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NOTE: I helped assemble a kit at the Symposium, but, as of today (November 24/10) have not yet
received my kit. I was the first one NOT to receive a kit at the Symposium. They planned for 250 and
accepted about 380 people.
Notes about assembly of Classic 3 Coil Bedini Monopole Generator/Motor Kit at Coeur d’Alene
Symposium on November 13/10
http://pesn.com/2010/11/23/9501730_Bedini_Renaissance_Conference_a_turning_point/
Sitting at table ~ John Mcginnis, ? Gustafson, Lee ? (owner of kit), North Dakota Indian (fiber optic
installer). Sorry Guys, I didn’t get your names properly. We WERE one of the first to get our motor
running… Whooo Hoooo
Note: this was not our motor, we weren’t allowed to take pictures. I got this off the web.
1. Mount magnets with North pole facing out. North pole will point North if spun on a sheet of paper;
will also attract the south pole of a compass.
2. Shim rotor magnets with something (John Bedini said paper). The magnets need to be secure to the
outer rim of the rotor. Movement robs power from the rotor. Maybe that’s what the glue was for.
3. Make sure the o-rings are on the shaft BEFORE you snap together the rotor.
You can take the rotor apart by releasing the snap clips a pair at a time (guess why we needed to know
that?).
4. Put drive coil position adjuster on the base before installing the rotor stands.
5. Pack core rods tightly and tap them in with a hammer. You want just enough rods so that they stay in
the core (too many will split the core). It helps to put them in and push them all down at once. We had
some spares in our kit.
Classic 3 Pole Kit Bedini Motor Circuit,
redrawn by George Wiseman
Eagle-Research.com
LEDs 1-12 as ‘load’
D1
Slave 1
Slave 2
4
1 3
2
1 3
Q1 C1
Q2 C1
Q3 C1
B2 B2 B2
E3 E3 E3
+ +
9 Volt 9 Volt
Primary Battery Charging Battery
6. Remove core wires from the holes in the plastic base of the solenoids before installing the solenoids.
The wires are only installed through the base holes for shipping. You might have to unwrap a couple of
feet of wire to be able to get the wire out of the holes.
7. Press firmly to install the slave and load coils into their clips.
8. Burn varnish for ½" of the ends of the coil leads. Then back-scrape the resulting carbon off with a
sharp edged knife, until you have a shiny copper surface.
9. Mount drive coil up from bottom of base, turn base into slides and lock into the adjuster. Slide
adjuster so that drive coil is directly under the axel for initial tests.
10. When starting motor, the rotor needs to be spun up to high speed by hand. May help to fasten the
base to the table or have someone else hold the motor still.
1. There was no circuit board in the kit, just some strips of copper coated plastic.
1a. I’d recommend assembly neatly on a circuit board (experimenters board from Radio Shack).
1b. Include voltage test points (wire to clip on test leads). It helps to have connectors on the circuit
board that allow amp-meter(s) to be installed (in series with the batteries and coils).
1c. I’d really like to see a circuit board come with future kits.
2. The initial circuit wiring schematic/instructions, that came on the disk, were incorrect in several ways
(they may have been corrected by the time you read this).
2a. The Charge and Primary batteries are on the wrong side of the circuit. ‘Move’ them to the opposite
side and connect them to the appropriate colors. Except for the series connection between the Charge
and Primary batteries, the positives and negatives are NOT actually connected, just shown very close
together. (Tom told me this).
2b. The transistor is a NPN, named MPS8099. (As read on device using my flashlight).
2c. The transistor pinout shown is BCE (231), instead of the correct EBC (123). The 3 transistors aren’t
actually depicted, just their pinout. (LUC told me this. Tom showed how to correctly wire the
transistor(s).)
2d. The top of all the coils is supposed to be the inside wire; the bottom is the outside wire. This is the
reverse of ‘normal’ accepted schematic protocol. (Tom told me this.)
2e. There isn’t a DP3T in the kit, just a SPST. I used it to shut off the current through the signal coil of
the drive solenoid.
