Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 Is Current Electricity Theory Wrong? And/Or Could Free Energy be Real? With Possible Explanation/(s) (Warning!……Somewhat Technical) A steel fork does not make spark when touch either side of abattery. Connecting either side of a battery to a steel fork via wiredoes not make sparks. Sparksoccur when circuit stops being fully complete with enough voltage (about 2.7volts) (2 AA NIMH). (untested) Capacitor charges (only when circuit is nearcomplete separated only by the gap between the plates) Battery-provided electricity lights up an LED through acapacitor (all components in the same series circuit). Battery doesn’t repel orattract steel silverware. Battery voltage decreasesover time with use (not new). Battery-created electrical energy can go through a capacitorto light up an LED to the same brightness as when the capacitor isn’t in thecircuit at all. Nickel-Metal Hydride battery self-recharges for a minute ofuse whenever it run out. Multimeter results/measurements appear to defy entropy bygoing up. Putting the multimeter test lead wires next to each other seems tocause increase as well. A battery terminal connected to a spoon-sized piece of metalcreates an AC voltage of around 80-200 millivolts. Still ceramic magnet touched by leadsto a multimeter heavily affects the voltage up to 200 or more millivolts eitherdirection. Electric fan voltage defies Newton’s Third Law by only going down to 2.3Vfrom 2.7V. Parallel circuit LED brightness defies explanation, staysthe same even with at least 9 resistors all in their own circuits parallel toLED. A hand-crank-generator-flashlight I unscrewed ran an LED inparallel with 8 resistors or so and a capacitor as easily as just the LED. TheLED didn't seem dimmer as far as I remember. (The last observation was not included in any manuscripts.) Opinions and Possible Explanations It would seem that rather than just electrons moving, some unknown“force” or “fluid” drags electrons, and the “fluid” can go right through theinsulation on capacitors. Then perhaps capacitors, batteries, and maybe even magnets,can create energy by charging and discharging. In today's science, there is this "Law of Conservationof Energy". And all motion is supposedly kinetic energy and comes frompotential energy. But I noticed one day that in Newton's three laws of motion, motion iscreated not by energy or potential energy, but by an "unbalancedforce". And I remember that fridge magnets can give off"endless" force apparently without any electrical energy input. So, wouldn't it be theoretically be possible to break the"Law of Conservation of Energy" using this "force-energygap"? Maybe it's possible, withcapacitors/solenoids/electromagnets/batteries to get more energy out of outputforce plus waste energy than total energy put in. Then: Work (energy) is FD∙cos(ө) But, if a machine can move magnets and/or coils by changingthe force without moving a magnet or a coil, by, say, changing polarity like amotor, or turning on and then off repeatedly, then maybe it can do work withoutusing work, or by using very little work (only enough to move electrons a smalldistance). And perhaps all motors create energy, just by beingpulse/polarity-dependent devices. Notes I tried to send this to 7 peer-reviewed journals, but theyall rejected it eventually. I’m starting to wonder, then, whether peer-reviewed journalsare really as good and important of a news source as scientists and otherpeople seem to think they are. More I have a digital multimeter that I am usingwith a battery. First, I tried to run the battery out of as much voltage/energyas I could. My multimeter said about 12mv or 6 mv. The battery's voltagewouldn't seem to hit and stay at zero.I then took it out of all circuits it was connected to. Then I let it sit therefor several days. for the first day or 2, It only went up to about .1V andseemed to be staying more or less around there, consistent with what I wouldexpect of a capacitor effect.But then on day 5 and 6, I checked the battery, and it said .895V and was at1775 or so microvolts.I then tried to run that out of amps and on the next day it was right backthere at .893-.892V." Suggestions I created a solenoid coil of about 85 turns ( a normal coilthat would move toward or away from a magnet when on and under enough amps). Itested it, and it ran the same amperage when running far away from a magnet(about a foot away) as when running right next to it. The solenoid used only 1 ohm while the LED I had used about200 kohm. Also. I learned in DC electrics class, if I am rememberingcorrectly, that magnetic force of a wire/solenoid is dependant on amps andturns of wire, not volts or power. So I could presumably run AC current through a transformerand maybe or maybe not a diode to get equal force out of less power. Although the LED I was using seemed to limit amps andprevented the solenoid from working, maybe more amps or power than the 4batteries I had could force the solenoid to work. Maybe not.
