Originally posted by Aaron Murakami
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Kromrey Disclosure - Bedini SG - Beyond the Advanced Handbook by Peter Lindemann
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Originally posted by adys15 View PostThanks Aron,i saw your videos but you showed the electromagnets coils,i.m interested in the rotor electromagnets..if there are wound like in the patent they cancel eachother
The generator coils are rotating and could be considered rotor electromagnets.
Instead of permanent magnets that induce current into the rotating electromagnets, those could be electromagnets as well, but those are not rotating. Please clarify.
If you mean the stationary ones, you need to wind them so they have the same magnetic field polarity as the permanent magnets.
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Originally posted by adys15 View PostThanks Aron,i saw your videos but you showed the electromagnets coils,i.m interested in the rotor electromagnets..if there are wound like in the patent they cancel eachother
The original Raymond Kromrey Patent depicts an Electromagnet for the Field excitation. it carries the same excitation current as that carried by the Rotor coils. Remember the Kromery patent talks more about it as a 'Low-drag Generator' and NOT as an 'Energizer' John Bedini perfected the design to explore the 'Energiser' aspect of this configuration and unveil the Radiant Electricity which was the basis of it. he then termed it as the G-Field Generator. Please watch his DVD on the Kromery convertor.
just my few cents...
rgds,
Faraday88.'Wisdom comes from living out of the knowledge.'
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Originally posted by adys15 View Postsorry i meant rotor coils,can someone make a good diagram of the windings that we can all take for granted and experiment with those
Its there in the video that Aaron referred to...
Rgds,
Faraday88.'Wisdom comes from living out of the knowledge.'
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Originally posted by adys15 View Postif you wind the rotor coils like this pic.the voltage will cancel out
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Hi Gary,
I respond here to your post #107 from this thread https://www.energyscienceforum.com/f...sg-build/page8.
4 Battery swapper schematic
Only difference is, I wired mine to split the negative instead of split the positive. That allowed me use my standard coil without having to make a new coil with an isolated output winding.
Did I depict Tom_Koorns, post#17 explanation correctly Figure 4?
Tom told me at the conference, where that video was recorded, that Teslagenx might eventually offer the swapper in kit form. But I don't think that has ever materialized.
One other big difference is that I have only run mine with 12 volt input. The one in the video was running with 24 volt input. This greatly affects the overall performance.
-Brodonh is using 12V batteries, post#84
-Tom K uses 12 V batteries/ 20 power-supply, post #88
-rdvideo is using 12V batteries, #320/#322
Radiant charging
When watching the video (Beyond the Advanced Handbook) and remembering what John said about Radiant charging in previous videos, the question as put forward in #80 immediately came to my mind. Reading your answer in post#81, I then assume if I would apply this to the standard SG setup (from the first two handbooks, no CG mode), you’d say that if after having the output battery charged radiantly, and letting it rest for a while you can swap the input/output batteries and John earlier statements would not apply?
Back poping
RS mentions this in post#332, and refers to the PL 2015 presentation. In #342he mentions it again, but for 2016. These I cannot find on the EmediaPress website.. Any idea where I would be able to find it?
2015 https://emediapress.com/product-cate...nference/2015/
2016 https://emediapress.com/product-cate...nference/2016/
RPMs
Both the machine from Peter in the video and also here in on this thread run at much higher RPMs than the SG (either in CG or Radiant mode). Is the main cause for this the small amount of magnets and the smaller rotor diameter? Peter’s power coil has a wider core, so that might influence it too I guess (stronger magnetic field)?
Best regards,
Rodolphe
354 - 2020-12-01 - Attachment.pdfAttached FilesLast edited by pearldragon; 01-12-2021, 08:03 AM.
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Hi Rodolphe,
4 Battery swapper schematic
I tried to reason how that circuit would look like, is Figure 3 in the Attachment correct? This is the setup you can use for a battery swapper with a standard twisted strands coil (from TeslaGenX)? (so no separate output winding).
Did I depict Tom_Koorns, post#17 explanation correctly Figure 4?
Why would it make such a difference in performance? Because the magnetic field in in the coil when excited would be stronger, and so the collapse also, and hence a higher output?
I tried to plough through this whole thread, did I understand correctly that:
-Brodonh is using 12V batteries, post#84
-Tom K uses 12 V batteries/ 20 power-supply, post #88
-rdvideo is using 12V batteries, #320/#322
Reading your answer in post#81, I then assume if I would apply this to the standard SG setup (from the first two handbooks, no CG mode), you’d say that if after having the output battery charged radiantly, and letting it rest for a while you can swap the input/output batteries and John earlier statements would not apply?
"BACK POPPING"
https://emediapress.com/shop/bedini-sg/
https://emediapress.com/shop/poor-ma...wapper-system/
Is the main cause for this the small amount of magnets and the smaller rotor diameter?
Gary Hammond,Last edited by Gary Hammond; 01-12-2021, 05:15 PM.
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Hi Gary,
Thanks for your answers.
You’re right: it’s John Koorn (not Tom Koorn, my bad).
No, that's not what I was saying. I was not contradicting John.
Best regards,
Rodolphe
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