I have been reading for a while, the threads in some websites about shorting the gen coil.
And I am starting to do tests with it.
All the videos and schematics I have seen are shorting the gen coil at the peak of the wave. This sounds good
… but I have not seen anyone shorting the gen coil all the time, multiple times, not only when the sine wave is on the peek.
So first I would like to know if you people think that is logical for you, as it is for me.
Because… shorting at the peak would give the bigger spike, but we are wasting all the others possible spikes.
So regarding that, and since I don’t have a great electrical background, I was wondering if a self-oscillating circuit could be used to short a generator coil (PWM style) ??? . For example, use the oscillation of a joule thief to short a gen coil (placed in a rotor with magnets of course).
---
Another question I would like to ask: Can I dump a capacitor into a coil? And expect the coil to be able to push an incoming magnet? And also get a radiant spike?
My basic idea is to put gen coils, been shorted all the time, and storing the radiant output into a capacitor, then with the right timing discharge that cap into another coil to help the rotation of the device, and also gather the radiant spike of that cap dump into the coil. Is logical?
Thank you
Best
Alvaro Hernandorena
And I am starting to do tests with it.
All the videos and schematics I have seen are shorting the gen coil at the peak of the wave. This sounds good
… but I have not seen anyone shorting the gen coil all the time, multiple times, not only when the sine wave is on the peek.
So first I would like to know if you people think that is logical for you, as it is for me.
Because… shorting at the peak would give the bigger spike, but we are wasting all the others possible spikes.
So regarding that, and since I don’t have a great electrical background, I was wondering if a self-oscillating circuit could be used to short a generator coil (PWM style) ??? . For example, use the oscillation of a joule thief to short a gen coil (placed in a rotor with magnets of course).
---
Another question I would like to ask: Can I dump a capacitor into a coil? And expect the coil to be able to push an incoming magnet? And also get a radiant spike?
My basic idea is to put gen coils, been shorted all the time, and storing the radiant output into a capacitor, then with the right timing discharge that cap into another coil to help the rotation of the device, and also gather the radiant spike of that cap dump into the coil. Is logical?
Thank you
Best
Alvaro Hernandorena
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