09.02.2018 Views

Practical Guige to Free Energy Devices

eBook 3000 pages! author: Patrick J. Kelly "This eBook contains most of what I have learned about this subject after researching it for a number of years. I am not trying to sell you anything, nor am I trying to convince you of anything. When I started looking into this subject, there was very little useful information and any that was around was buried deep in incomprehensible patents and documents. My purpose here is to make it easier for you to locate and understand some of the relevant material now available. What you believe is up to yourself and is none of my business. Let me stress that almost all of the devices discussed in the following pages, are devices which I have not personally built and tested. It would take several lifetimes to do that and it would not be in any way a practical option. Consequently, although I believe everything said is fully accurate and correct, you should treat everything as being “hearsay” or opinion. Some time ago, it was commonly believed that the world was flat and rested on the backs of four elephants and that when earthquakes shook the ground, it was the elephants getting restless. If you want to believe that, you are fully at liberty to do so, however, you can count me out as I don’t believe that. " THE MATERIAL PRESENTED IS FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. SHOULD YOU DECIDE TO PERFORM EXPERIMENTS OR CONSTRUCT ANY DEVICE, YOU DO SO WHOLLY ON YOUR OWN RESPONSIBILITY -- NEITHER THE COMPANY HOSTING THIS WEB SITE, NOR THE SITE DESIGNER ARE IN ANY WAY RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR ACTIONS OR ANY RESULTING LOSS OR DAMAGE OF ANY DESCRIPTION, SHOULD ANY OCCUR AS A RESULT OF WHAT YOU DO. ​

eBook 3000 pages!
author: Patrick J. Kelly

"This eBook contains most of what I have learned about this subject after researching it for a number of years. I am not trying to sell you anything, nor am I trying to convince you of anything. When I started looking into this subject, there was very little useful information and any that was around was buried deep in incomprehensible patents and documents. My purpose here is to make it easier for you to locate and understand some of the relevant material now available. What you believe is up to yourself and is none of my business. Let me stress that almost all of the devices discussed in the following pages, are devices which I have not personally built and tested. It would take several lifetimes to do that and it would not be in any way a practical option. Consequently, although I believe everything said is fully accurate and correct, you should treat everything as being “hearsay” or opinion.

Some time ago, it was commonly believed that the world was flat and rested on the backs of four elephants and that when earthquakes shook the ground, it was the elephants getting restless. If you want to believe that, you are fully at liberty to do so, however, you can count me out as I don’t believe that. "

THE MATERIAL PRESENTED IS FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. SHOULD YOU DECIDE TO PERFORM EXPERIMENTS OR CONSTRUCT ANY DEVICE, YOU DO SO WHOLLY ON YOUR OWN RESPONSIBILITY -- NEITHER THE COMPANY HOSTING THIS WEB SITE, NOR THE SITE DESIGNER ARE IN ANY WAY RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR ACTIONS OR ANY RESULTING LOSS OR DAMAGE OF ANY DESCRIPTION, SHOULD ANY OCCUR AS A RESULT OF WHAT YOU DO.

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We want an NPN transis<strong>to</strong>r and so the MJ11016 looks possible with a 100 volt capacity, 30 amp current and 200<br />

watt dissipation. It is a Darling<strong>to</strong>n pair in a single case and so will switch on around 1.4 volts as opposed <strong>to</strong> 0.7<br />

volts on the base, but that should not make any difference in our circuit. With a gain of 1000 a simple carbon<br />

variable resis<strong>to</strong>r could be used <strong>to</strong> control the base current. There are many other transis<strong>to</strong>rs <strong>to</strong> choose from.<br />

Another way <strong>to</strong> find a suitable transis<strong>to</strong>r might be <strong>to</strong> go on eBay and search on “transis<strong>to</strong>r” and see what<br />

transis<strong>to</strong>rs are popular and how much they cost. An alternative might be <strong>to</strong> try the circuit with a FET transis<strong>to</strong>r<br />

such as the IRF740 which is high voltage, very powerful and not expensive. However, FET transis<strong>to</strong>rs trigger on<br />

voltage and draw almost no current through their “grid” connection which is the equivalent <strong>to</strong> a bipolar “base”<br />

connection and so some experimentation with the circuit may be needed.<br />

It might also be worthwhile looking <strong>to</strong> see what transis<strong>to</strong>rs were chosen by Alexkor in his 5-battery circuits in<br />

chapter 6. If we do that we find the MJE13009 which has an identical specification and so is almost certainly the<br />

same as a T13009 transis<strong>to</strong>r and the MJE version is readily available on eBay. Another of his transis<strong>to</strong>rs is the<br />

2SC3552 transis<strong>to</strong>r with 500V capability and 150 watt capacity and described as “fast acting”.<br />

The Diode<br />

One component which has been shown but not described is the diode or ‘rectifier’. This is a device which has a<br />

very high resistance <strong>to</strong> current flowing in one direction and a very low resistance <strong>to</strong> current flowing in the opposite<br />

direction. The base/emitter junction of a transis<strong>to</strong>r is effectively a diode and, at a push, can be used as such. A<br />

proper diode is cheap <strong>to</strong> buy and has far greater voltage and current handling capacities than the base/emitter<br />

junction of a transis<strong>to</strong>r.<br />

Diodes are mainly made from one of two materials: germanium and silicon. Germanium diodes are used with<br />

very small alternating currents such as radio signals coming from an aerial. This is because a germanium diode<br />

needs only 0.2 Volts or so <strong>to</strong> carry a current while silicon needs 0.6 <strong>to</strong> 0.7 Volts (same as a silicon transis<strong>to</strong>r<br />

base/emitter junction). Germanium diodes (and transis<strong>to</strong>rs) are very sensitive <strong>to</strong> temperature change and so are<br />

normally restricted <strong>to</strong> low power circuits. One very neat application for a silicon diode is as an ‘un-interruptible<br />

power supply’ where mains failure is caught instantly:<br />

In this circuit, the mains voltage drives the Power Supply Unit which generates 12 Volts at point ‘A’. This provides<br />

current <strong>to</strong> the Load. The diode has +12 Volts at ‘A’ and +12 Volts at point ‘B’ so there is no voltage drop across it<br />

and it will not carry current in either direction. This means that the battery is effectively isolated when the mains is<br />

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