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Author Topic: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments  (Read 730 times)

Offline SkyWatcher123

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Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« on: March 13, 2023, 08:27:55 PM »
Hi all, I've changed tracks a little, was experimenting with capacitor dumping methods and i am now experimenting with the Stingo oscillator from Sucahyo.
If you are out there Sucahyo, please visit this thread and let us know what you are up to.
The results with the battery charging circuit, with the modified capacitor/full wave bridge have been very promising so far.
I purchased a new 12 volt FVP flooded lead acid lawn battery for testing.
The battery right from the store showed 12.46 volts and after a couple cycles, discharging down to 12.60 volts loaded voltage and then recharging with oscillator, after letting battery rest overnight, the battery now sits at around 13.00 volts.
And the loaded discharge voltage is holding at a higher level.
I think the circuit has been de-sulphating the battery and will make it closer to new.
And it is not surface charge, that is for sure.
I was able to charge the battery up to 15.40 volts, although John Bedini said, that 15.60 volts or 2.60 volts per cell, is the ideal charging finish voltage, to be sure all sulphates are reintegrated back into the electrolyte, thus allowing the battery to last 15 years, rather than 4-5 years.
I will be posting the circuit drawing i am using at the moment and a picture of my "physical" setup here.
All comments welcome.
peace love light :)

Offline SkyWatcher123

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Re: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« Reply #1 on: March 14, 2023, 12:51:15 AM »
Hi folks, here is the schematic.
I have the circuit set to use about 9.5 watts, when charging a 12 volt 300 CCA lawn battery.
Forgot to put in drawing, the speaker wire coil is 200 feet length, each speaker wire is in series.

All comments welcome.
peace love light :)


https://i.postimg.cc/1RbD4nXf/Sucahyo-stingo-oscillator-pancake-coil.png

Offline panyuming

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Re: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« Reply #2 on: March 14, 2023, 10:42:35 AM »
Hi folks, here is the schematic.

Thank you so much SkyWatcher123 for sharing。
PNP Transistor emitter On top. It doesn't matter.

The two-wire coil, similar to the Tesla pancake coil, increases the coil's own capacitance.
This slows down the rise of the coil's back EMF when the transistor is closed.
Maybe it works better.

Looking forward to your introduction of the best results.

Thank you

Offline SkyWatcher123

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Re: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« Reply #3 on: March 16, 2023, 06:10:32 AM »
Hi panyuming, the pnp emitter is correct in the drawing, this way it draws 1/4 of the current, compared to the pnp emitter in the normal way and gives the same output.


I have the speaker wire pancake coil wound the easy way, where one wire of the pair, is above the other so basically a 1 wire spiral coil, on top of each other.


I also became aware, that the oscillator may give even sharper pulses, if no resistors are in the path from pnp collector to npn base, so i removed the 10 Kohm potentiometer and 600 ohm resistor and placed the 10 Kohm resistor and a 2.2 Kohm resistor in place of the 10 Kohm resistor, that is on the path to the pnp base.


I'm running tests everyday and i will share all my results.
peace love light  :)


 

Offline panyuming

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Re: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« Reply #4 on: March 16, 2023, 08:45:50 AM »
Hi panyuming, the pnp emitter is correct in the drawing, this way it draws 1/4 of the current, compared to the pnp emitter in the normal way and gives the same output.

Good. It just works fine.
The usual transistor is used in reverse, and the magnification decreases a lot,
mainly because the reverse withstand voltage is about 6~8V.
Your TIP142 is a Darlington transistor,
so the reverse withstand voltage exceeds your 12V supply voltage.
Yes, it can be used.

Thank you again for sharing and wish you success!

Offline SkyWatcher123

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Re: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« Reply #5 on: March 17, 2023, 04:57:40 AM »
Hi panyuming, yes it works well enough.
I'm testing a new coil setup.
This coil is three 24awg. magnet wires, wound trifilar at 1.4 ohms.
This coil and former, is placed on a ferrite flyback c-core, from television.


The efficiency is better, using 2 watts less and giving more output current.
The frequency is much lower, with the ferrite core, though the 2 halves of
the core, are not connecting, probably a 1/4" gap.
Experiments shall continue.
All comments welcome
peace love light 

Offline panyuming

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Re: Sucahyo Stingo Oscillator Experiments
« Reply #6 on: March 17, 2023, 10:06:50 AM »
Hi panyuming, yes it works well enough.

Experiments shall continue.
All comments welcome
peace love light

I'm going to put this thread of yours and other threads that charge the battery with pulses.
Classified as a Bedini device.

Previously I studied Bedini device.
See that many points are included:
1. The effect of rotating wheel magnet passing through the coil.
2. Multi-stranded wire and 7 transistor driven coils.
3. The speed of the reverse peak voltage rise when the coil is cut-off.
4. Charge the battery with the reverse peak voltage of the coil.
5. Charge the capacitor with the coil reverse peak voltage.
6. Charge the battery with capacitor discharge.

I can't guess which of them causes the OU effect.
I have only experimented with charging lead-acid batteries with coil fast reverse peak voltage.
No OU phenomenon was measured.
Because I heard that fast pulses can elicit 'radiant energy'.
I spark the lead-acid battery directly.
Think this is the fastest pulse I get along with.
The OU phenomenon was also not measured.

Learn to copy someone else's device,
It may be only a little bit closer to success.

I heard a story from the 1940s.
There is a company that can make very good large lenses.
In addition, corporatization buys their secrets at a high price.
Inform after the transaction: non-stop stirring.

So I envy your hard experimenters who get the OU effect.