Storing Cookies (See : http://ec.europa.eu/ipg/basics/legal/cookies/index_en.htm ) help us to bring you our services at overunity.com . If you use this website and our services you declare yourself okay with using cookies .More Infos here:
https://overunity.com/5553/privacy-policy/
If you do not agree with storing cookies, please LEAVE this website now. From the 25th of May 2018, every existing user has to accept the GDPR agreement at first login. If a user is unwilling to accept the GDPR, he should email us and request to erase his account. Many thanks for your understanding

User Menu

Custom Search

Author Topic: Lords of the Ring  (Read 950315 times)

giantkiller

  • TPU-Elite
  • Hero Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 2791
    • http://www.planetary-engineering.com
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2265 on: September 06, 2007, 06:58:10 AM »
@acerzw,
Sure. I will post everything. Sharing is caring.
The only complicated part would the asm for the 1, 1.5, 2 modulus freqs. I have to dig in the manual to see their mult and div statements. If that is there then piece of cake. Actually that is a stupid statement. I just figure out the bit count to speed and dump that into the counter registers. I'm done. 8)

I did realize that there are quite a few posts on the freqs and jdo300 is heading that way with a uchip & digital signal chip solution. We talked about the Parallax quite a bit. It is agreed that the digital control would be the best. Analog jumps and could jump into a banger. That was proved in my last scope movie on youtube.  :o  I connect all this in a bit.

Now for some history:
Tesla stated that the spark killed men, metallic objects became charged. Those 2 statements imply power and field size.
Now my part. Whoever has not been to my website then they will not know I have stainless steel in my feet from an accident. I also carry the staphylococci  from a hospital accident. So I kept my coil generated field size below the 2 ft radius to keep the field from the metal in my feet. I cannot afford to have the metal discharge at all and cause any blemish on the surfaces. The staph would rush to the site and cause infection. Already been there, am not going back again.

Now you all understand my harping on safety.

We will now return to our regularly scheduled program.

--giantkiller.
« Last Edit: September 06, 2007, 11:16:29 PM by giantkiller »

acerzw

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 455
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2266 on: September 06, 2007, 07:34:22 AM »
GK,
     When I try to view your website I just get a blank page? is it working?

acerzw

bolt

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 921
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2267 on: September 06, 2007, 09:09:22 AM »
Here is a very nice audio amp i found with a quick google. Very simple class A mosfet amp which is DC coupled and will have extremely wide bandwidth should easily run DC to a 1 meg i recon. The only drawback is the split rails supply but hey if your going to do this then give it the best shot. If it works then scaling back on quality can come later and you can then use this a very nice home hi fi amp so it wont go to waste no matter what happens. I heard this class A stuff before it just has to be heard the difference really is amazing! Even at 3 Hz your speaker cone will just move in and out like a piston LOL and this is exactly what SM is describing to make the TPU work.

Half way down this page http://www.geocities.com/leobodnar/audio_amplifiers.html

i didn't know you was bionic so better use a handheld kill switch instead.


Mannix

  • elite_member
  • Hero Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 564
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2268 on: September 06, 2007, 01:00:24 PM »


That is a nice starting point for a mosfet audio amp...if only you had a running coil to use it on you
might be able to learn to protect it somehow ..it only took Steven 10 years to do so.

I wonder how it will respond to 5khz spikes and wide band RF hash finding its way back to the output fets?

read his stuff again, this is futile for me

I 'm done here, for a time much longer than those fets will last.








bolt

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 921
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2269 on: September 06, 2007, 01:39:00 PM »
easy.......there wont be any RF nor pulses. This is a musical instrument and such no RF should be generated. Do your mains transformer at home create RF and hash? Mine dont.

giantkiller

  • TPU-Elite
  • Hero Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 2791
    • http://www.planetary-engineering.com
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2270 on: September 06, 2007, 06:17:22 PM »
GK,
     When I try to view your website I just get a blank page? is it working?

acerzw

It is a browser problem. I handcrafted the page in straight HTML. You using firefox?

--giantkiller.

acerzw

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 455
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2271 on: September 06, 2007, 08:08:41 PM »
@giantkiller,

Yes, Firefox on Ubuntu Linux, all open source, don't you know.

