Akula Lantern Circuit

Matt Watts

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #1, on June 1st, 2014, 10:41 PM »Last edited on June 1st, 2014, 11:46 PM
I'm certainly trying to get a handle on this gizmo--even started learning the Russian language hoping it will help somehow.

Best I can tell is you need very accurate nanosecond pulse width impulses to induce the ferro-resonance.  Once running you can reduce the interval between the impulses to gain more power.  I still think as do many others, the ferrite core material Roman is using is not your standard composition.  Also notable in the video is the use of a relatively high voltage capacitor to capture the output from the secondary winding--something we may well have overlooked thus far.

It sure appears straightforward in the video, but as yet no English speaking replications, which makes one wonder if this is a trick or genuine over unity.

Jeff Nading

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #2, on June 2nd, 2014, 02:46 PM »
I would have to agree at this point Matt. I understand he's asked someone to translate for him. I'm wondering if this is like the U shaped iron with two coils wraped around it along with the end plate, as long as the end plate is in place the whole apparatus holds magnetic force.

Matt Watts

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #3, on June 2nd, 2014, 07:50 PM »Last edited on June 2nd, 2014, 08:02 PM
More to think on...
Quote from T-1000
The idea behind is - after first pulse you let BEMF to reach maximum and hit with current from transistor again on its peak time so the magnetic domains when coming back will be supported by current and voltage from BEMF WILL ADD with current from transistor so C28 cap will charge from much higher voltage on positive half-cycle. The LEDs are powered from BEMF. After this pulse you need to let ferrite's magnetic domains to return into first position. This is why there is low frequency in akula's ferrite case.
Something very key being said here:  A mechanism to add voltage from one source with the current from a different source.  Now imagine doing this with the out-of-phase voltage/current seen in reactive power.  The conventional way of doing this is to synchronize the phasing where you end up paying full-price for the wattage you make available.  You get what I'm saying here?  Take this small example:

You have source with 1 volt and 50 amps and another source with 50 volts and 1 amp.
Source A -- 50 watts.
Source B -- 50 watts
Total power -- 100 watts

Now suppose you grab the 50 amps from Source A and the 50 volts from Source B and combine them to get 2500 total watts with only 100 watts of input.  If the Akula circuit can do this to some degree...

We're in business!

Jeff Nading

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #4, on June 3rd, 2014, 02:35 PM »
Makes sence to me Matt, just wish I had time to build this.


Tarakan

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #6, on December 30th, 2014, 01:57 PM »
Quote from Matt Watts on June 2nd, 2014, 07:50 PM
More to think on...

Something very key being said here:  A mechanism to add voltage from one source with the current from a different source.  Now imagine doing this with the out-of-phase voltage/current seen in reactive power.  The conventional way of doing this is to synchronize the phasing where you end up paying full-price for the wattage you make available.  You get what I'm saying here?  Take this small example:

You have source with 1 volt and 50 amps and another source with 50 volts and 1 amp.
Source A -- 50 watts.
Source B -- 50 watts
Total power -- 100 watts

Now suppose you grab the 50 amps from Source A and the 50 volts from Source B and combine them to get 2500 total watts with only 100 watts of input.  If the Akula circuit can do this to some degree...

We're in business!
Enthusiasts all over the world try to reverse engineer Akula circuits and it seems rather unrewarding.
Almost as if intelligenes launch those circuits to distract free energy researchers from more important things.

Cycle

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #7, on March 30th, 2015, 02:37 PM »Last edited on March 30th, 2015, 03:08 PM by Cycle
Quote from Matt Watts on June 1st, 2014, 10:41 PM
I'm certainly trying to get a handle on this gizmo--even started learning the Russian language hoping it will help somehow.
Maybe this will help, at least for YouTube videos that have closed captioning... a way to translate the Russian closed captions to English.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZAREZuTLNg#ws

Also:
http://www.cnet.com/news/youtube-debuts-video-translator-for-300-languages/

And software to translate in real-time from a YouTube audio stream:
https://speechlogger.appspot.com/en/

Matt Watts

Re: Akula Lantern Circuit
« Reply #8, on March 30th, 2015, 05:38 PM »Last edited on March 30th, 2015, 05:56 PM
Yes, I downloaded all the video files and need to run them through various transcribers to get a better feel for what messages he may be relaying.  YouTube translation is pretty poor going from Russian to English when talking about technical information.

I'm actually wondering how good a job these guys could do:
https://speechtotextservice.com/
Quote from Tarakan on December 30th, 2014, 01:57 PM
Enthusiasts all over the world try to reverse engineer Akula circuits and it seems rather unrewarding.
Almost as if intelligenes launch those circuits to distract free energy researchers from more important things.
Roman is very technical, Ruslan is less so and seems to be very genuine.  I have a couple videos where Ruslan lays it all out there.  If it's a hoax, it is very well thought out and precise.  Before I can say one way or another, I need to build the device and tune it the way Ruslan describes, then we should have our answer.