The Konzen Pulse Motor
The Konzen Pulse Motor
The Konzen Pulse Motor
too, but the 5amp draw is way too much for this
motor and impractical considering all the heat
produced in the relay and bearings - they become
hot to the touch at this amp draw.
Three nights ago I hooked a 4v/115v transformer
to the output of the pickup coils in a failed
attempt to get the motor self-running - the
pickup coils produced a steady 40volts - of an
unknown amperage; because I got shocked very
bad by this and said fuck it - this blast went way
up the arm and into the chest cavity - reminded
me of getting shocked by a running car engine
through the sparkplug cable - a pretty dangerous
shock, really.
This shock-test probably proof of the large pulse
that is generated when the coils ignite against
each other - an "opposed repulsing pulsetransformer affect" you could call it.
The AC voltage not stepped up and straight out
of the pickup coils will also shock any fool
enough to curse and throw the leads down too only it tingles the hands and up the arms a bit...
so there is some sort of periodic large pulse of
above 100 volts going on I believe - having this
pickup coil output current scoped should solve
the mystery.
EXPLANATION OF WATTS-INPUT MEASUREMENT:
The .63 mean watts input to the motor is based
on the fact the motor pulses current during only
3 percent of the rotation during one rotation this is from measurements of the test motor
pickup coils.
All the coils are wound from 35ft of .042
magnetic wire that have been factory wound
wound around a plastic bobbin.
When connecting the pick-up coils in series, they
must be "tuned" first, by checking to find the hot
leads of each coil as the motor is running, as not
having the polaraties in the correct order in just
one coil will produce 0 volts.
The pickup coils are not connected to the battery
circuit at all, and only generate current from
being mounted directly behind the power coil as
it receives a pulse of current, and they then
oscillate AC current until the next pulse of the
power coils.
RECYCLING ENERGY:
Important and very useful back-EMF recirculation
circuits extracting from the MOTOR coils - this can
charge-up three batteries as the motor drains another
one - a switching circuit can then be made to keep the
battery supplying power to the motor always fresh. Add
the output of the pickup windings, high-voltage
"splatter" coils and then the output of the shaft and you
will have over-unity from this motor design:
AMPERAGE:
NOTE:
The watts-draw to the motor in simplified math, first by
disregarding the extreme peaks, and again making the
pulses into simple square-waves would be this:
Considering a 10% duty cycle, 11.2V(taken across
battery) x 2.5A x .10 duty cycle = estimated 2.8WATTS
DRAW into the motor during these tests.
There is still the stator coils pickup coil output to look at
CIRCUITS:
Here are some circuits of this motor to understand.
Please note that a large capacitor in parallel with the
battery will greatly improve the performance of this
motor but is not shown in these circuits:
MOTOR-CAPACITOR
Here is something showing the importance of having a
capacitor across the battery powering the motor - the
particular one used in these tests is a 100000uf 25V
cap in paralell with the 12V4ah battery. This size works
very good with the motor being tested using motor-coil
windings of 40ft of #22 gauge magnetic wire...Look at
the difference the cap makes - nearly cutting the voltsdraw to the motor in half! Larger caps will lower the
volts even more... There is also more rpms and power...
note that these shots also do not have a spark-gap feed
occuring like shown in the photos above and there is no
positive pulse following the first pulse:
With cap:
HORSEPOWER TESTS:
ADJUSTABLE TIMING:
The photo below shows the adjustable timing
mechanism using two spinning magnets that trigger a
magnetic reed switch that in turn trips a mosfet relay in
order to send the pulse-current into the motor-coils.
The magnetic reed switch is held in place by an
adjustable plastic plate that changes the timing of the
"PICKUP/SPLATTER COILS"
The pickup/splatter coils to this motor are not
connected to the power supply, and induce AC current
simply by being right next to the pulsing magnestism of
the power coils being turned on and off during the
running of the motor. The placement of these clusters is
Electric bearing used in this motor made from rollerblade bearing and 1/4inch I.D. nylon "hat" washer. Keep
the current of very very low input toprevent these from
burning up. Conventional slip-ring assemblies,or brush
or carbon contacts can be substitued for the electric
bearings to send the jucie through the rotor.