Hi all, i was playing around last night with an Alum battery that has had no water for 3 days and the light was completely dead. however, i noticed that pulsing the contact with the led, it shines for a very brief moment, and it shines at full brightness. so i started pulsing it manually for a while using different patterns and saw that after a while of pulsing action the led started to come back slowly at first and more and more as more pulsing took place. i could bring back the light to almost full brightness. the charge kept going for about one or two hours, almost feels like a capacitor. i wonder if adding a pulsing signal to the circuit can improve the performance of these batteries, and also try to figure out what is causing this, given that the battery is releasing barely any current. reminds me a little of what Mr. Bedini talks about on the dVD on Tesla impulse technology... could it be one of those radiant nodes across the coil caused by the faint pulses from the alum battery? see for yourselves:
sg oscillator pulse charge - YouTube
carlos
sg oscillator pulse charge - YouTube
carlos
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