However I do have a small XP partition on my main machine for old times sake, so I will boot that and take a look...

Anyway GK, keep up the good work, I am impressed that you are doing this with metal in your person, must be a nightmare at the airport... so I can see that the next project needs to be anti-gravity so we can build a UFO and avoid all those airport checks...

I probably will post a little something in the AM for group moral boosting purposes. I do think that once the TPU replication is done an dusted (before Xmas to keep our Walmart friend happy) that the accumulated knowledge of all on this thread who care to participate should be applied to building an anti-gravity device. After all with all the free-energy, we will need to use if for something worthwhile, and powering banks of 100w light-bulbs is not awe inspiring to me.

So I propose that we use the energy to power a anti-grav device. We know it can be done from the www.hutchinsoneffect.ca website, so we just need to perfect it. The Tibetans have done it for Hundreds of years with music and as bolt says we have a musical instrument. I strongly believe that the TPU is not far off a functioning AG device, the whole universe it built of waves, just a case of learning to resonate them in the right way. I am convinced that RE is related to Wilhelm Reich's orgone energy. Much research leads me to believe that ions and a TPU like device can do it.

Anyway, until later and hopefully in the AM I will post a little something...

Acerzw (or Robert)
« Last Edit: September 07, 2007, 03:29:48 AM by acerzw »

rensseak

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 330
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2272 on: September 06, 2007, 09:29:13 PM »
@giantkiller,

Yes, Firefox on Ubuntu Linux, all open source, don't you know.

However I do have a small XP partition on my main machine for old times sake, so I will boot that and take a look...

Acerzw (or Robert)


http://www.denver.net/~paul/main.htm

works better with linux (Debian).

Norbert

giantkiller

  • TPU-Elite
  • Hero Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 2791
    • http://www.planetary-engineering.com
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2273 on: September 06, 2007, 11:11:08 PM »
Futurlec.com order:
DEVLCD Development Board 16x2 LCD 1 $11.90 $11.90
DM-UT30F Data-Hold Digital Multimeter with Frequency Meas. 1 $12.90 $12.90
GRCABLE10 Grey Ribbon Cable - 10 core 2 $0.40 $0.80
GRCABLE14 Grey Ribbon Cable - 14 core 1 $0.45 $0.45
IDCC10 10 Contact IDC Socket Connector 8 $0.25 $2.00
IDCC14 14 Contact IDC Socket Connector 1 $0.25 $0.25
MCCABLE10 Multicolor Ribbon Cable - 10 core 1 $0.50 $0.50
MINIDAC DAC Mini Board 1 $9.90 $9.90
PIC18F8720CONT PIC18F8720 Controller 1 $35.90 $35.90
POLHDCON2 2 Pin .100 Polarized Header Connector 1 $0.15 $0.15
POLHDCON4 4 Pin .100 Polarized Header Connector 1 $0.17 $0.17
PSPI Development Board Program Download Cable 1 $2.50 $2.50
RS232CONN Development Board RS232 Connection Cable 1 $2.50 $2.50
SDP8 SDP8 - 8 Seven Segment Display Board 1 $22.90 $22.90
TESTINPUT Test Input Board 2 $4.50 $9.00
Subtotal $111.82
Shipping $14.00
Total $125.82

Shipping 1-2 weeks
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MPlab ide downloaded and installed
Manuals printed
Training curve started.

Process model started for the frequency loops.
Will decide on Opensource VB ide clone to create pc interface to Uctrlr board through serial cable. WIll migrate to blue tooth later. Have another project that needs this.

Sites for tube stuff.
http://www.askjanfirst.com/eindex.htm

And as a back up for the xr-2206 sine wave output.
http://www.loetstelle.net/projekte/xr2206neu/xr2206neu.php
Got to find the supplier of small quantity of chips for < $100us. Anybody?

Now on to the amplifier stage...