EdEarl Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 Is Current Electricity Theory Wrong? Could Free Energy be Real? No, you should find why your observations are in error using current theory. No, if it were free you could easily jump into orbit. You would have to hold yourself on the earth, because gravity would not. Also, you would not have to eat, because your body would have free energy. Plants would not need sunlight. Windmills would turn without wind. And, many other totally absurd things.
Brett Nortje Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 No, you should find why your observations are in error using current theory. No, if it were free you could easily jump into orbit. You would have to hold yourself on the earth, because gravity would not. Also, you would not have to eat, because your body would have free energy. Plants would not need sunlight. Windmills would turn without wind. And, many other totally absurd things. Could be wrong, as, it is still being put in place. Free energy would be where you see reactions. when you sling a oscillator together with the other 'pebbles,' it will keep the energy going until it is used up. this technical trick can be replicated in science, I suppose...
pwagen Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 You seem to have a very poor understanding of how electricity is supposed to work. I suggest you remedy this before trying to get anything else peer reviewed.
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 I wouldn't call it out just yet. My LED has been running 9 complete days on 2 AA rechargeable batteries.
swansont Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 I wouldn't call it out just yet. My LED has been running 9 complete days on 2 AA rechargeable batteries. 200 kOhms at 2.7 Volts is 13.5 microamps, or about 3 milliAmp-hours over 9 days. Since AA rechargeables are typically 1500-2500 mAh, there's nothing surprising here from the perspective of standard electrical theory. NB Ten or so lines between paragraphs is an annoying presentation style to many. 3
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 Sorry about the spaces, they weren't in my Microsoft Word document, the pasting system wanted me to paste in a box instead of the actual window. It also jammed many words together.
Externet Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 You need to read this and its embedded links along the paragraphs... -----> http://amasci.com/miscon/whatis.html
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 Maybe the universe doesn't obey the law of thermodynamics and the magnitude of the Lenz Law is a seventh or less of what it should be.
ydoaPs Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 Maybe the universe doesn't obey the law of thermodynamics and the magnitude of the Lenz Law is a seventh or less of what it should be.The computer you used to type those words disagrees with you. 3
ACG52 Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 How about you get at least a minimal education before you try this kind of thing? 1
swansont Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 No it doesn't.Your computer would not function if the theories about electricity were wrong, so yes, it does. 1
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 The fans would still run, and the wires and bulbs, too. The fan would just run 7 times faster than it should assuming this posted theory is right.
John Cuthber Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 The fans would still run, and the wires and bulbs, too. The fan would just run 7 times faster than it should assuming this posted theory is right. Most people don't use a computer as a fan. The semiconductors wouldn't work if you were right. They do work. You are wrong.
swansont Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 The fans would still run, and the wires and bulbs, too. The fan would just run 7 times faster than it should assuming this posted theory is right. All other issues aside: Does the fan run 7 times faster than it should? 2
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 I don't know. Has anyone else checked how fast a fan runs compared to the battery or AC energy? I don't know and I don' have the tools to check and make decisions about the actual fan speed in real life.
krash661 Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 (edited) I tried to send this to 7 peer-reviewed journals, but they all rejected it eventually. this pretty much answers everything. after reading some of this i agree with alex. Edited June 12, 2013 by krash661
swansont Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 I don't know. Has anyone else checked how fast a fan runs compared to the battery or AC energy? I don't know and I don' have the tools to check and make decisions about the actual fan speed in real life. I think the company making the computer checked the fan speed when they were testing the design and also doing quality control on the manufactured devices. If the fan was running 7x faster than it should, they would have checked up on things. Anyone making a motor would have noticed this, multiple times, in the past >100 years. It doesn't pass the smell test.
