mike,
current does not matter..... does not matter, just enough to move the ions a bit, the radiant does the rest. you will know the current is right when everything stays cold and your batteries charge. "branch currents" look at the forced oscillator thread. that is what branch currents are, splitting the output of each strand instead of combining them. as far as the tesla node, wind an inductor, place it across the coil output positive in series. so charge bat pos to one side of the FWBR then the choke goes to both sides of the FWBR then the charge battery positive continues on to the battery,
if the inductor also called a choke is at the right number of henries, it will pick up the information contained in the spike (dipoles) and spit it out the rectifier, with no loss of charging.
everyplace you put a diode there is an opportunity to create a radiant event. the transistor is 3 diodes, diode off the collecter, diodes in the rectifier, the junction in the diode is a radiant door. the junction in the transistor is a radiant door. where does the gain in a transistor come from? think about switchng power supplies and the gains they produce.
Tom C
Tom C
current does not matter..... does not matter, just enough to move the ions a bit, the radiant does the rest. you will know the current is right when everything stays cold and your batteries charge. "branch currents" look at the forced oscillator thread. that is what branch currents are, splitting the output of each strand instead of combining them. as far as the tesla node, wind an inductor, place it across the coil output positive in series. so charge bat pos to one side of the FWBR then the choke goes to both sides of the FWBR then the charge battery positive continues on to the battery,
if the inductor also called a choke is at the right number of henries, it will pick up the information contained in the spike (dipoles) and spit it out the rectifier, with no loss of charging.
everyplace you put a diode there is an opportunity to create a radiant event. the transistor is 3 diodes, diode off the collecter, diodes in the rectifier, the junction in the diode is a radiant door. the junction in the transistor is a radiant door. where does the gain in a transistor come from? think about switchng power supplies and the gains they produce.
Tom C
Tom C
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