And for you picture buffs:
http://tmpgenc.pegasys-inc.com/en/product/tme_feature.html
http://picturecode.com/index.htm

--giantkiller. My goal has been to finitely reproduce the Hutchison effect. Maybe injecting different type waveforms. 8)




acerzw

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 455
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2274 on: September 06, 2007, 11:48:11 PM »
GK,
     You have another project that needs that... crikey dude, exactly how many hands do you have?  :o

I looked at your web page and I see that you have at least 3!  :o

Eek I thought I was a bit of a geek, you really are the six million dollar man, gotta envy a tech spec like that... f**k if I had a quarter of that on my CV I would be happy, and as for the DoomRod that has to be the coolest FPS accessory I have ever seen... 8)  Well with your CV If you can't replicate the TPU, then I really don't think anyone else on the planet will...  ;)

Acerzw

giantkiller

  • TPU-Elite
  • Hero Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 2791
    • http://www.planetary-engineering.com
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2275 on: September 07, 2007, 12:01:43 AM »
@acerzw,

Obsessive, Compulsive Creativity (OC2, I am my own chemical compound). LOL. If you get to the web page you see will a Finish line for children's pinewood derby races. This version uses cables. I have the race tracking software done and want to hook the 2 together so that after registration the device runs the pc.
OBTW: I've  built hands too.

--giantkiller. No sleep, no life, no time, only progress.LOL.

acerzw

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 455
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2276 on: September 07, 2007, 12:12:25 AM »
Hey GK,

You know you don't have the monopoly on Obsessive Compulsive Disorder on this forum, I got that too! (really).

Does kinda screw up your sleep/wake cycle something cronic... but hey the brightest lights burn quickest  ???

Acerzw, will post again in the AM...

giantkiller

  • TPU-Elite
  • Hero Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 2791
    • http://www.planetary-engineering.com
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2277 on: September 07, 2007, 12:31:30 AM »
Go this excerpt from the amp site.
Quote
Class A power amplifier designed to drive loudspeakers. Initially I wanted to use separate heavily asymmetrical PSU biasing opamp into full class A for the whole swing of output voltage but not after I have heard it play. The sound is gorgeous! This sound is bright and crisp. Bass is so punchy - I did not think my Tannoys Mercury M2.5 would sound so good. Actually after finishing wiring a prototype I spent two days just sitting a listening to my favorite albums again and again...
 
This is the best design I have came up so far!
I use two 6x6x4cm heatsinks per channel. Power supply is unregulated (just transformer, diode bridge and capacitors) but I cannot hear anything even when I put my ear within few centimeters of the loudspeaker. Opamp has very good power supply rejection ratio. I've tried to keep everything as simple as possible and basically LM317 would be just one extra opamp... If you are looking for better sound, get separate regulated low power supply just for the U1 opamp, something like +-15V at 100-200 mA.
I have also used one LM7805 to get bias for both channels - you may want to use two separate 7805 in a final amp to get better channel separation. R2 pot is anything from 500 to 50k. I have used 22k.

To convert this to a headphone amp just use lower gain (1..3) and possibly regulated power supply. Of course idle current should be brought down to 50-100mA.


I personally prefer AD826 against OPA2604 but the difference is so small I am not even sure that it exists. The amp has so few components and is so simple that no single component can colour the sound too much. And no single electrolytics beside bypass for opamp (2x100uF), at least not in signal path!

The split rail is not bad. But I have never seen a voltage regulator used like that. A slick trick.

Correction to doco here:
http://www.analog.com/en/prod/0,2877,AD826,00.html

(6) AD826 ordered.

acerzw

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 455
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2278 on: September 07, 2007, 02:07:16 AM »
@all

Since it's early in the AM here, and us night owls are out and about, I think its time for a piece of eye candy. Since I haven't built anything yet here's a little tribute to those who can and do, so if you want to feel part of this good old collaborative open source convoy, just print out this sucker and stick it on your wall, your dog, your car, your fridge or anything else that needs brightening up... and then fasten your seat belts for the rest of this journey...  8)

Acerzw, here's to you all...

(since it's open source please find the original in a zipped Open Office Draw file.)
« Last Edit: September 07, 2007, 04:04:32 AM by acerzw »

giantkiller

  • TPU-Elite
  • Hero Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 2791
    • http://www.planetary-engineering.com
Re: Lords of the Ring
« Reply #2279 on: September 07, 2007, 05:39:24 AM »
I think this vid applies: