Re: Current

Jerry Wayne Decker ( jwdatwork@yahoo.com )
Mon, 25 Jan 1999 09:00:01 -0800 (PST)

Hi Ken, David et al!

That would do it...though you could also use a few capacitors, bleed
them off to continuously trickle charge a 12vdc battery, then use the
battery to feed an off the shelf inverter to generate the 120vac 60
cps power.

Unfortunately, everything is designed around 120vac at 60 cps, though
it runs far more efficiently as pure 12vdc....I would use the same
capacitor method to charge the battery and just use recreationl type
appliances that are designed to run on 12vdc.

So, David, you have our interest....anything you can tell us....if
nothing else, JUST HINTS is better than nothing..come on guy, don't
tease like that..<g>...

---Kenneth Carrigan wrote:
>
> What you will have to do (transformers at 12Hz not efficient) is
make a swithmode
> power supple. Rectify the 1,000 volts 12 Hz to DC and then switch
it (HEXFET)
> at some higher frequency (10-20kHz or so..) and place through a
transformer to
> make into any voltage... then rectify.. for DC. Use an inverter
after that to convert
> to AC power.. That is the process to go for...
>
> v/r Ken Carrigan
>
> Does anybody have any ideas as to how I might turn 1,000
volts 12 Hz of very low current electricity into 125 volt 60 Hz, with
a much higher current? Could I just use a transformer? Here is my
problem, I have this "free energy' device that produces over 1000+
volts AC with a very weak current. So, I'm needing to change the
output current to one that I can use to run electrical devices that do
not have high impedance. I don't care if I have to reduce the voltage
down to only 12 volts so long as I can get it to run some higher
current electrical applications. So if anyone has any ideas please let
me know.
>
>
>
<HR>
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//EN">

What you will have to do(transformers at 12Hz not efficient) is make a swithmode
power supple.  Rectify the 1,000 volts 12 Hz to DC and then switch it (HEXFET)
at some higher frequency(10-20kHz or so..) and place through a transformer to
makeinto any voltage... then rectify.. for DC.  Use an inverter after that to convert
to AC power..   That is the process to go for...
 
v/r KenCarrigan
     Does anybody have any ideas as to how I might turn 1,000 volts 12 Hz of very low currentelectricity into 125 volt 60 Hz, with a much higher current? Could I just use atransformer? Here is my problem, I have this "free energy' device that producesover 1000+ volts AC with a very weak current. So, I'm needing to changethe output current to one that I can use to run electrical devicesthat do not have high impedance. I don't care if I have to reduce the voltagedown to only 12 volts so long as I can get it to run some higher currentelectrical applications. So if anyone has any ideas please let me know.

_________________________________________________________DO YOU YAHOO!?Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com