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Solid States Devices => solid state devices => Topic started by: SilverDigger on May 22, 2020, 09:55:16 PM
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A square wave input to an iron core transformer is a great way to generate electricity. The harmonics of the 50% duty cycle square wave have a tremendous effect on the iron, generating a higher voltage. Do not mix this with electronegativity, it will explode.
An example of how this can be used in a circuit can be found here. https://youtu.be/hV7CKvXzpBk
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one interesting detail, at resonant frequency transformer turns squarewave into sinewave
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one interesting detail, at resonant frequency transformer turns squarewave into sinewave
I wonder why is this not used in inverters instead of complex d class amps they use.
I guess transformer resonant at 50Hz would have to be huge.
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A square wave input to an iron core transformer is a great way to generate electricity. The harmonics of the 50% duty cycle square wave have a tremendous effect on the iron, generating a higher voltage. Do not mix this with electronegativity, it will explode.
An example of how this can be used in a circuit can be found here. https://youtu.be/hV7CKvXzpBk
Same idea here: https://overunity.com/16039/quantum-generator/msg461022/#msg461022 (https://overunity.com/16039/quantum-generator/msg461022/#msg461022)
It works! I connected a Frequency Generator to the same transformer referenced in the email/screenshot and connected a multimeter to the DC output and swept through the frequencies using a square wave, and sure enough the higher harmonics gave a greater DC voltage output.
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