Free-Energy for Beginners
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Free-Energy For Beginners Introduction Free-energy is where you do not have to pay for the energy entering your system. Examples are wind- power generators, flowing water generators, wave-power generators, solar panels and things like that. However, wind and sun are not always available and even wave power is not always there as waves are mainly created by wind blowing across an ocean. Because of that, those energy sources are usually called “Renewable Energy” sources. The real source of Free-Energy is the inexhaustible energy of the universe which is always available everywhere at all times. We are immersed in that energy. It flows through us. It flows through everything that exists. It is effectively, inexhaustible, continuous, and unlimited in every respect. However, just as an expensive solar panel converts sunlight into electricity, devices which convert free-energy into the equivalent of mains electricity voltage and frequency, are usually expensive. There are more than twenty different ways to convert free-energy into the style of energy which we find convenient, so let’s take a look at a few of those ways: 1. Aerials An aerial is a very simple device. It can be just a length of wire which is supported vertically (like a car aerial). An aerial is made very much more effective if the lower end is connected electrically to the earth. Free-energy which fills all of the universe, strikes our Sun and produces the radiation which we call sunlight. That radiation spreads out in every direction and the ionosphere which surrounds the Earth, absorbs some of that energy all the time, making the ionosphere highly charged with respect to the surface of the Earth. Because of that, any vertical wire has a higher voltage at its top than the voltage of the Earth, and your aerial wire connects two points of different voltage and that causes a current to flow along your aerial wire. If you capture some of that energy flow, then you have created a free-energy power source which continues for ever. That is a source of energy which you don’t have to pay for BUT you do have to pay for the length of wire and the capturing components which you use. One suitable circuit looks like this: 1 You will notice that there is no input power and there are no active components. If the circuit diagram looks meaningless, then the Appendix explains basic electronics in a simple fashion which will allow you to read and understand such circuits. Dragan Kljajic has been experimenting with this circuit and has started by building fifty of these modules on a printed circuit board like this: and using two of these boards he produces a continuous output of 96 watts from the board. An improved version of the circuit has been shown as: 2 This is a simple, understandable system which anybody can build and use. It is possible to build an aerial which has an output of 10 kilowatts. 2. Magnetic Rotors A developer in South Africa has developed a simple magnetic rotor which he uses to create 40 watts of continuous power at mains voltage and frequency. The design and operation is very simple. He uses five small batteries which he has recovered from old computer Uninterruptible Power Supplies. His circuit is like this: In this early version of his circuit, the top three batteries can be dispensed with. The system is started by spinning the rotor “C”. That creates a small voltage in coil “1”, switching on the T13009 transistor and powering coil “2”. This induces a voltage in coil “3” which is rectified by the four diodes shown in blue, charging battery “A” which powers the circuit. When the transistor switches off, the transistor collector is dragged to 50 volts or so, charging all five batteries. Each battery is a 7 Amp-Hour capacity 12-volt battery. The magnetic effect of this keeps the rotor spinning. The load is a mains inverter driving an incandescent 40-watt mains bulb. One proving test was three weeks long with the bulb lit brightly and all batteries holding their starting voltages. 3 3. Robert Adams Robert Adams of New Zealand designed a series of motor-generators which operate with very much the same style of construction: 4 In his system, he uses the magnets being attracted to the iron cores of the stator to keep the rotor spinning. When the rotor magnets align with the stator coils, he applies a very small current to the stator coils to prevent the rotor being pulled back towards the stator coil cores. Separate output coils gather power over just a few degrees of rotation and then switch off. That generates a back-EMF magnetic pulse which pushes the rotor on its way. The back-EMF from every coil current is captured and returned to the driving battery, and that is 95% of the total drive current. Overall, the circuit is 800% efficient, that is, it has 8 times more output current than input current. The most powerful replication which I have heard of to date is 32 kilowatts of output power. 4. The Tseung Wheel Lawrence Tseung and his colleagues, set up a simple wooden rotor wheel and drove it with a series of coils. The wheel diameter is 500 mm and the output power is 330% greater than the input power: This generator was set up in a Chinese university and members of the public were invited to bring their own meters and confirm that the output power was very much more than the input power. 5. The Water-jet Generator James Hardy set up a simple paddle-wheel and drove it with a fast jet of water from a commercially available pump: 5 The arrangement is self-powered and lights an incandescent mains bulb as well. His YouTube video showing this is at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGpXA6qhH_Q. 6. Battery recharging Ron Pugh of Canada has made a very nice high-quality battery charger based on a design by John Bedini of America: 6 This particular charger operates with sharp voltage pulses which restores sulphated batteries as well as charging them fully. Ron uses 24-volt batteries and he has measured the performance carefully, finding that there is 13 times more charging power than the input current needed to make the system operate. The rotor has three sets of magnets which have been carefully matched for magnetic power. 7. The Transformer of Thane Heins Transformers and motors today are deliberately constructed symmetrically. That is as sensible as getting a push-start for your car but putting two people at the front pushing backwards and two at the back pushing forwards. Symmetrical transformers and motors automatically oppose themselves with magnetic fields requiring you to raise the input power as soon as the output power increases, and that is totally mad. Thane Heins has constructed asymmetrical transformers which minimise that effect and the results are spectacular: For example, this home-made transformer has been tested with an input power of 106.9 milliwatts, it produces an output power of 403.3 milliwatts, which is 3.77 times greater. In the patent document, Thane quotes a prototype test which had a primary coil winding with 2.5 ohms resistance, carrying 0.29 watts of power. The first secondary coil had a winding with 2.9 ohms resistance, receiving 0.18 watts of power. The Resistive load 1 was 180 ohms, receiving 11.25 watts of power. The secondary coil 2 had a winding with 2.5 ohms resistance, and received 0.06 watts of power. Resistive load 2 was 1 ohm, receiving 0.02 watts of power. Overall, the input power was 0.29 watts and the output power 11.51 watts, which is 39.6 times greater. How is that possible? It is because additional power is flowing into the transformer from the local environment. 8. Lawrence Tseung’s Magnetic frame The same sort of thing happens when a permanent magnet is incorporated into a magnetic frame as has been demonstrated by Lawrence Tseung: He shows three separate operating modes for the devices as follows: 7 Here, the Coefficient Of Performance (“COP”) is the output energy coming out of the device, divided by input energy supplied by the user. If the pulsing input generates a magnetic field which adds to that of the permanent magnet, then the output power can be 50% bigger than the input power (or greater). However, the frame has to be big enough to carry the magnetic flux applied to it. 9. Rosemary Ainslie’s Heater Most men are generally dismissive of the abilities of women doing research. As Kevin Ashton states in his book How To Fly A Horse, 16th April 1958 saw the death of the scientist Rosalind Franklin at the age of thirty-seven. Rosalind was a talented X-ray crystallographer working on the problem of how viruses reproduce (essentially, how life works, as her work was understanding the mechanics of life). The following day the World’s Fair opened in Brussels with the main attraction being a scale model of a virus. That model was built by Rosalind as she was dying. She held a research position at the University of London, and later, an appointment, at Birkbeck College, where she studied the tobacco mosaic virus. For a long time, the only people who knew what she had really accomplished were the three men who had secretly stolen her work: James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins. Watson and Crick were researchers at Cambridge University.