Originally posted by wrtner
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I've been using the COP calculator provided as part of the group experiment (if you are familiar with this?) for over a year now, and have some 40+ test runs. The COP calculator is designed to do pretty much what you suggest above. The problem I have is that I generally get a COP of around 1 (give or take a few %). I have felt ongoing frustration with this, since the point of the group experiment / SSG is, as I understand it, to show that it is radiant energy, and not amps, that are charging the battery. If the COP is 1 though, then I fail to see how this is demonstrating the point??
However the other day I was reading a report by a guy called Alex in the Experimenters Files section of the Group Experiment where he points out that his analog ammeter measures the spike going into his charging battery, and interprets this as a constant rate of current, when in actual fact, for most of the time the current flow is a lot less than this (and is zero for about 75% of the time.) The last page of Alex's report shows a computer generated chart (which I think is derived from his scope somehow) showing voltage and current. I would love to know how he generated this chart. I tried emailing him through the Yahoo group, but do not know if he got the email, since the group is no longer extant.
Working on Alex's basis, that the current flow into the battery is much less than the analog ammeter reading most of the time, then this makes me happy, because for the first time in a year I get some concrete evidence that it is the volts not the amps, charging my battery.
However, assuming Alex is right, and unless I'm overlooking something obvious here, I'd like to point out that the COP calculator / group experiment is very misleading / downright wrong, since it calculates the COP based on a constant current input derived by the ammeter from the maximum voltage during the spike. I'm not sure if the group experiment is actually still running or not, but if it is, then maybe a slight change of methodology would be useful, in order to take this in to account?
It'd be good to hear other's thoughts about this?
Rob
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