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Author Topic: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils  (Read 265315 times)

ElectricGoose

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #45 on: March 14, 2010, 07:15:27 AM »
Ok in this movie
http://www.youtube.com/user/abramrk1#p/u/3/wS935WyumjY

The coil has more space between to coils , see what happen to the bulb one the pickup coil when i connect on one the transistor , the bulb on the pickup coil gets brighter , but this not true for the slim , now is it because of the spacing in the pickup coil or the one on the jt , i am still not sure, sorry ...

The 45 degree angle slope seemed logical but lab experiment will be needed to have a definitive value for that slope.

I did notice a big improvement (in voltage output) over my first one that had a 15/75 slope.

Mark

Thanks Mark!

Perhaps less truly is more!

Regards

E-Goose

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #46 on: March 14, 2010, 07:31:28 AM »
Thanks Mark!

Perhaps less truly is more!

Regards

E-Goose

I just finished testing a few suggestion , and tested the slim one the bulb gets dimmer with one on the transistor ...

I also tested a choke one the secondary output , it barely worked .

Also Watson from Watson blog , told me to use 2sd965 from the fuji circuit
it works pretty well . He also mentioned the nte11 , i will get a pair one nte11 and one nte12 .
« Last Edit: March 14, 2010, 09:17:25 AM by Mk1 »

ElectricGoose

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #47 on: March 14, 2010, 08:19:04 AM »
I just finished testing a few suggestion , and tested the slim one the bulb gets dimmer with one one the transistor ...

I also tested a choke one the secondary output , it barely worked .

Also Watson from Watson blog , told me to use 2sd965 from the fuji circuit
it works pretty well . He also mentioned the nte11 , i will get a pair one nte11 and one nte12 .

Mark

Not sure what you meant "bulb gets dimmer with one one the transistor"??  Regarding the choke...you attempted to use this as a secondary pickup coil OR to smooth the output of your already existing secondary?

Nte112 UHF schottky diode?  Might clean things up somewhat.

Regards

E-Goose

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #48 on: March 14, 2010, 08:52:10 AM »
Mark

Not sure what you meant "bulb gets dimmer with one one the transistor"??  Regarding the choke...you attempted to use this as a secondary pickup coil OR to smooth the output of your already existing secondary?

Nte112 UHF schottky diode?  Might clean things up somewhat.

Regards

E-Goose

If you look at the video when i connect the bulb on the transistor the bulb on pickup coil get brighter that is the one with the taller core , but with the slim one when i have a bulb one both the transistor and the pickup coil they get dimmer . Btw this is what i mean when i say loading the transistor.

Choke was to smooth the output of your already existing secondary .

Nte11 specs :

http://www.datasheetcatalog.com/datasheets_pdf/N/T/E/1/NTE11.shtml

Mark

ElectricGoose

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #49 on: March 14, 2010, 09:17:13 AM »
If you look at the video when i connect the bulb on the transistor the bulb on pickup coil get brighter that is the one with the taller core , but with the slim one when i have a bulb one both the transistor and the pickup coil they get dimmer . Btw this is what i mean when i say loading the transistor.

Choke was to smooth the output of your already existing secondary .

Nte11 specs :

http://www.datasheetcatalog.com/datasheets_pdf/N/T/E/1/NTE11.shtml

Mark

Ahh...I didnt pick that up in the vid.  Hmm...perhaps this indicates that the primary prefers a harsher angle to the winding (I assume being deeper former, it WAS a little steeper than your little one?)  Problem is, there are so many variables here, it might be that and might not be.

E-Goose

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #50 on: March 14, 2010, 09:20:51 AM »
Ahh...I didnt pick that up in the vid.  Hmm...perhaps this indicates that the primary prefers a harsher angle to the winding (I assume being deeper former, it WAS a little steeper than your little one?)  Problem is, there are so many variables here, it might be that and might not be.

E-Goose

I know its not the coil angle because the taller one also has a 45 degree slope like the slim one , the taller one has 3 turns per revolution and slim one 5 .

Thanks again , for bringing all those good points !

