of like what's done with Litz wire in some circuits). 
- output coils to receive signal from 4 initial coils - electrically (not inductively) "coupled"?
- is your loop circuit using a diode to send pulses back to the 4 primaries to create a standing wave? In this case, could you add a pickup coil to collect electricity from the standing wave without disturbing the resonance of the output coils?
- also, if achieving resonance is an issue, a caduceus winding would have multiple points of resonance while preserving the field cancellation effect of the swbf winding (fwiw).
Bob
 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 09, 2014, 11:35:48 AM
@Bob,


Just a few sketchy ideas I threw out. I'm living in Costa Rica far from shop in Northern California. It's really time to get some of these things on the test bench. Danial Nunez's overunity Rodin Coil's two channels of series bifilar coils. I lit some bulbs like he did, by running an amplified acoustic sound wave through a plain series bifilar coil, lots of fun! I built a two , two wire a series quadfilar spiral toroid, but I never tested it for OU. I was set it up for it and grew distracted. I did discover that pulsed D.C. on one SB quadfilar coil rectified to A.C. on the other.   


It looks like Nunez may vector A.C. magnet waves through the sister coil, maybe it magnifies the current without Lenz drag from the distance of the
wraps?
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: Bob Smith on August 09, 2014, 02:58:03 PM
Synchro1,
There's a lot of neat things to be done with a swbifi coil, and sometimes our best creativity takes place with what we have at hand. I haven't paid enough attention to the Rodin coil to really know what's going on.  I did like your quadfilar arrangement on the speaker wire cable. I went out and bought one off the shelf at Radio Shack, and picked up some schottky diodes.  Just have to hook it up.
 
I often wonder if there are simpler ways of achieving some serious game-changing results with salvaged components. For example, I mentioned in an earlier post that I had some four-winding toroids from a computer power supply that could be rigged up in some kind of series winding arrangement.  Similarly, looking at ways to re-wind cast-off DC motors to run and generate electricity...
 
There's stuff around, but it's finding sources, and most importantly time.
Good luck in CR. Pretty country - pura vida!
Bob
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 10, 2014, 05:49:55 PM

Take a look at this recent Akula coil dissection starting at 1:54: We see a wide diameter air core hybrid (solenoid, toroid) like the one under discussion in this thread! The spiral toroid is wrapped around a solenoid core in similar fashion. This kind of coil can vector a magnet wave to an oscillating receiver that is far enough out of range to prevent any back action on the primary. They show an oscillating LL ferrite receiver at the beginning of the video, but they don't show the coils interfacing. They show coils interfacing in the Tesla generator video that preceds it, grounded to a "Water pipe". 



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRE8FiUDF3s (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRE8FiUDF3s)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 11, 2014, 02:45:35 AM

I asked Tinselkoala to increase the frequency of his QEG primary, and adjust the self resonant frequency of his adjustable ferrite inductor receiver to check for increased output. Tinselkoala already put on this kind of show, starting at 2:50 in the video; He begins to increase the amplitude of his  square wave through a Tesla series bifilar pancake, and the brightness of his LED's increases with great intensity while the input current drops towards zero!
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvf9Uo7UVx0 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvf9Uo7UVx0)
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 12, 2014, 08:11:46 PM

The "EL" (Electro-Luminescent) light wire below demonstrates an increased brightness caused by increased frequency up to 2000 hertz:

"The AC frequency can run from 60Hz to 2000Hz, higher frequency results in a brighter display (but lower overall wire-life)".


                                          "Frequency has nothing to do with, and is completely independent of Amplitude."
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 12, 2014, 08:44:12 PM
TinselKoala threw me off his QEG thread for misrepresenting his "Works". He could double the speed of his D.C. motor, and any looped back output from a coupled generator, by doubling his frequency from 300 to 600 hertz alone with no increase in input power. I think the drop off point is around 800 hertz for D.C. motors like the 2000 hertz limit for EL's.  He just needs a tuner capacitor wired to his receiver coil, to raise the self resonating frequency to the increased primary hertz, and Voila, double the money!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 12, 2014, 09:15:13 PM
TinseKoala modulates his D.C. motor Amplitude by turning his receiver coil inside his QEG primary core and raising and lowering his motor R.P.M. This amounts to "Amplitude Modulation", or "AM". Wiring a tuner capacitor to the receiver coil would allow one to modulate the D.C. motor with Frequency, or "FM". My improvement turns TinselKoala's QEG into a simultaneous "AM"-"FM" broadcast power receiver! You can narrow the power range with the "AM" tuner and refine and maximize the efficiency with the "FM". Together these two wave modulators team into a very sophisticated motor controller.
 
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 12, 2014, 10:22:29 PM
Imagine a spinning disk magnet in front of TK's QEG primary, generating current in his receiver coil. Now oscillating sine wave frequency is stretched into an increased span of harvestable frequency, because the sine wave is going to spin the disk much faster then it could the D.C. motor. What would happen if we fixed the magnet's position and wrapped the receiver coil around the magnet? How much more power can we gain from increased frequency with the axle removed, just from the sine wave flux oscillation in the PM field? What's the upward limit?


The simplicity of the magnet receiver is that it dispenses with the self oscillating LC receiver, inductor and tuning capacitor, right? The magnet's a natural "Variable Frequency Receiver".
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 13, 2014, 12:05:02 AM
Here's my latest state of the art "Solid State Synchro Coil" concept: Place small, identical series bifilar spiral input coils at each end of a powerful diametric Neo tube magnet. Wire the spirals in series to one another. These two coils form an LL tank, and the self oscillating frequency is tuned to the A.C. operating frequency and magnetic resonance. A tuning capacitor can help form an adjustable LLC input oscillator.


The output coil needs to be wrapped end to end, the wire looping tight around at the ends, so it's running up and down the magnet. We power the twin spirals on each end with high frequency low amperage oscillating sine wave input, and rectify and store the vortex field output, crossing the longitudinal wraps. A tuner cap can help keep the output in resonance with the circuit.   


This kind of circuit can be three million times overunity in the megahertz range; Therefore, the input amperage needs to be scaled down toward zero to light a one hundred watt bulb without frying the output coil!
Title: Re: Solid State "Synchro Coil".
Post by: synchro1 on August 13, 2014, 07:10:07 PM
"Joel and I were successful in isolating and identifying the fundamental Ferromagnetic Resonant Frequency as being around 174.9 KHz".


The natural resonating frequency of Earth's magnetic field is 180 Khz, and coincidentally where Tesla fixed the frequency of his large Antenna in New Mexico.


The self resonating frequency of the LLC tank, twin spiral bifilars, and capacitor needs to be set at this magnetic resonant frequency and the A.C. oscillating sine wave operating frequency needs to match. This will cause the magnet to ring like the ferrite Joule Ringers.