2f. There was no potentiometer in the kit; so a person needs to experiment to find the best resistance
value, for fine tuning.
I understand that once the motor is running, the incandescent light (included in the kit) can be used (in
series with, or in place of, the on/off switch) to reduce the current in the signal coil to increase
efficiency.
I understand that the potentiometer can replace the incandescent bulb to fine tune or optimize efficiency.
Using a 4 way rotary switch would be nice, to choose beween (1)off, (2)on, (3)on through potentiometer
and (4)on through incandescent bulb.
3. I think it would help to wind the individual solenoid wires together, once they leave the coil, to
prevent cross induction of the magnetic fields. Just be careful to mark the inside and outside wires
before winding or it’ll be near impossible to figure them out. Have the wires long enough to neatly
come to your circuit board.
4. I found it handy to make the LED’s (load that came with the kit) into a long string, with test points so
we could jumper any number of them, to vary the ‘load’. Be sure to connect them correctly, they are
polarity sensitive.
My load ideas:
A diode (IN4001) should be wired in series with the LEDs, because LED’s have very little resistance to
reverse current and they’ll burn out in an AC environment.
Maybe use a full wave bridge rectifier to make use of both ‘halves’ of the voltage pulses; because this
voltage is AC.
Maybe wire the LEDs as a full wave bridge rectifier.
Maybe wire the LEDs so that half are one polarity and half are the other (with solenoid wired in center),
so catch both halves of the sine wave.
Maybe wire diodes and capacitors as a voltage doubler, to efficiently catch both sides of the wave and to
double DC voltage for use in single load.
5. Monitoring the charging rate of the ‘charge’ battery worked well to help us discover the optimum
adjustment of the drive coil position.
6. It would help to have the circuit board and batteries in a stand/box/container that would allow easy
changing of batteries and neat/easy testing/tuning of the circuit.
7. I’m thinking that the output of the assembly could be doubled if add another drive coil (in place of the
load coil) and two more slave coils in the empty brackets; these to have their own circuit.
8. I’m thinking all the coils could be independent if each was set up as a separate drive coil. This would
allow:
Higher frequency charging pulses to the Charge battery, with less current.
Lower current draw from Primary battery.
Full control of the timing by using Hall Effect; adjust the pulse timing, not the coil position.
Placement-angling of the rotor and drive solenoids to maximize core attraction and solenoid repulsion
effect.
Use of even-even magnet:solenoid geometry to reduce lockup
(as per Bill Muller ~ Al Francour).
9. I’m thinking the charging circuit would be more efficient if the diode from the collector to the
Charging battery was replaced with a full wave bridge rectifier. Then the Charging battery would
receive BOTH sides of the sine wave created by the drive coil.
10. The Load coil could, with a full wave bridge rectifier, also charge the Charging battery or the
Primary battery. It is fully load/voltage isolated and ‘floating’ relative to those circuits.
Questions:
Tests:
The NPN transistor base is normally grounded (through base diode) and therefore normally OFF.
The signal coil (in bifilar drive solenoid) is what turns on the transistors; through power switch (and/or
pot. and/or incandescent bulb) though the transistor base resistors. It turns on with ‘positive’
voltage/amperage and turns off when voltage goes negative (current flow stops).
Given: Magnets spinning past the core make the current:voltage positive and negative.
The induced ‘negative’ voltage:current (from the signal coil) flows past the transistor bases, through the
grounding diode and ‘shorts’ back to the coil. This keeps the power (from the Primary Battery) to the
drive and slave solenoids off by preventing current to flow from the transistor collectors to the emitters.
After the rotor magnet leaves (is repelled from) the drive solenoid core…
The magnetic field saturates, causing the signal coil to lose voltage:current and voltage to the transistor
bases is reduced, shutting off the transistors. The remaining magnetic field then causes a voltage spike
from the drive and slave coils; sending a charge to/through the charge battery (or if it isn’t in place,
through the neon bulbs).
The neon bulbs are there to prevent voltage from going too high and burning out the transistor.
