had a quick question for people that have already been working with shorting. has anyone tried to "pre-charge" the cap they short into with a backwards voltage from what the short would charge the cap to? what made me think of this is i have heard that stacking voltages causes a bigger radiant event. Such as, I believe it was JB, that said something about taking two caps and charging them from a battery in parallel then putting them in series and discharge them back into the batt would cause a gain. So if the charge that is built up on a coil that is to be shorted is opposite the "pre-charge" you put on the cap (would be as if you connected a cap in series with the coil capacitence)...would it create a bigger push on the out-swing of the magnet and since the cap voltage is trying to push current in the same dirrection of the shorted coil would it end up charging higher in the other direction than if you did not "pre-charge" it? or maybe use another cap that you precharge and when you short the coil you short that cap in series with it into the charging cap therfore you would gain extra energy into the charge cap and also have a way to have a shorting coil generator be the prime mover because of the charge you put into the "pre-charged" cap.
does it sound like it may be something or am i missing something?
Not a complete shematic but something to show what im trying to get at. from my understanding even the smallest extra push would make a coil-shorting gen rotate because of the seeming non-existence of drag when shorted correctly. so if you short correctly and add one small extra charge...would it not run?
does it sound like it may be something or am i missing something?
Not a complete shematic but something to show what im trying to get at. from my understanding even the smallest extra push would make a coil-shorting gen rotate because of the seeming non-existence of drag when shorted correctly. so if you short correctly and add one small extra charge...would it not run?
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