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Re: The Egg Works - Well, Almost



Original poster: Ben McMillen <spoonman534@xxxxxxxxx>

This is along the same line as dropping a small magnet down a hollow aluminum tube.. To the un-informed, they think the magnet will just fall through..

Coiling in Pittsburgh
Ben McMillen


Tesla list <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Original poster: Yurtle Turtle

I've got several rare earth magnets and they behave
similarly with copper and brass, when dropped onto
them, or slid across them. I think the brass should be
fine.

Adam

--- Tesla list wrote:

> Original poster: BunnyKiller
>
> Hey All....
>
> for those who have been following this thread, lets
> stop a moment
> and THINK of whats happening here... we are dealing
> with a toroidal
> core a single phase system with 90 degree opposed
> fields and a
> brass hollow egg...
>
> lets examine the situation
>
> 1. egg not perfectly "shelled" ( unbalanced)
> 2. 90 degree phase induction ( only 2 opposing
> fields) per 4 fields
> ( this would explain the "4 lobed" visual imbalance
> in the video)
> 3. Brass egg ( copper offers the highest
> "reluctance" (( is that
> proper)) to magnetic fields... copper hates magnetic
> field changes it
> resists them thus the "drag" it induces.... and the
> movement it
> incurs.. reverse the situation and you see a
> movement of the copper
> compared to the "revolving" field..
>
> What can be done to make it work as intended??
>
> 50%- 100% thick walled copper egg ( high
> "reluctantce" ?? opposition
> to magnetic fields influence ( ( sp?)) )
> 4 or multiple of 4 phases ( coils) of inductors
> maybe an 8 "phase
> coil system" would work better, instead of 4 do 8
> windings
> and POWER think motor here... stationary and
> rotor fields....
> 120vac @ 10+amps
>
> eventually the egg ( copper at best ) would spin up
> to the 60Hz cycle
> induced by the fields created by the coils....
>
> and you get The Egg of Columbus in its full glory
>
> Scot D
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