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 Then perhaps I just noticed it three months ago? I mean, they're for-profit businesses. They probably won't just do science on their devices when they already make and test them against saltwater and mechanical forces. -1
Windevoid Posted June 12, 2013 Author Posted June 12, 2013 What does the smiley face mean?............It's kind of creepy when I don't know whether it's smiling or smirking. is this about the electric universe theory ? No Repost Without Large Spaces Is Current Electricity Theory Wrong? And/or Could Free Energy be Real? With Possible Explanation/(s) (Warning!……Somewhat Technical) A steel fork does not make spark when touch either side of abattery. Connecting either side of a battery to a steel fork via wiredoes not make sparks. Sparksoccur when circuit stops being fully complete with enough voltage (about 2.7volts) (2 AA NIMH). (untested) Capacitor charges (only when circuit is nearcomplete separated only by the gap between the plates) Battery-provided electricity lights up an LED through acapacitor (all components in the same series circuit). Battery doesn’t repel orattract steel silverware. Battery voltage decreasesover time with use (not new). Battery-created electrical energy can go through a capacitorto light up an LED to the same brightness as when the capacitor isn’t in thecircuit at all. Nickel-Metal Hydride battery self-recharges for a minute ofuse whenever it run out. Multimeter results/measurements appear to defy entropy bygoing up. Putting the multimeter test lead wires next to each other seems tocause increase as well. A battery terminal connected to a spoon-sized piece of metalcreates an AC voltage of around 80-200 millivolts. Still ceramic magnet touched by leadsto a multimeter heavily affects the voltage up to 200 or more millivolts eitherdirection. Electric fan voltage defies Newton’s Third Law by only going down to 2.3Vfrom 2.7V. Parallel circuit LED brightness defies explanation, staysthe same even with at least 9 resistors all in their own circuits parallel toLED. A hand-crank-generator-flashlight I unscrewed ran an LED inparallel with 8 resistors or so and a capacitor as easily as just the LED. TheLED didn't seem dimmer as far as I remember. (The last observation was not included in any manuscripts.) Opinions and Possible Explanations It would seemthat the magnitude of the Lenz Law is a seventh or less of what it should be. It would seem that rather than just electrons moving, some unknown“force” or “fluid” drags electrons, and the “fluid” can go right through theinsulation on capacitors. Then perhaps capacitors, batteries, and maybe even magnets,can create energy by charging and discharging. In today's science, there is this "Law of Conservationof Energy". And all motion is supposedly kinetic energy and comes frompotential energy. But I noticed one day that in Newton's three laws of motion, motion iscreated not by energy or potential energy, but by an "unbalancedforce". And I remember that fridge magnets can give off"endless" force apparently without any electrical energy input. So, wouldn't it be theoretically be possible to break the"Law of Conservation of Energy" using this "force-energygap"? Maybe it's possible, with capacitors/solenoids/electromagnets/batteriesto get more energy out of output force plus waste energy than total energy putin. Then: Work (energy) is FD∙cos(ө) But, if a machine can move magnets and/or coils by changingthe force without moving a magnet or a coil, by, say, changing polarity like amotor, or turning on and then off repeatedly, then maybe it can do work withoutusing work, or by using very little work (only enough to move electrons a smalldistance). And perhaps all motors create energy, just by beingpulse/polarity-dependent devices. Notes I tried to send this to 7 peer-reviewed journals, but theyall rejected it eventually. I’m starting to wonder, then, whether peer-reviewed journalsare really as good and important of a news source as scientists and otherpeople seem to think they are. More I have a digital multimeter that I am usingwith a battery. First, I tried to run the battery out of as much voltage/energyas I could. My multimeter said about 12mv or 6 mv. The battery's voltagewouldn't seem to hit and stay at zero.I then took it out of all circuits it was connected to. Then I let it sit therefor several days. for the first day or 2, It only went up to about .1V andseemed to be staying more or less around there, consistent with what I wouldexpect of a capacitor effect.But then on day 5 and 6, I checked the battery, and it said .895V and was at1775 or so microvolts.I then tried to run that out of amps and on the next day it was right backthere at .893-.892V." Suggestions I created a solenoid coil of about 85 turns ( a normal coilthat would move toward or away from a magnet when on and under enough amps). Itested it, and it ran the same amperage when running far away from a magnet(about a foot away) as when running right next to it. The solenoid used only 1 ohm while the LED I had used about200 kohm. Also. I learned in DC electrics class, if I am rememberingcorrectly, that magnetic force of a wire/solenoid is dependant on amps andturns of wire, not volts or power. So I could presumably run AC current through a transformerand maybe or maybe not a diode to get equal force out of less power. Although the LED I was using seemed to limit amps andprevented the solenoid from working, maybe more amps or power than the 4batteries I had could force the solenoid to work. Maybe not.
EdEarl Posted June 12, 2013 Posted June 12, 2013 What does the smiley face mean?............It's kind of creepy when I don't know whether it's smiling or smirking. Neither, it shows my frustration that you ignore really good advice from very smart and educated people, and frustration that your view of how things work is vastly different from science that has been developed by great minds dating back at least to the time of Plato. That you think you know more about electricity than the folks at NASA who put the Curiosity rover on Mars is incredible. 1
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