(04-25-2024, 06:22 PM)Jim Mac Wrote: So check this out.. I cut a coil in the single pipe that is carrying two DC currents opposite ways.The way i see it the LED lights are diodes and they self regulate between them into an AC signal, When the one goes Positive the other goes Negative until they reach the input voltage level and then the flow flips over and the opposite happens, producing a very natural AC wave. If one voltage is much higher then the effect falls away. Great work.
When the load is these 12V Edison LED bulbs, and it is set at the right voltages, the coil produces Alternating Current in the single pipe line..
I tried to repeat it with resistors instead of bulbs, but it will not happen. So far only with these bulbs. I am not sure if it is some form of resonance happening, or what.
If it is resonance, we now have a resonating AC circuit that requires No Switching... And ONLY DC Input. Hmmm...
BTW- I watch these bulbs on the scope, from 1V to 12V hooked up to the same supply, and the input is flat DC the whole way.
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Current Flowing in 2 Directions in 1 Wire
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05-17-2024, 01:05 PM
can you draw up a ciruit? nor seeing exactly what is going on. what freq is the ac on the scope?
mags
05-17-2024, 05:34 PM
(05-17-2024, 01:05 PM)magluvin Wrote: can you draw up a ciruit? nor seeing exactly what is going on. what freq is the ac on the scope? The circuit has been posted several times, but I wouldn't spend too much time trying to figure it out because the Bulb was filled with chips and circuitry. https://www.mooker.com/thread-117-post-1...ml#pid1934 |
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