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Don't feel bad if it don't work the first time, This seems to be more of a hit and miss, And I have been stepping away from lead acid batteries with my recent projects. Not that there is nothing there but it seems more random then scientific. I get mixed feedback. Some have been able to replicate the conditions while others have not.
(05-02-2023, 09:27 PM)weighta Wrote: [ -> ]Hey Joel, good to meet you. First I want to thank you for your findings and making them public. It's extremely rare and difficult to come across people like you because your interest is at the heart of technology, even if it's suppressed or under the table. All of what you mentioned in the video is correct. Radiant energy and back EMF are one of my favorite hobbies because they give you a lot of potential, and it seems that based around that concept you have been posting inspirational content around this, which makes it a lot more exciting. The phenomenon is in fact over unity, and I have drawn out a couple radiant chargers and implemented Ritalie's radiant chargers as an example to make it available for those who want to experiment, which I may post later on.

What I wanted to touch on was the 100 watts of free energy video you did on the capacitor dump circuit that would charge through an electrolytic capacitor, and discharge through a neon lamp. I have to say, you give yourself a lot less credit than you deserve. And even though you say "oh well its just a simple circuit" or that "all i did was xyz," you can't ignore the fact that you have put together something spectacular.

Although there wasn't a specific schematic for your circuit in the video, I was able to follow along with it enough to know what you were talking about, along with what was clarified in the comments.



[Image: fsBMgsz.png]

I can't guarantee the schematic here is exactly correct as in the video, but for firing back EMF at resonance to the coil, it serves a purpose.

A lot of questions people had were about the coil in the video, as it's just an ethernet or telephone cable wound around a spool. This is very easy to make, but there's a misconception that makes it harder than at first looks apparent. This coil CANNOT exceed 2 Ohms, anything over and you are losing current. The resistance is intentionally low, (all wires at both ends shorted) to preserve the voltage after the loop.

The coil also NEEDS a lot of surface area to draw in as much radiant energy as possible. That can take some experimenting. In your video, Joel, the telephone cord you have has 4 wires, and some people were wondering about an RJ45 ethernet cable which has 8 wires. So, will that work? The answer is yes, as long as the coil does NOT exceed 2 ohms, and you are combining all wires at each end. Stranded copper is also best, because there is more surface area within a volume on smaller wires than one large wire.

Thanks for your demonstration, and I'll make any changes as needed in the schematic. I'll post some other circuits as well for inspiration on Radiant energy in the future.
Need help here.

This didn’t work for me. I tried this and few other variations by adjusting the positions of the capacitors, neon & SCR. 

When the neon triggered about 75v at the capacitor, 1 of the 2 things here happened:

1) the neon glows dimly 1 time per second.

2) neon glows continuously and dimly.

Nothing goes into the charging battery for both cases. 

I suspect the power came from the primary battery and the neon absorbed everything.

I used a mini oscilloscope to find out what’s going on inside the coil. Everything seems normal because there’s a spike of positive voltage of 13v and negative voltage of 72v. And phone cable coil is at 1.6ohms and slightly longer than 300 feet. 

Any expert managed to achieve over unity of 50-100watts here?

Thank you



2)
That's strange, What I did to make sure it worked is a put a 12v lamp tester probe in line with the negative pulse of the scr so that when my cap dumped i would see the bulb light up brightly and dim within a second as it discharged.
(10-29-2023, 03:07 PM)alexinspire Wrote: [ -> ]
(05-02-2023, 09:27 PM)weighta Wrote: [ -> ]Hey Joel, good to meet you. First I want to thank you for your findings and making them public. It's extremely rare and difficult to come across people like you because your interest is at the heart of technology, even if it's suppressed or under the table. All of what you mentioned in the video is correct. Radiant energy and back EMF are one of my favorite hobbies because they give you a lot of potential, and it seems that based around that concept you have been posting inspirational content around this, which makes it a lot more exciting. The phenomenon is in fact over unity, and I have drawn out a couple radiant chargers and implemented Ritalie's radiant chargers as an example to make it available for those who want to experiment, which I may post later on.

What I wanted to touch on was the 100 watts of free energy video you did on the capacitor dump circuit that would charge through an electrolytic capacitor, and discharge through a neon lamp. I have to say, you give yourself a lot less credit than you deserve. And even though you say "oh well its just a simple circuit" or that "all i did was xyz," you can't ignore the fact that you have put together something spectacular.

Although there wasn't a specific schematic for your circuit in the video, I was able to follow along with it enough to know what you were talking about, along with what was clarified in the comments.



[Image: fsBMgsz.png]

I can't guarantee the schematic here is exactly correct as in the video, but for firing back EMF at resonance to the coil, it serves a purpose.

