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Author Topic: Creating TPU Steven_Mark  (Read 85264 times)

kajunbee

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #225 on: January 05, 2020, 04:39:55 PM »
There was a video if I remember correctly where he cut a pie section out. I haven't been able to locate it yet, but I'll keep looking.

Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #226 on: January 05, 2020, 04:46:05 PM »
I also read things about a video where its cut open but never really found that video.

The best I got is a picture from Mannix, wich apparently is the most primitive starting point that was given to him by SM himself.


Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #227 on: January 05, 2020, 05:13:52 PM »
https://www.quora.com/What-is-a-non-inductive-resistor-and-how-is-one-made

We want free electrons to release themselves from the material, so for the core, having a big magnetic field is a bad thing.

Magnetic fields take time to charge and discharge, wich we want to avoid.

We want small wavelenght standing waves with many nodes that shoot electrons perpendicular to the node points.

Its these electrons that we must use to create chain reaction.

kajunbee

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #228 on: January 05, 2020, 05:24:41 PM »
This was quite a few years back, so it may have been taken down by now.

Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #229 on: January 05, 2020, 05:25:34 PM »
When will people learn, nothing is eternal on youtube.

Pure lazyness.

sm0ky2

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #230 on: January 05, 2020, 06:58:22 PM »
Interesting historical fact:


Bells were never bells! We invented a reverse use for the device
By ADDING a hammer inside!
They were originally sound RECIEVERS / resonators
and physically connected to the substructure NOT “hanging”!


The sound of the air passing through the towers caused a resonant
vibration that rung the entire tower which in turn rang the larger building
They constantly produced sound, which is why they were destroyed by our
civilization.


The vibration of the metal inside the stone structures caused electric pressure
The rising amplitude gave it tension.
It is described this way by the old world very explicitly.


They used the energy to operate water and air compressors, that work differently
than ours do today. Without valves or separated chambers.
But rather pressure built up by motion such as that of the wind or a flowing river.
Fountains and wind powered channels are still functional around the world today.
Operating on free energy designed into the construction.
The same energy was converted into electricity and heat.
The oldest “induction heater” sits in a museum in Suzdal, dated to some 900 yrs ago.
4ftx4ftx12ft tall, and was known to heat the building it sits in.
Completely made of solid ceramic with 1/2” coils of an iron alloy wrapped through its’
interior, powered by electric oscillations the building harnessed.


The buildings were gigantic tank circuits designed to resonate from natural sources.
Just like TPU, stiffler 2&3coil, bendini , Tesla


A guy mad a wind generator out of bandsaw blades stretched horizontally
with a magnet placed 1/4 the length out that passed through a coil when the wind blows.
This is a physical representation of the principal. Like the rope experiment.
The singing bowls of India
Or a digereedoo
Old pipe organs
Blow wind across a resonant chamber in front of a tuning fork
It will cause the fork to resonate, as will a metronome tuned to
a resonant node of the fork operating nearby.


The physics are exactly the same



Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #231 on: January 05, 2020, 07:10:27 PM »
The wire core alloy should be wound with double wire or twisted pair wire then cut and attached. But now I worry about, parasitic capacitance that will make my waveguide a leaky waveguide.

So how long should the wire core be? Diameter is irrelevant.

At What submultiple of the schumann wavelenght should the wire be cut?

In electrical terms, not sound.

The goal is to reduce inductance and maximize impulse power transfer on nodes that shoot into space.

kajunbee

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #232 on: January 05, 2020, 07:23:52 PM »
The video quality is poor as usual so not much can be seen.https://youtu.be/tPuhI03ZMR8

Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #233 on: January 05, 2020, 07:31:57 PM »
Where does he open it?


kajunbee

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #234 on: January 05, 2020, 07:40:46 PM »
I only saw him cut section open around 4:45. I just fast forwarded to that point.

Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #235 on: January 05, 2020, 07:48:18 PM »
Yeah so I paused and cant see anything.

However my motivation has been increased.

kajunbee

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #236 on: January 05, 2020, 08:08:34 PM »
It is only a cutaway of the toroid which is what I was curious about. Unfortunately the video quality is poor. If your unable to see it then I'm not sure what the problem is. 

sm0ky2

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #237 on: January 05, 2020, 08:32:54 PM »
The version in that video is using normal ceramic ferrite rings
Found inside a power supply, or etc.
You can order them on eBay or amazon or cannabalize something
They are coiled in a “bucking” configuration.
2 coils per toroid
So the magnetic poles oppose each other n-n/s-s
With a gap between them about 1/6th of the circumference
very sloppily I might add....


The large ring is a stack of speaker rings (plastic?)
to hold the receiver coils in place.
Cap 1 is between the primaries
Cap 2 between the secondaries
The other ends are crossed 1-2
and 1 to a coil
2 to another coil
and the big coil uses a cap as the “virtual ground”
you can replace his reed switch with any other switch
to turn it off and on.
It’s just like Stiffler/Tesla it just is arranged differently
Pancake coils might work better/easier
His cylindrical coils require proper spacing between them
notice how large the gap is when they cut into it
Like the “string can intercom”, works best at distance intervals



The outer coils are wound in the same direction
So they cooperate
The inner coils buck against each other, and the difference
in timing between them (because it’s not well built) causes the
physical vibration (losses).




Tune the big coil to your favorite FM station
and screw up their advertising budget while you harvest
power from their station.


Tune it to 60 Hz, and get rid of your wall outlets....


Or.... tune it to 7.81~??




sm0ky2

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #238 on: January 05, 2020, 08:55:40 PM »
There’s square/rectangular stacked metal plate transformers
That have bucking coils on each side.
These can replace his toroids.
And probably way more efficient


The round shape of the antenna is not important
We can make a square one, or any shape as long as
the geometry and spacing allows the 2 smaller coils
to pick up the field from the big one, and feed it into
both of the bucking transformers.


To describe that magnetically, it’s like the reactive inductance
large motors can put on a load meter.
Or the “virtual current” a large generator puts out just before
it kicks on.


The pickup coils catch the signal from the larger receiver coil
from the top and from the bottom.
(which is amplified by the capacitor)
each one feeds half of a bucking coil
This in turn charges the other half across the cap
because the whole toroid develops a field not just the half
The “virtual energy” is added back into the circuit the 2nd
half of the cycle.


The toroid coils aren’t important for it to work.
Of course the better they are wound, the more efficient the
energy conversion.
But the whole of the functionality lies in the receiver coils.
They must operate constructively with the input frequency.
Not destructively.
That is the key.




Toolofcortex

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Re: Creating TPU Steven_Mark
« Reply #239 on: January 05, 2020, 09:24:33 PM »
There no difference between ferrite and alloy wire. Alloy wire will allow for longer wavelength.

I’ll have to shop for materials and decide on a variety of designs.