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Author Topic: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?  (Read 10173 times)

tinman

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #15 on: February 09, 2019, 03:05:41 PM »
Hello Hoppy, Citfta, Grumage,
Thanks for the info on the SSG's. So it seems input power draw can vary quite a bit
depending on the exact setup.

It can vary from Uw to Kw,just depends on how big you want to go.
Of course a Kw motor would be rather large  :D

Most desktop SSG pulse motors draw around 50-200mA @ 12 volt's.
You then should be able to recover around 80% of that through your inductive kickback when the motor is tuned correctly.

Then there is the window motor  ;)
Below is a video of my first window motor,where i used magnetic bearings for the shaft.
This is the one i thing may have self run had i used Schottky diodes to reduce the V/drop across the diodes,which you can see was around .8v across the standard diodes i used.

The run caps are 2x 1000uF 25 volt cap's--so not a large storage capacity.
But if you look at the big paddle rotor,and take into account the amount of air that would be shifting,then i think it was doing quite well  ;)

This was back in 2012,and i had only just begun this free energy stuff.
Had no idea about  Schottky diodes back then.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=67R5ksfFF14


Brad

Void

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #16 on: February 09, 2019, 05:05:52 PM »
Hi Brad. Wow, that really is a very efficient window motor. The total draw
on the run capacitors must have only been very small indeed for the voltage to fall
that slowly. Well done!

AlienGrey

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #17 on: February 09, 2019, 05:38:08 PM »
Ok. I have a dumb question. Anyone, please chip in.
Is it possible to replace the battery in the SG motor with a supercapacitor?  From my limited understanding of the device, that would not work.  But what do you all think?
That's a good point as a LAcid battery wastes 50% of the energy in its process.

trevstar

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #18 on: February 11, 2019, 03:56:20 AM »
Well I started this thread looking for a good SG Motor but now I have found something BETTER!  This guy created a crystal battery that lasted a year and a half. I n another video he has batteries running up to four years! The batteries are easy to build and have decent power. They run MOTORS not LEDs.  In another video he put together 10 batteries to run a decent sized fan, about 15 volts. I am going to work on this now!Trevor
http://action.news/watch?v=Mzq_qWIhamQ


skywatcher

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #19 on: February 11, 2019, 08:04:29 PM »
What's the point about running a small motor from a battery ?

trevstar

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #20 on: February 11, 2019, 09:08:41 PM »
Well it's not just a motor, it can power anything you want and to get more power you just add more batteries. This does not even have to be practical. Personally, I just love having a device that will run day after day, week after week......  up into years.  I can see a lot of fun with this.  Imagine a demo where you fit this on a toy car and it goes around in circles for months at a time!  Or you give a fan to a friend and they have it blowing in their roomweek after week after.................    The main problem would be the fan or the car breaking down not the power source.   Here is where  the batteries are running a decent sized fan.

http://action.news/watch?v=QZ0oCND23S4


skywatcher

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #21 on: February 11, 2019, 09:26:43 PM »
But it's still only a chemical battery. You can have the same results by using a normal battery of comparable size and weight. And it's not 'free' because you have to pay for the material, which will be depleted after some time, like in any normal battery.

We should start thinking about new ideas, not building the 1001st non-working magnet motor which has not worked 1000 times before... and the same applies for 'crystal batteries' which also don't work, at least not in the sense of 'free energy'. This forum can be useful as some kind of 'blacklist' of non-working ideas.

trevstar

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #22 on: February 11, 2019, 09:42:27 PM »
I would like to know which regular battery can run a motor for 4 years. He has motors running that long and he shows where he cut one open and there is still plenty of the electrode left.  Sure, I have a digital watch that has gone about 5 years on the same battery but it is not a motor being run.  Would I prefer something like a gravity wheel that runs forever from overbalancing. SURE!  But this is something I can access right now, I understand if it does not grab your enthusiasm.  But I like it.

skywatcher

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #23 on: February 11, 2019, 09:55:26 PM »
Laserhacker (the guy in the video) has made motors which run for many hours on a small capacitor. They only need some microamps to run. It would be absolutely no problem to run such a motor from a single battery for some years. Ok, if you have fun playing with such things feel free to do it, you can always learn something and it's better than playing stupid video games...  ;)

trevstar

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #24 on: February 12, 2019, 12:04:30 AM »
Agreed, much better than video games!  ;)

ayeaye

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Re: Bedini SG Motor Worth Buying?
« Reply #25 on: August 07, 2019, 03:01:38 PM »
One reason to buy it yes. Would anyone actually measure whether this thing, Bedini SG, has any overunity? Quite difficult to do, this involves measured discharge of the batteries to see how much energy there actually was in the batteries. As the Bedini sharp pulses are the way to create surface charge most easily. Also the worst treatment of the battery, though this is not the most important. Plus constantly measuring the speed of the wheel, using a stroboscope or whatever, to calculate the energy that went to the rotation of the wheel. The most difficult is to measure how much energy actually went to the wheel and to the battery from hand, by the manual start. Very weird but, in spite of so many people making it, no one ever measured whether it actually has overunity, Wherever, in the device itself or in the batteries, no one has ever measured whether there is or is not overunity anywhere there. To buy it and being happy to see that it rotates, charges battery too, i don't see it as a great joy, one is happy to make an electric motor, what a big deal is in that? Thus the only reason i see, is when one is actually going to do any overunity measurements, and no, just measuring the voltage on the battery is not that. Just my two cents, if one may want to see it so.

One more thing, how long it runs, is not a way to measure overunity, Overunity is not about something running forever, it is about whether energy out was more than the energy in, and only that. Thus the only way to actually measure overunity, is to measure how much energy went in, and how much energy came out. All the rest is just talk, may be right or may be not, but has no value because it is not an actual measurement. Not an experimental method, in strict terms.