#305:
Great to hear you have your motor kit running. The system is designed to run from a small 12 volt, 7
amp-hour battery, charge a capacitor and dump that into a different 12 volt, 7 amp-hour battery.
Meanwhile, when it gets up to speed, a whole string of LEDs light up from the extra generator coil that
is putting out about 24 volts. When you have the whole thing working, I'll tell you how to modify it so it
will run itself, light the LEDs and charge the back battery faster than the front one goes down.
#311
OK, here's the deal (or at least one set of possibilities). The idea is this. Once you have the basic system
recycling the electricity from the front batteries to the back batteries while running the motor, any
mechanical energy produced is the major portion of the "free energy" created by the machine. The extra
generator coil can then "convert" this free mechanical energy back into "new" electricity, or electricity
that was not in the system before.
The way the system is wired is to take 100% of this "new" electricity and use it to light some LEDs. The
voltage of that system is about twice the voltage of the batteries, or about 24 volts. So, if you light only
about 12 volts worth of LEDs instead of the full amount, you now have about 12 volts worth of output to
play with. This can be applied to either the input battery to offset the battery drain at the front, or added
to the capacitor and dumped to the battery in the back along with the rest of the recovered energy from
the coils.
Either way will give you the bias you need to run the system, light some LEDs and charge the back
battery faster than the front runs down.
First, the 9 volt batteries supplied with the kit are for demonstration purposes. They must be replaced
with some small, 12 volt rechargeable batteries. 4 or 7 amp-hour gel-cells are preferred.
Second, the generator coil is designed to produce about 24 VAC at about 5,000 rpm. This final voltage
(whatever it is for your model's top speed) determines how many LEDs you can light ABOVE the
battery level.
Back popping the front battery is the most difficult method to get to work, although a workable method
for off-setting the input was clearly explained in the Electric Motor Secrets thread and has been there for
years.
Charging a cap on the back end with both the recovery from the motor coils AND the excess from the
generator coil (after lighting a few LEDs) is the simplest and most reliable method.
Free running bearings, choosing the right number of LEDs based on the operational "top speed" of your
system, running the system at "room temperature" so the batteries charge efficiently, etc, etc,
etc,.....including everything John has been harping on for years..... are all necessary aspects of an
operational success story!
Look at what John just posted in the "Electricity Watson Machine" thread. Its your own way of thinking
that is stopping you.
Quit trying to build a "self-running machine" and start closely observing and working with the machine
that is in front of you. Go through each system in the machine and find out it's range of activity. Chart
them and take notes. Let the machine "teach you the truth" about itself and how well it embodies what
"you believe" it embodies. When you find differences between "what you thought it was doing" and
"what it is really doing", make adjustments.
When you are done with this process, it WILL be running itself.
Peter
Thousands of textbooks have been written to explain electronics and I haven't found a single one that
can explain the operation of a transistor. They all make it seem so complicated!
Let's see if I can do better. Here is a picture of a transistor.
My transistor runs on water current. You see there are three openings
which I have labelled "B" (Base), "C" (Collector) and "E" (Emitter)
for convenience. By an amazing coincidence, these also happen to be
the names used by everyone else for the three connections of a
transistor!
If we pour water current into "B" this current flows along the "Base" pipe and pushes that black plunger
thing upwards, allowing quite a lot of water to flow from "C" to "E". Some of the water from "B" also
joins it and flows away. If we pour even more water into "B", the black plunger thing moves up further
and a great torrent of water current flows from "C" to "E".
1. A tiny amount of current flowing into "B" allows a large amount to flow from "C" to "E" so we have
an "amplification effect". We can control a BIG flow of current with a SMALL flow of current. If we
continually change the small amount of water flowing into "B" then we cause corresponding changes in
the LARGE amount of water flowing from "C" to "E". For example, if we measure the current flow in
gallons/minute: Suppose 1 gallon/minute flowing into "B" allows 100 gallons/minute to flow from "C"
to "E" then we can say that the transistor has a "gain" or "amplification" factor of 100 times. In a real
transistor we measure current in thousandths of an Ampere or "milliamps". So 1mA flowing into "B"
would allow 100mA to flow from "C" to "E".
