Fully Electronic Free Energy Device

Matt Watts

Re: Fully Electronic Free Energy Device
« Reply #50, on March 16th, 2014, 09:54 AM »
Quote from Jeff Nading on March 16th, 2014, 06:11 AM
Matt you think there is enough information here to build this one, I've never seen one of those LED flood lights before, wouldn't mind having a few of them laying around, especially if they used a free energy source. :cool: :D
It looks to be the Akula0083 30 Watt circuit I started in the other thread.  There are at least a handful of builders in the OU and OUR forums full-on building this thing at various levels of optimism.  I have all the specs downloaded and about to engage in my attempt.



Lynx

Re: Fully Electronic Free Energy Device
« Reply #53, on July 30th, 2014, 03:53 PM »
So the "core" is just made of (thick) wire wrapped in a circle, X number of turns, which then leaves the rest of the coils being wrapped around the core perpendicular to the core wire itself?
Most interesting.
I wish my lazy hiatus could go away, I'm kinda fed up with it.
There's too many interesting things going on here right now making it even more useless to waste time doing nothing.
I wonder what the simple most concept proving device would look like?
Hopefully something that which takes like only 1 hour (tops) to put together, including coffe breaks and regular forum browsing.

Matt Watts

Re: Fully Electronic Free Energy Device
« Reply #54, on July 30th, 2014, 04:49 PM »
Quote from Jeff Nading on July 30th, 2014, 03:10 PM
Looks like wire wraped around wire then more wire on top of that, is this about right? :D
Two wrapped layers around what I'm pretty sure is a soft iron wire core (multi-loop).  Very similar to Steven Mark's Toroidal Power Unit (TPU).  The iron wire acts as a magnetic conductor and power collection core; the two layers wrapped around that act as control windings that pinch the dielectric inertial plain (the heart of the magnetic field) around like a marble through a garden hose.  At least that's how I currently understand this device to work.  If this IS like SM's TPU, the power coming out of the collector loop is mostly DC.

I know one thing for sure, once I get this UniSwitch operational, it won't take much to try a simple test and see if I can get something working.  Switches, wire and a little patience wrapping should be all it takes to find out.