Mark

woodycad

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #51 on: March 15, 2010, 02:45:49 PM »
Hi everybody,

"the romanian" here, unfortunately having not time for any elaborate discuttion.
The template of Universe was decripted some months ago.
 The fundamental helix of transport (E.F.T.) build all flows of Superfluide Universe.
Nothing is planar motion, everything is in a helical geometry.
Any line, any planar geometry is an ilusion. An autoband move around TERRA and togeder move aroun SUN. Circular + another trajectory means helix.
All motions are helical. All planar imagines are proiective reality.
In a general relativity, all clusters flows in a helical geometry.(tetrahedral condensed matter)
See a magnetic line as a helical motion.
See a circle as intersection beetwen a plan and a helix.
See averything as a helix flow, no end and no begining.(as time, no limit back or front)

100 x (superstring+M+twistor + bundle fiber +...)theory= THE FUNDAMENTAL UNIVERSE PROJECT

You will hear in media, any country you are from!
Until then, see the site of the project:
www.thefundamentaluniverse.ro

Is much more than any dream of humanity,
Try to understand "the principle"(is public)and then aply it in different geometries.
You can understand from pictures, download 2 PDF from site (romanian language documents).
....ELSE YOU WILL SPEND TIME FOR NOTHING,....manytimes...







jeanna

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #52 on: March 16, 2010, 01:43:24 AM »
Mark,
Did you ever give us the amps draw on your coil?

thank you,

jeanna

wattsup

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    • Spin Conveyance Theory - For a New Perspective...
Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #53 on: March 16, 2010, 04:23:25 AM »
@MK1

Sorry to but in with this question about your AG coils.

If you have one that has more then one winding of the 45 degree coils, let's say if you had 2 or more 45 degree windings, then just pulse one of them and collect from the others either in parallel or in series. Then put those in series with the outer horizontal coil and see what kind of output you get.

It is possible that a pulse on one winding, will not only impart to the others but the others will then re-impart some back to the pulsed winding since all of them are inter-crossing. There must be a few frequencies to find that will agree with such a scheme.

I would be very interested in learning the result of this.

Added:

Again about the AG coil, I have a funny feeling the ultimate result will eventually be found to be with two of these coils like the Hendershot.


woodycad

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #55 on: March 17, 2010, 08:44:54 PM »
It's lost time,

only turbine principle catch energy.
Study fluidity... in The Fundamental Universe project!
All the matter is fluid, so as entire Universe!
See much more than 100 pages published, for free, on the project site!

Not spend time...in vain!


Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #56 on: March 22, 2010, 07:56:09 PM »
It's lost time,

only turbine principle catch energy.
Study fluidity... in The Fundamental Universe project!
All the matter is fluid, so as entire Universe!
See much more than 100 pages published, for free, on the project site!

Not spend time...in vain!


Well i wish you would at least offer some English version of that 100 pages.
Because all i get from you are pictures. I think i would loose more time learning Romanian then spend time...in vain!

I wish you would at least permit to copy character in your document that way i could use a translator , otherwise i am wasting my time ...

Thank for the pictures.

Mark

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #57 on: March 22, 2010, 08:06:56 PM »
Mark,
Did you ever give us the amps draw on your coil?

thank you,

jeanna

Sorry i could not answer sooner , it draws about 160 mili , but it changes form one transistor to the other .

I got some working from 70 mili to 230 mili .

I however am not too concern about it , since i am pushing in the opposite direction for the rest of the crowd , i am a bit alone here ...

Most are working to get the lowest input , i am working on getting the most current out .

I already see sparks yellow one when connecting connecting the secondary to the bulb , i tried to get them on camera no success.

The 2 volts bulbs is as bright as can be and the 6 volts 250 mili , is getting brighter everyday.

Mark 


Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #58 on: March 22, 2010, 08:24:10 PM »
@MK1

Sorry to but in with this question about your AG coils.

If you have one that has more then one winding of the 45 degree coils, let's say if you had 2 or more 45 degree windings, then just pulse one of them and collect from the others either in parallel or in series. Then put those in series with the outer horizontal coil and see what kind of output you get.

It is possible that a pulse on one winding, will not only impart to the others but the others will then re-impart some back to the pulsed winding since all of them are inter-crossing. There must be a few frequencies to find that will agree with such a scheme.

I would be very interested in learning the result of this.

Added:

Again about the AG coil, I have a funny feeling the ultimate result will eventually be found to be with two of these coils like the Hendershot.

The make of the coil dose show us some but we need to see how it works .

I don't think it works like the hendershot a mean the honeycomb coil , because of the orientation of the coil .

The field of the coil i make will act like a regular wire air coil of about the same radius .

The hendershot has the crossing field on a different axe altogether , but i do see why he would put transformer inside a coil .

I started to make a second and third coil , i will go Russian doll .

The bigger one dodecahedron 10 steps 5 turns per rotation .

Then 8 steps 4 turns/rotation octahedron . 

The last one 6 steps 3turns /rotation tetrahedron.

But thanks for the comment , Keep them coming.

Mark


Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #59 on: March 22, 2010, 08:47:13 PM »
@all