There is a very nice new poster on YouTube called "Overunityguide." He really seems to be a newbie and he seems nice. I hope that if any of you more knowledgeable users interact with him you help him get up the learning curve.
He made a clip that attempted to demonstrate an alleged "Thane C Heins Regenerative Acceleration Generator effect" with a transformer only.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbmharDOA3Y&feature=uploademail[/youtube]
His description:
In this video you can see that it is even possible to use the Thane C Heins Regenerative Acceleration Generator effect without any moving parts, so in this case in a transformer.
What is important in this setup is that this transformer isn't like a normal transformer, no in this setup it is a transformer with a low impedance / high current primary coil and with a very high impedance secondary coil. What is interesting to see is that this transformer will react totally different on 200 Hz as compared to 950 Hz.
In the first part of this video you can see that when this transformer is being driven at 200 Hz, that normal transformer action is taking place (input power goes up when connecting the load to the secondary coil)
And in the second part of this video you can see that when this transformer (with its very high impedance secondary coil) is being driven at 950 Hz, that the input power to the primary will drop when we connect the load to the secondary. So we can conclude that the same Regenerative Acceleration Generator Effect can also be employed into a special transformer which consists of a low impedance primary coil and a very high impedance secondary coil. (driven at higher frequencies...)
p.s. Please remember that this video is only showing: 'proof of principle' so there can be a-lot improved. Of course everyone can imagine how multiple secondary's can be used to further enhance this effect. I can think of one primary being placed in the center of two laminated stars, with let's say eight secondary's being placed around it.
If you want to know more about this technology, Please go to Thane C Heins it's YouTube Page which can be found at:
http://www.youtube.com/user/ThaneCHeins
That's a sign of a nice guy right there, making such an effort for his YouTube clip description.
My issue is the following: Thane Heins thought this clip was great and vindicated him. Plengo posted on the other two forums in the Romero threads stating that this clip was "very important."
I took issue with this and as part of my fading away, I decided to make some tough comments on this clip. It's very important to state that my tough comments were not directed at Overunityguide, he is a newbie.
Here is the play by play:
Thane's comment on the clip:
Dear Overunityguide,
Really nice job and way more simple than I would have expected!
I have to tell you that since being throw out of Ottawa University after 2.5 years of doing our research there and being misrepresented in the media over the past several years - watching your videos is like being released from prison because new evidence has proven innocence.
Thanks again for helping get me out of prison!
Cheers
T
My response:
>>>>>>>>
@ThaneCHeins You have got to be kidding. For starters the load looks like a European LED bulb. That means that it has some electronics in it to convert 220 VAC @ 50 Hz to some kind of output to drive the LEDs. That means the LED light bulb which was designed for European mains power is being fed two flavours of non-standard AC power. This is a non-linear active load and nobody knows how it will react to the two different AC excitations that it wasn't designed for.
Then the only "evidence" you have for what is going on is a Kill-a-Watt meter that's measuring the power consumption of the waveform generator itself. You have no voltage or current waveforms and instantaneous power measurements for the input primary of the transformer or for the output secondary of the transformer. You have absolutely no data to draw any kind of meaningful conclusions about the power coupling properties of the transformer itself. You can't conclude ANYTHING.
The only preliminary conclusion you might be able to draw is that it appears when you are trying to fry the LED light bulb with 950 Hz at 120 volts AC into a STEP UP transformer and then feeding the secondary output into an active device designed to accept 220 volts AV at 50 Hz something funny happens and the load from the perspective of the frequency generator gets reactive and some power is kicked back into it. This is a disaster that you can't make any meaningful measurements on.
I can feel that Overunityguide is a beginner and he needs to be given a big break. But you Thane have been "playing" with the stuff for years now. I can't believe it!
Same thing for you too Plengo. How you can possibly believe that this clip is "extremely important" is beyond me. You are trying to fry an LED light bulb with what probably looks like an ugly square wave because of the high voltage AC going into a step-up transformer going into an LED light bulb. It's unbelievable!!!!
With all the flaws mentioned, I am going to repeat the most important flaw: You have NO DATA at all about the operation of the transformer. All that you have is a Kill-a-Watt power measurement on the power supply that is powering the experiment. That tells you nearly NOTHING about the transformer itself.
I can tell all three of you that the transformer is doing exactly what it is supposed to be doing under these strange conditions. It's all 100% conventional - No Heins effect at all!
>>>>>>>>
I'm frustrated. There is such a disconnect for me that it's time I drop down to a single innocuous post per week. I am shocked that a good-intentioned posting by a total newbie is gobbled up by people that have been around for years as being 100% legit when there is no real data in the clip to back up the proposition. I'm baffled and it's time to almost disappear for me.
I apologize if I have offended anybody but I view this example not as a step forward, but more like 10 steps back. I tried very earnestly to move things forward but I give up.
MileHigh