2. The amount of current that can flow from "C" to "E" is limited by the "pipe diameter". So, no matter
how much current we push into "B", there will be a point beyond which we can't get any more current
flow from "C" to "E". The only way to solve this problem is to use a larger transistor. A "power
transistor".
3. The transistor can be used to switch the current flow on and off. If we put sufficient current into "B"
the transistor will allow the maximum amount of current to flow from "C" to "E". The transistor is
switched fully "on".
If the current into "B" is reduced to the point where it can no longer lift the black plunger thing, the
transistor will be "off". Only the small "leakage" current from "B" will be flowing. To turn it fully off,
we must stop all current flowing into "B".
In a real transistor, any restriction to the current flow causes heat to be produced. This happens with air
or water in other things: for example, your bicycle pump becomes hot near the valve when you pump air
through it. A transistor must be kept cool or it will melt. It runs coolest when it is fully OFF and fully
ON. When it is fully ON there is very little restriction so, even though a lot of current is flowing, only a
small amount of heat is produced. When it is fully OFF, provided we can stop the base leakage, then NO
heat is produced. If a transistor is half on then quite a lot of current is flowing through a restricted gap
and heat is produced. To help get rid of this heat, the transistor might be clamped to a metal plate which
draws the heat away and radiates it to the air. Such a plate is called a "heat sink". It often has fins to
increase its surface area and, thereby, improve its efficiency.
Getting Technical
The difference between PNP and NPN transistors is that NPN use electrons as carriers of current and
PNP use a lack of electrons (known as "holes"). Basically, nothing moves very far at a time. One atom
simply robs an electron from an adjacent atom so you get the impression of "flow". It's a bit like "light
pipes". In the case of "N" material, there are lots of spare electrons. In the case of "P" there aren't. In fact
"P" is gasping for electrons. Clear as mud isn't it?
OK, bear in mind that the Base is only a few atoms in thickness - almost a membrane - so any electrons
allowed into the base "membrane" act as a catalyst to allow other electrons to break through from
emitter to collector.
Imagine a pool of water near the edge of a table. It rests there with surface tension holding it in place.
Now put one tiny drop of water on the table edge and let it touch the pool of water. Suddenly, the pool
drains onto the floor as gravity takes over! Your tiny drop provided the catalyst to get it moving. So the
base electrons do a similar job for the "pool" of electrons in the emitter - helped by the "gravity suction"
of the power supply voltage on the collector.
A transistor doesn't "increase" current. It simply allows power supply current to pass from collector to
emitter* - the actual amount depends on the (small) current allowed to flow into its base. The more
electrons you allow into the base, the more (x 100) that flow from collector to emitter . I put "x 100"
because that is the typical gain (amplification factor) of a transistor. For example, one electron put into
the base could allow 100 to escape from collector to emitter.
The best way to understand this is to get your soldering iron and start building!
* The purist might argue that current flows from emitter to collector - dependent on whether we are
discussing electron flow or "hole" flow. I don't want to get involved in the physics of current flow. You
don't need to know this to design a circuit.
* This discussion relates to Bipolar transistors. Other types of transistor such as "FETs" (Field Effect
Transistors) are in common use and work in a slightly different way in that the voltage applied to the
"gate" terminal controls the current flowing from "cathode" terminal to "anode" terminal. In effect, a
FET is simply a semiconducting (one-way) resistor whose value is controlled by the voltage applied to
its "gate".
* OK, having told you all that, I now have to point out that the above description is basically WRONG!
What I've described is based on what is called "the beta model" of a transistor. A transistor actually
relies on base voltage input - the current input is incidental. If you are at college, your teacher will
explain this fully with lots of mathematical equations that will let you design anything at all. However,
my description will let you design simple circuits with a minimum of effort and they will almost
certainly work. Unless you are going to take up design as a profession, this is all you need to know.