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Author Topic: The Ossie motor  (Read 332315 times)

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #585 on: December 03, 2010, 05:11:13 AM »
Hey Mags! I luuuurve the xmas coil :) Marko Rodin said it would be; A great diaphragm-less speaker coil - I've confirmed that. He said it was much more efficient & a lot less copper required than conventional coils, I've confirmed that. He also said it makes a great aerial, I've confirmed. Then he also claimed the maths were the answer to anti-gravity, free energy, space travel etc - Now to work on those :D Using a simple MOSFET circuit from woopy I got my little rotor doing 11,000 RPM last night before it started to shake apart.

Weird thing is though, when I put a rodin pu coil voltage rises quickly without shorting it out with a reed. No discernible bemf but it then seems to plateau... weird. Last night MOSFET test. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Q0tgr_hrLY

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #586 on: December 03, 2010, 05:22:33 AM »
btw this is the scope shot with the ossie circuit.


and this is the mosfet/hall switch scope shot.

Magluvin

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #587 on: December 03, 2010, 06:04:01 AM »
So do the outr star branches also have affect on the field produced in the center, or could the points be shortened, maybe rounded off half way, to reduce the resistance.

What is the resistance of the coil?

Mags

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #588 on: December 03, 2010, 06:09:03 AM »
The resistance of that coil is around 8 ohms. I have at 2 ohms but it sucks more amps.

Tito L. Oracion

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #589 on: December 03, 2010, 07:09:53 AM »
The resistance of that coil is around 8 ohms. I have at 2 ohms but it sucks more amps.

This is otits   ;D


Hi jim, did you try adding some secondaries from primaries and amplify some current there? then add them all to battery.

and i think ozone makes a good moves here.
 

;D

ps: oh boy i have a virus i have to jimboot my computer bye.  ;D joke  :D

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #590 on: December 03, 2010, 08:29:07 AM »
Heheh hopefully your jimboot was successful! So u mean secondary gen coils?

Tito L. Oracion

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #591 on: December 03, 2010, 08:58:30 AM »
Heheh hopefully your jimboot was successful! So u mean secondary gen coils?

Yes sir, just a wild idea

since we are inducting the primaries why not use secondaries to get some transfered energies from the near primaries?
 
;D

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #592 on: December 03, 2010, 11:13:36 AM »
Well im successfully charging an old flat 9v duracell. More watts in than out i'd say but I'm not sure how to do the measurement. I'm using a 12vdc sla @ 200ma charging a cap to 7v and hanging the 9v off that. running at 7200rpm. The gen coil slows the rotor marginally. I have it attached to a rectifier schottky bridge . Im not shorting out the coil. That simply stops the rotor. Would it be poss to have the charge coil dump freq match that of the pulse coil? I was thinking of taking a parrallel trigger from my hall switch to dump the charge coil.

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #593 on: December 03, 2010, 12:14:27 PM »
Here is the scope shot. The green trace is the pu coil which charges a cap quickly now to 10v. Not sure if the p2p voltage is of any significance or not.

gyulasun

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #594 on: December 03, 2010, 12:38:29 PM »
Here is the scope shot. The green trace is the pu coil which charges a cap quickly now to 10v. Not sure if the p2p voltage is of any significance or not.

Hi Jimboot,

If you divide the peak to peak voltage value, 20.31 by 2.82, you get about 7.2V AC RMS and after the full wave rectification the capacitor is charged to the single peak value of this RMS which is 7.2V times 1.41, i.e. 10.15V DC what you can measure.  Now the measured numbers are ok because the induced voltage is sinusoidal.

Gyula

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #595 on: December 03, 2010, 01:33:33 PM »
Here is the vid, the p2p v on the pu coil gets up to 29v
http://Http://YouTube.com/jimboot2/

Low-Q

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #596 on: December 03, 2010, 08:37:47 PM »
RMS? What is the RMS watt readings?

gyulasun

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #597 on: December 03, 2010, 10:07:16 PM »
Vidar,  who are asking on the RMS watt readings? 

I ask this because simply I converted Jimboot's induced voltage measured by his scope as a peak to peak voltage amplitude and he wrote he was not sure if the p2p voltage was of any significance or not. I simply converted the peak to peak voltage value to RMS voltage value that is all.
The significance of the output voltage manifests when a load is connected across the output and how it relates to the consumed input power then.

Jimboot

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #598 on: August 28, 2011, 03:17:34 PM »
You guys seen these motors john Hutchinson has fromi military surplus? They'd turn my osier motor ou not a problem. They seem to have very little resistance when he turns them by hand http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DX25yvRMiyY&feature=youtube_gdata_player

Low-Q

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Re: The Ossie motor
« Reply #599 on: August 29, 2011, 02:43:41 PM »
Vidar,  who are asking on the RMS watt readings? 

I ask this because simply I converted Jimboot's induced voltage measured by his scope as a peak to peak voltage amplitude and he wrote he was not sure if the p2p voltage was of any significance or not. I simply converted the peak to peak voltage value to RMS voltage value that is all.
The significance of the output voltage manifests when a load is connected across the output and how it relates to the consumed input power then.
Yes, you're right. A load is important to make any conclusions. RMS readings will however tell more about the actual average voltage. In the 230 or 115V AC grid, there is a peak of 325 or 163V, but the effective voltage is 230 or 115V. If you have a voltage peak at 100V, lasting for 1mS at 50Hz cycle, you have an RMS voltage of only 5V. Lets say you have a peak of 10 amps too on the load. The peak will read 1kW, but the RMS readings will be only 1W. So I guess it IS important to consider the RMS readings too. Also phase relationship between current and voltage in a reactive load (Containing capacitors, and inductors) will be an important factor also.

Vidar