I would like to start off, and thank the people who helped get me here. I truly appreciate the effort. The last place will never be visited again.
I'm new with experimenting, but I've followed forums like this in the past. I've also read a lot of different information.
With that said, I had posted on the "other" place this question to EMJ, but I'm sure he never read it. Unfortunately while waiting for the message to be approved (really??) I found the answer, but I'll add to the question.
Last "place" post: " I do have a question aimed at EMJ: Are the coils wound orthocyclic, one left hand, one right hand , and one to match a direction with less wire/bigger AWG to be the "drive" coil?
Orthocyclic to me is defined as: one layer wound (in this example moving to the left) and the following layer is wound back to the original starting point(for this example to the right),this would be stated as two layers and how ever many turns that have occurred. This cycle repeats until all layers and number of turns required are completed. A reverse othocyclic coil would be, in this example, started on the left and be moving to the right. These are only examples in this instance. A coil can be wound any direction, but the reverse would start on the opposite side. "
Now the addendum: I see your coils are the typical othocyclic winging method, Have you ever tried a non-orthocyclic winding? I'm not sure it will do much, for I'm not positive that magnetic flux has a linear factor to it. I would define non-orthocyclic as all right hand coils are separate from the left hand coils (every even layer would be connected, and every odd layer would be connected, for even layers are actually moving backwards through the field). But like I stated, no linear component of a magnetic field has been proven to this point (not to me at least).
I have figured a way to wind coils differently (non-orthocyclic), if anyone is interested, and my idea should be quite fast, and easy to modify your current arrangement quickly.
James
Sorry, ignore this post if it could possibly sidetrack the discussion.
« Last Edit: 2015-01-28, 20:02:25 by Propellanttech »
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