Hi Julian,
I'm not sure how to respond to this. ........................My main experience has been only with the SSG as presented in the three handbooks. I tried to copy John Bedini's build as closely as I could. The coil spool, welding rod core, seven 130 feet strands of #20 wire and one 130 feet of #23 wire twisted together (litzed) and wound evenly around the spool was used. The 21 magnets were evenly spaced around a 26" steel bicycle front wheel fitted with precision ball bearings without seals. The basic circuit on the Teslagenx board with matched components was used with one trigger coil input and seven power winding inputs. Here's a link to the board. http://www.teslagenx.com/kits/tx-sg8.html?category=kits The kit had a 12ohm resistor for the common trigger input and 470ohm resistors on each individual trigger input to the 7 MJL21194 transistors used.
Tuning consisted of balancing the wheel and lubricating the bearings for a maximum run-down time which was 13 minutes for my wheel (with coil removed) and then adjusting the air gap between magnets and coil core for fastest running with least current draw. This worked out to .354" on my machine. I later switched out the 12ohm input resistor with a 100ohm pot so I could experiment with input resistance and air gap settings. Turns out I got the best results with the original set up. I found that any added resistance anywhere in the circuit reduced the results. This includes thru meters, switches, connections. and wiring.
The rule of thumb for these machines is .250 amps current draw per power winding. So with 7 windings mine should draw 1.75 amps which is very close to what it draws in common ground ( aka generator) mode where it gives around 1.25 COP in AHs using 13AH flooded batteries. And In radiant mode it draws 1.25 amps giving around .6 COP in AHs using the same batteries. With cap discharge it gives around .8 to .9 COP.
What I found is that I can change both the RPM and current draw by changing either or both the trigger input resistance and the air gap. But I get best charging with the original settings. So, for any given machine there is a best combination of variables. And current draw can be either too great or too little for best results.
I've also been experimenting with an older machine I built that uses 5 power windings and hall effect switching of MJL21194 transistors. It will not get above .9COP and draws 1.25 amps in generator mode. I'm in the process of changing it out to SiC FETs. I tried driving all the windings in parallel with one FET and it drew way too much current and blew out the FET. Then I hooked all the windings in series and drove it with one FET. That drew too little current and gave poor results. Next I want to try driving each winding with it's own FET and see what that does.
I think that driving each recovery coil with it's own separate transistor would lower the total current and they could all be tuned by a common pot and matched branch resistors. Another approach would be to put the coils in series instead of in parallel or maybe a combination of parallel pairs in series. Adding a pot in series with each coil would waste a lot of power whereas adding a transistor to each coil would control the current without a lot of heat loss. Either of these approaches would have the effect of lowering the voltage applied across each coil.
Gary Hammond,
I also wanted to ask for your suggestions on reducing the supply current in an SSG/SG-type device.
Tuning consisted of balancing the wheel and lubricating the bearings for a maximum run-down time which was 13 minutes for my wheel (with coil removed) and then adjusting the air gap between magnets and coil core for fastest running with least current draw. This worked out to .354" on my machine. I later switched out the 12ohm input resistor with a 100ohm pot so I could experiment with input resistance and air gap settings. Turns out I got the best results with the original set up. I found that any added resistance anywhere in the circuit reduced the results. This includes thru meters, switches, connections. and wiring.
The rule of thumb for these machines is .250 amps current draw per power winding. So with 7 windings mine should draw 1.75 amps which is very close to what it draws in common ground ( aka generator) mode where it gives around 1.25 COP in AHs using 13AH flooded batteries. And In radiant mode it draws 1.25 amps giving around .6 COP in AHs using the same batteries. With cap discharge it gives around .8 to .9 COP.
What I found is that I can change both the RPM and current draw by changing either or both the trigger input resistance and the air gap. But I get best charging with the original settings. So, for any given machine there is a best combination of variables. And current draw can be either too great or too little for best results.
I've also been experimenting with an older machine I built that uses 5 power windings and hall effect switching of MJL21194 transistors. It will not get above .9COP and draws 1.25 amps in generator mode. I'm in the process of changing it out to SiC FETs. I tried driving all the windings in parallel with one FET and it drew way too much current and blew out the FET. Then I hooked all the windings in series and drove it with one FET. That drew too little current and gave poor results. Next I want to try driving each winding with it's own FET and see what that does.
If I wanted to include such an adjustment would a simple pot in series with each channel be suitable to take the total supply current down from around 0.9A to around 0.25-0.5A, or perhaps elsewhere in the circuit to affect all channels equally?
My concern is that dropping nearly half an amp at around 12V means dissipating 6W so does that mean that the only sensible way to drop the current is to reduce the coil voltage? This can be done with my Buck Converter but that has other consequences.
My concern is that dropping nearly half an amp at around 12V means dissipating 6W so does that mean that the only sensible way to drop the current is to reduce the coil voltage? This can be done with my Buck Converter but that has other consequences.
Gary Hammond,
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