Energy Gains in Adam's patent.

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Jagau posted this 07 September 2024

Is there energy Gains in Adam’s patent, the great question.


I built an Adams motor using a computer HDD to simplify the assembly of the bearings and with the installation of six permanent neodymium magnets on the rotor. This is Robert Adams’ first advice in order to understand the operation and then build a bigger one.

In order to study the behavior of the motor I use two 5 milli-henry coils on each side at 180 degrees from each other with the left side winding CCW and the right CW, the coils are connected in series.

The control system will be done with an Arduino mega 2560 using a hall effect sensor S277 for detecting the position of the rotor relative to the magnets. On the hall sensor S277 that I recovered from a computer fan, only the DO output (pin 2) will be used to give the interrupt detection instruction (it is in the Arduino program) in order to activate a 6N136  optocoupler to give a pulse on the Gate of the Nmos IRF3205 which will activate the two coils in series of the motor as declared by the inventor Mr. Robert Adams.


Photo to come

Jagau

Jagau posted this 4 weeks ago

Before talking about the Arduino program and the modifications I made, I would like to bring to your attention two other excellent research websites on the Adams motor,
Nick Kraakman's here:

https://waveguide.blog/pulse-motor-generator-design-considerations/

An excellent site where you will find very important information and also demonstrates with another kind of Arduino program model that is also available for download on his Arduino site.

 

And JL Naudin's here;

 http://jnaudin.free.fr/dlenz/DLE23en.htm

Speaks of no comments is excellent, very detailed and I think you will like it. This is the Arduino model that I use with some modifications to the GNU program. The program can be downloaded from his Arduino site.

Jagau

Unimmortal posted this 4 weeks ago

I'm glad you mentioned Nick's waveguide.blog site. He is a good guy and has done a great job pulling apart the many aspects of the Adams motor.

Jagau posted this 2 weeks ago

Another interesting site for the Adams motor with all the formulas you need for your calculations and a well-done Arduino and opto isolator connection schematic.

https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202409.0402/v1

Jagau

Unimmortal posted this 2 weeks ago

@jagau - yes a commutator. For now, using a hall sensor over a 20mm circular magnet, triggering an IRF540N, to trigger the relay is providing the identical effect at lower speeds. However if you aren't doing ~1500-1800rpm, you miss out on the real effects. Here's a quick taste of what's coming

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/BJlMMYxL060

Jagau posted this 2 weeks ago

A lot of work here, unimmortal. You are truly a serious builder.

Thank you, for sharing

Qustion:

What does EMMA mean?


Jagau

Unimmortal posted this 1 weeks ago

Thank you Jagau, but I'm just a stubborn hack 😀

EMMA will be revealed soon.

Right then, 1800rpm is the number. If you want the field effect, that's where you need to be. A couple of new things have now revealed themselves.

CW + CCW should in theory equal zero. CW or CCW either side of a magnet certainly does. When you put opposite windings together in series I've found a differential voltage across the two sets of 40V. Which is an odd number as when wired together via inside windings I currently see 200V. When I close the loop, and with rpm up at 1800, I'm getting a significant speed up. I now believe that there are some electrons (40V worth) moving between the coils and find there spin is opposite to the coil, and equilibric forces try to fix this situation - effectively biasing the coil ftom a magnetic perspective that aids in rotation.

What is extra cool, is that when switching the gen coil sets and then shorting, the speed up effect was still there and further enhanced. I'm hoping this means the switch effect at TDC was being aided before it was being switched! Because with 24 coils now switching, it is hauling like a freight train.

If anyone has time to counterwind some coils and try what I've suggested above, you may even get the generator coils feeding each other because that is exactly what I sense mine are trying to do. More to come...

Jagau posted this 1 weeks ago

Your theory seems excellent, and the part:

By putting opposite windings in series, I noticed a differential voltage of 40 V between the two sets. Which is an odd number, because with internal windings, I currently get 200 V."

This part has moved from theory to practice, love that.

Yes, secondly, I had heard about these CW and CCW windings in series and hadn't yet experimented with that in Adam's motor, and what I will do. Very interesting discussions.


Jagau

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