@PhysicsProf
Thank you PhysicsProf, that is a generous offer. I will be more than happy to send you a device for independent testing -- if I ever get one working lol .
Luckily, I have a job that affords me the ability to fund some degree of research. Hopefully, this continues. I bought two Nanoperm cores today... an M-416 and M-412 with relative magnetic permeability of u/u0 = 17,000 (very high, 2x - 100x higher than ferrite) , with moderate resistivity in the range of 1x10^-6 Ohm x Meters. This is for a Gabriel device replication and for general experimentation.
http://www.magnetec.de/eng/universal-kerne1.htmI'm also going to snag a couple of conventional ferrite toroidal cores (low resistivity, high permeability) ,as well as a couple of Micrometals powdered iron toroidal cores (moderate permeability, high resistivity). This way I can do power experiments / replications with toroids with varying properties.
If all else fails, I'll make a giant 100amp Joule Thief with an IGBT and 60W bulb , haha.
@Itsu
Comments:Well done on the earlier 98.5% efficiency result.
i put in a second (polarity reversed) led (diode 1n4148 removed), and confirm both are lid.
The polarity reversed one is much brighter then the non-polarity reversed one.
-Itsu
So this is sort of like an LED-rectifier, huh? Both of the LEDs light up with one brighter than the other? Doesn't that mean they've got to be 'seeing' an AC signal?
I redid the power measurements in the above situation (no 1n4148 diode, 2 x led).
Pin (RC/DMM method) 1.487 x 0.0426 = 0.0633462 W (63mW)
Po (scope on emitter / across 1 Ohm) 0.09 (mean) x 0.009 (mean) = 0.00081 W (0.81 mW).
N = 0.81/63x100% = 1.28%
-Itsu
Okay... interesting. I keep hearing what Bolt / overunity.com told me, "a carefully tuned Joule Thief can get COP>1." How I have no idea, but now there are two people with COP>1 results, so the condition (whether a measurement error or true COP>1) has been replicated.
Itsu, I have a few ideas...
1) Can you conduct several more COP trials with the exact same circuit? It's always good science to do multiple trials , and publish all the values. Then you can calculate mean, median, std_dev, etc.
2) Can you try powering off the circuit (remove the battery), then connect it back up and test the COP several times? Call these "Power Cycle Trials" or something.
3) Can you try different AA batteries for power, and measure the output COP vs battery voltage?
4) Can you try removing the scope probe and the scope ground, and see if the input power is the same? Maybe try the above tests #1 - #3 with the scope disconnected, so you can make sure your input power is in the correct range?
I mean , either
(A) There is something wrong with the measurement protocol (RC/DMM method for input, scope on emitter for output) or
(B) JT circuits are actually overunity under certain conditions which remain to be determined, perhaps related to voltage/current phase , or perhaps to something else .
Caveats:Could current be entering the circuit via a ground loop on the scope? Like I suggested in #4, Itsu, Can you see if your input power consumption changes if you remove the scope from the circuit? One thing to remember is that removing the scope might change the Out-of-phase condition (OOP), if some sort of phasing issue is the source of the extra power. So you'll probably have to do multiple trials for all these tests.
Other questions:Electrical Engineers: Is there a way I can do input/power measurements with just DMMs + 1 channel scope? I have a variety of RC components, several DMMs, and one single-channel Tektronix analog scope. I can calculate AUC of a periodic signal by taking a photograph, and integrating the pixels. My scope has a grid that is backlit.
My oscilloscope; Tektronix 465 with one probe
Cheers,
Feynman