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Author Topic: Successful TPU-ECD replication !  (Read 1139027 times)

sn7401

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1635 on: January 15, 2010, 03:38:48 AM »
Hi guys,

@Otto

I did the test, in my setup I used ATmega8 as generator which drives the IRF840 directly, without IRF7307 becose they need to be pulsed with negative half-wave pulse from generator, if i understand correctly the schematic diagramm from *.pdf V1.0. You see, Im not a profesional High-frequncy/radio/analog schematic guy, Im just a programer with some
electronics skills, so I think this 900V kicks is a so called backEMF. Am I right?
Indeed, in series CC conection this kick are bigger then in parallel conection. Why it so? Inductivity of the coils is bigger?
Very unusual coils, I can't wait to finish my second oscilator to apply two frequencies.
Its obviously better to make one big CC coil over all collector wire... I think...
« Last Edit: January 15, 2010, 08:32:09 AM by sn7401 »

sn7401

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1636 on: January 15, 2010, 05:09:46 AM »
@Otto,

I put scope probe on MOSFET drain, and scope gnd on the common gnd....
(scope: 100V/div 10us/div, oscilator 50% duty cycle)
So this small hash on the picture is a seed? Or I'm on the wrong way?

otto

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1637 on: January 15, 2010, 08:44:29 AM »
Hello all,

@sn7401

seed??? hmmm.....looks more like the beginning of something big...its good.

Otto

sn7401

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1638 on: January 15, 2010, 05:56:48 PM »
@Otto,

have you seen this before?
what do you think about this coils?

otto

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1639 on: January 15, 2010, 06:18:38 PM »
Hello all,

@sn7401

never seen  it but I suppose to know from where you got this drawing.

I would be a total idiot if if would say its bad.

So, as its easy to build just do it!! Build it, test it and tell us what you have.

Otto

turbo

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1640 on: January 15, 2010, 07:44:02 PM »

I would be a total idiot if if would say its bad.


It is bad  :)

Now i'm a total idiot.
Or am i ?

Otto, how long are you planning to keep fooling yourself?
It has been a long time already....

I would like to point you to the fact that there are more devices then just the TPU..
It never hurts to look around! t r u s t  m e

sn7401

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1641 on: January 15, 2010, 09:28:28 PM »
Hello all,

So, as its easy to build just do it!! Build it, test it and tell us what you have.


Yes I wiil do, but there is some question...
In the drawing said - "The wires between the acceleration coils have to be parallel (to create capacitance)"
It mean acceleration coils wire or collector ring wires? This a bit confusing me...

Mannix

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1642 on: January 16, 2010, 01:33:20 AM »
Here is Otto's document on how he achieved his results

http://www.overunity.com/index.php?action=downloads;sa=view;down=359

otto

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1643 on: January 16, 2010, 12:46:01 PM »
Hello all,

@Mannix

thanks

Otto

PS: ignore this document

EMdevices

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1644 on: January 17, 2010, 07:35:41 AM »
just add water and the "seed" will germinate    :)    JK

@otto,
don't regret anything,  you did good work!

EM

otto

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1645 on: January 18, 2010, 07:27:21 AM »
Hello all,

@Marco

youre a fine man but frustrated. We know that you have spent a lot of money to build a TPU and the result was always "0" - zero. Nobody had success. Nobody because we have always builded only coils and forgot to use cores.
A time ago I have "discovered" that a 4" TPU has the weight of 1 POUND!!
I posted this!
And its pure logic: why to build TPUs without a core when you can use a core that will give the needed power. Dont even think a core will saturate or you will have trouble with a core. They are doing a fine "job". The needed job to say so.

Yes, there are other devices. Lets look at Tesla:

big devices with a lot of "iron" as cores. Of course he didnt use iron!
But if you dont understand the Tesla patents you cant build a TPU or in another way, if you dont understand a TPU you will also fail with SOME Tesla patents.

Just to mention what yesterday happened on my workbench:

The Tesla patent 390 721 for a rotating magnetic field.
I didnt use my drawing because I "know" this patent and started to connect some coils. Input is the 1. coil, the next is the 3. coil, the next is the 2. coil, the next and last is the 4. coil. Fine. I connected the 1. and 3. coil and then....hmmmm....I know this patent....hmmmm......

I KNOW A PIECE OF SHIT!!!

Look at this patent!!!

What I want to say is that we are so clever....we know everything. Our egos are sooooo big. To be honest, we know nothing! At least I know nothing. But the good news is that Im learning, ha,ha.

I never thought that a TPU would be a fake or that there are hided a lot of batteries or such crap. Now after almost 3 years I still want a TPU like the first day I saw the videos. It will be finnished maybe this year, maybe next year, maybe never but I dont want even to see other devices that are maybe working or not. I only want a TPU. If I have to give my life for it then OK.
I hope you see that Im totally ocupated with the TPU and I dont want to stop my work on it.

@EM

Im giving water and the seed germinated to 120V DC. I would love to have 110V bulbs but as Im in Europe I need 240V. But trust me its not a problem.

Thanks for the "flowers" but you did also a very good job!!

@All

I still dont want to talk about my document. I even dont want to say "follow me" because.....Im the one who wants to be famous, not you, ha,ha, Im joking.

This docu is for people that can understand what is shown and ..... lets say, its for the next generation.

As said, ignore it and play with your coils.

Otto



sparks

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1646 on: January 18, 2010, 08:15:40 AM »
    If we take an ac motor stator but instead of powering it with a generated input we make the windings inductors in an lc network.  Then we excite the 3 seperate tanks with dely pulses to get them ringing at the same frequency but out of phase.  The rotor will see a rotating magnetic field.  We could get rid of the rotor and the l in the tanks could become solenoids wrapped around a core.  There are all sorts of different forms of energy capacitors.

forest

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1647 on: January 18, 2010, 11:58:50 AM »
rotating magnetic field is a field
create kick  on it a let them rotate and convert into big kicks
simple

otto

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1648 on: January 18, 2010, 12:42:14 PM »
@forest

you can have it even simpler:

create a really big kick because of the core and again because of the core set it convert into something like a sine.

Simple?

Oh, forgot: let the core automatically create the needed frequency for a rotation.

Simple?

Oh, forgot: ignore my document!!!

THIS is the best way.

Otto

sparks

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Re: Successful TPU-ECD replication !
« Reply #1649 on: January 18, 2010, 01:47:35 PM »
Yes a rotating magnetic field is a field.  And as the polarized field is caused to rotate it induces currents in conductors that appear as stationary to the rotating magnetic field.  In an induction motor these induced currents produce a relavently stationary magnetic field that tries to catchup with the stator rotating magnetic field.  Kicks will degenerate into any number of waveforms depending on the circuit upon which they are imposed. Three kicks degenerating in three different tanks appears to me as a combination of kicks that would produce a rotating magnetic field relative to a stationary observer or what most people call an alternator or if the slip frequency is designed correctly an induction motor.  Timing is crtical.  The rotating magnetic field stores energy just like a spinning top.