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Author Topic: Bedini's gates magnet motor  (Read 24552 times)

Marcel

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Bedini's gates magnet motor
« on: April 19, 2008, 06:24:11 PM »
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OCMFNRxQp4

Hi all,
Here is a complete setup for a magnetic motor from the Bedini's theory.
No torque. The system is 100% balanced.
I have spent a month of my poor short life.

Marcel

gyulasun

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Re: Bedini's gates magnet motor
« Reply #1 on: April 20, 2008, 12:35:44 PM »
Hi Marcel,

Excellent workmanship! 

Though I have not built this kind of setup,  I ask whether you considered the total weight or mass of you rotor and compared it to the possible torque gains of the individual gates?  All I mean is perhaps a much lighter rotor weight or mass would already show a slow rotation?

Because I assume when you remove all the stators except one, then the rotor as it is shown now in the video or in your picture will go through that one stator gate with some gain?  You surely tested this?

And you surely have seen Naudin tests on this setup? http://jnaudin.free.fr/html/mgmnu.htm   It shows a gain in forces but the question is the force gained is enough for moving a certain (and how much) rotor mass?

Keep up the excellent work and do not give up!

rgds,  Gyula

Paul-R

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Re: Bedini's gates magnet motor
« Reply #2 on: April 20, 2008, 04:03:50 PM »
There is a belief among the cognoscenti, especially those in the minatowheel
Yahoo Group, that a symmetrical wheel will not work because the fields "wrap
around" themselves and short circuit.

If you took out one, or maybe two stations, and provided an electomagnet which
gave a closely regulated small push, it might help. Also, the motor might work at
a critical speed, and at no other. It might pay to drive the wheel with a variable
speed motor, and measure the shaft power with a prony brake.
Paul.

4Tesla

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Re: Bedini's gates magnet motor
« Reply #3 on: July 30, 2008, 09:41:42 PM »
Quote
Excellent workmanship!

Ditto.

Jason

altium

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Re: Bedini's gates magnet motor
« Reply #4 on: July 31, 2008, 09:26:08 PM »
Hi Marcel,
nice picture and good work. Do you test this construction? Are she`s working?
Do you have eternal spinning?


Thaelin

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Re: Bedini's gates magnet motor
« Reply #5 on: October 28, 2008, 08:36:40 PM »
Hi Marcel:
   I have done the same thing a while back but used just a rotor of plywood. I had pvc
shells to hold the magnets.
   The other poster "Jason" has a valid point of having uneven rotor to stator values. I
think that maybe sets of three stator and a 9/12 ratio would be good. If you map out
a 9/12 setup, it gives you one pair free, one entering, one in, and one exiting.
   Above all thanks for sharing your design. That is class workmanship. I now have the
idea of how to hold the magnets for the stator without wobble.

thaelin