A lot of questions people had were about the coil in the video, as it's just an ethernet or telephone cable wound around a spool. This is very easy to make, but there's a misconception that makes it harder than at first looks apparent. This coil CANNOT exceed 2 Ohms, anything over and you are losing current. The resistance is intentionally low, (all wires at both ends shorted) to preserve the voltage after the loop.

The coil also NEEDS a lot of surface area to draw in as much radiant energy as possible. That can take some experimenting. In your video, Joel, the telephone cord you have has 4 wires, and some people were wondering about an RJ45 ethernet cable which has 8 wires. So, will that work? The answer is yes, as long as the coil does NOT exceed 2 ohms, and you are combining all wires at each end. Stranded copper is also best, because there is more surface area within a volume on smaller wires than one large wire.

Thanks for your demonstration, and I'll make any changes as needed in the schematic. I'll post some other circuits as well for inspiration on Radiant energy in the future.
Need help here.

This didn’t work for me. I tried this and few other variations by adjusting the positions of the capacitors, neon & SCR. 

When the neon triggered about 75v at the capacitor, 1 of the 2 things here happened:

1) the neon glows dimly 1 time per second.

2) neon glows continuously and dimly.

Nothing goes into the charging battery for both cases. 

I suspect the power came from the primary battery and the neon absorbed everything.

I used a mini oscilloscope to find out what’s going on inside the coil. Everything seems normal because there’s a spike of positive voltage of 13v and negative voltage of 72v. And phone cable coil is at 1.6ohms and slightly longer than 300 feet. 

Any expert managed to achieve over unity of 50-100watts here?

Thank you



2)

Perhaps test your noen scr circuit with this first to make sure its all working properly then integrate it into your device. 

Sure thing. i will do that in a few days. Need to order that microwave capacitor ?
(10-30-2023, 01:03 AM)alexinspire Wrote: [ -> ]Sure thing. i will do that in a few days. Need to order that microwave capacitor ?


Or an X rated capacitor at 200+ volts.
Thank you Joel. I ordered the microwave caps. I will look for the x rated caps too. Probably easier to work with because of its size.

@admin,

If I follow the schematic of exactly, the neon will blink dimly and shortly. I tested it with 10,000uf caps and the voltage increases. My only issue is that the output is very low and takes a really long time to increase 0.01v of a small battery. My main concern is that the coil is not generating much back emf. I am not sure if it’s because:

1) coil connected wrongly: I twisted all 4 cores together at both end.

2) the cables are not thick enough: my phone cable is 0.63mm each

3) other reasons that I am not aware of

I managed to fit everything in a connector ?

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1exuQSAr...p=drivesdk
Your greedy lmao  Big Grin j/k well in part the issue is your trying to charge up way too large value, With my coil, I found out that anything over 20uf was too big to charge instantly so you don't get enough oomph out of it so to speak. Try even with 10uf, That got me a few blinks a second and could really hear it clicking away as well, indication of a good current flow, At this rate my big 12V charges. As far as the self looped setup its unique and  every battery is different. This is why I stepped away from all of this. Very picky to replicate and because its done with difficulty the mainstream won't use this anytime soon. 

Today as I know more, In part its more then the cap dump that was driving it but also the high frequency transients hitting the battery. 

In simple terms after about a month of messing with it everyday. I fluked the right "Setting" 


Hope this help, The cap dump imo is indeed part of the key and could work with multiple coil setup for multiple amps a second dumps. This is how you could make up for current. Again it's money time and effort. Is it really worth it in the end? If it's for science and personal interests sure. If it's for running your house.. not so good, Well I mean it will work but you may as well get that extra 300 watts using a solar for much cheaper than what you need to do to get this working.

It's all perspective I guess.
Hi Joel,

Thanks for your input. I definitely agree with what you have shared in terms of the practicality. It is definitely important to weight the opportunity costs of ready made and affordable solar panels. My biggest issue with solar panels right now is the investment on the battery bank.

Just watched your video about looping this system with a separate controller. Definitely want to try it out. Still not very sure how to do it yet. But I will definitely experiment it and post here if I have any success with it.

You’re also right about the process of fine tuning the system. Aside from frequency and duty cycle, I need to be careful by comparing the input and output too. I think self loop is the easiest to compare because multimeters don’t seem to work well with pulses.
Hi Admin,

I managed to replicate the design of the microwave cap:

https://youtu.be/fVMpQQugA-0

The battery is charging well and neon is glowing steadily and dimly. When I switch to 800v scr, the neon light suddenly become super bright. Guess I am sticking to 600v.

For fine tuning the 100w system, I think probably need to test it with either self-loop or observe how fast it charges a capacitor bank.

A question for Joel:

“Have you tried the microwave cap system with an inverter? Will there be low to zero energy draw from the battery and generate a good output?”
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