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Author Topic: Armature  (Read 4957 times)

guruji

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Armature
« on: February 12, 2009, 02:21:46 PM »
Hi guys can I use a normal motor armature and add magnets on it for this motor? I have an old washing machine spinner armature and a water pump armature. Can I use these and simple glue magnets on them for Newman motor?
Thanks

jadaro2600

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Re: Armature
« Reply #1 on: February 13, 2009, 01:17:37 AM »
Newman's machines are rather weighty - the inductance in their coils are very high, as a result.

kmarinas86

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Re: Armature
« Reply #2 on: February 15, 2009, 03:13:29 PM »
Hi guys can I use a normal motor armature and add magnets on it for this motor? I have an old washing machine spinner armature and a water pump armature. Can I use these and simple glue magnets on them for Newman motor?
Thanks

The rotor of a Newman motor only has two poles. That spinner armature probably has more than two.

guruji

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Re: Armature
« Reply #3 on: February 15, 2009, 07:25:56 PM »
Thanks guys for your response but to clarify I was refering to those induction motors with soft iron laminated core.
Thanks

jadaro2600

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Re: Armature
« Reply #4 on: February 15, 2009, 10:19:26 PM »
This depends, is it an induction motor or a wound rotor armature?

One can take a simple wound electric motor and replace magnets for coils and coils for magnets ( ie exchange ).

IF the solid state armature is used, replacing it with an unmagentized neodymium core would result in better performance - UNMAGNETIZED ...otherwise, there may be undesired heating or cracking.  This is only the case if it is some sort of induction motor, where the armature is solid... where there are constant changes in field alignment.

Sorry to stray off topic.  Newman's machine incorporates a coil magnet in his armature - the core is iron; it really is too bad the printer of his book lost the master plates in a fire.  I kind of wanted a copy. . .ebay suggest a price of like 1200.00 usd though so that's out of the question.

DO you have a link to the plans for this machine?


JustAnElectrician

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Re: Armature
« Reply #5 on: February 16, 2009, 02:45:43 AM »
LINK to FREE NEWMAN BOOK .pdf download!!!

http://www.free-energy-info.co.uk/

It's around 20% of the way down, look for eBooks: Newman Part 1: thru part 5

It has the complete Newman Theory AFAIK and downloading Newman's South African Patent for his Energy Machine is helpful also.

http://www.rexresearch.com/newman/newman.htm

It has drawings and specs for the #14 AWG coil wire and #15 coil wire (70 and 90# units) as tested by WWL TV in New Orleans and specs for the huge
#5 AWG coil wire (5000# coil and 600# magnets) that performed so well, but no specs for the 7500# unit on a flatbed trailer that is mobile for demonstrations.
Pretty easy to scale that up with Ohm's Law and other electrical rules, but with the price of copper these days #14 is expensive enough!

Hope this helps, it helped me!
In my professional opinion, the Newman Machine likely has the strongest basis in conventional EM theory, and the best conventional Physics explanation too.
I am "Just an Electrician" but our training is 100% applicable towards an engineering degree, and it is a federally funded and recognized program. I just
think "outside the box" a bit and many aspects of free energy theory in electrodynamics answer most of the nagging unanswered questions associated
with Counter EMF and other strange phenomena that are in our field. I've always been a seeker, and not a follower. I have found things that ring true "outside the box".

Rob