This is a circuit I designed a while back, it rotates 3 batteries. Every battery gets a turn in every position. So every battery gets a turn to be the charging battery. This circuit is intended for use on a monopole energizer wheel. Each coil has 3 trigger windings, as well as 1 powering/motor winding. The circuit can be modified for as many powering windings as you like with is own transistor. The 3 trigger windings of each coil turn on 3 transistors to power the powering/motor winding. When current is passing though the powering/motor winding, the current is saved in the charging battery. When the powering/motor winding is turned off the back emf from the triggered coil charges a capacitor, when the capacitor is raised above 0.6V the capacitor is dumped into the charging battery. The circuit is Tri-Symmetrical so the same process happens for every one of the 3 coils.
Q1b,Q1c,Q2b,Q2c,Q3b and Q3c can be replaced for low voltage drop SCRs, since Q1,Q2 and Q3 are turning off anyway which will turn off the SCRs and stop them from latching on. All switching devices must all have reverse blocking capability. So mosfets and IGBTs (insulated bipolar transistors) may not be suitable as switching devices in this circuit.
The 3 coils are at 120 degrees out of phase with each other, so they are triggered one at a time. For example if you had 4 magnets on the wheel the coils would be placed evenly around the wheel, at 120 degrees apart.
As different coils are triggered, the batteries are rotated in different positions.
Here are 3 schematics showing 3 different battery rotation positions, with 3 different coil triggerings. This will help you get the idea.
The red arrows represent the current flow, the green arrows represent the back emf(energy recovery from the coil).
This could be one of many solutions to solve the battery rotation problem with the ssg.
This circuit can be modified to have just one coil triggering for 1 hour or so, then onto the next coil, with the addition of a 3 position sequential timer circuit such as a 555 timer pulsing a CD4017 decade counter.
I have designed more variations of this circuit, and wish to show them all in a PDF. But I have not been able to find a schematic design software that can rotate the component symbols at 60 degrees. And may have to resort to using a paint brush program or draw the schematics by hand.
So I have posted these hand drawn schematics early, because I don't know how long it will take to make my PDF presentation.
Kind Regards
Nityesh Schnaderbeck
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