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Emma Genius December 1st 13 03:31 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.

NotMe December 1st 13 03:43 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 

"Emma Genius" wrote in message
...

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in
series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery
pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as
follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral
tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5
volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Next on your to do list is Fire or the Wheel?




Steve Kraus December 1st 13 04:27 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
Troll. Phase has no meaning on DC. 3 wire / 2 voltage DC goes back to
Edison if not farther.

Emma Genius wrote:


Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries
in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery
pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope
as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center
neutral tap. Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a
1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.



Emma Genius December 1st 13 04:47 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
"Emma Genius" wrote in message
...

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in
series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery
pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as
follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral
tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5
volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Next on your to do list is Fire or the Wheel?



I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.




Tony Hwang December 1st 13 05:00 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
Emma Genius wrote:

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries
in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery
pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as
follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center
neutral tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a
1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.

Hmm,
DC circuit has no phase. It has polarity.


Slick Willy December 1st 13 05:26 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 12:00 PM, Tony Hwang wrote:
Emma Genius wrote:
Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.

Hmm,
DC circuit has no phase. It has polarity.


It depends on what the meaning of the word 'is' is....I mean 'phase' is.

[email protected] December 1st 13 05:49 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 10:31:09 -0500, Emma Genius
wrote:


Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


LOL! Best post of the year!

Emma Genius December 1st 13 07:36 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 12:49 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 10:31:09 -0500, Emma Genius
wrote:


Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


LOL! Best post of the year!


Thank you! :-)

The Daring Dufas[_8_] December 1st 13 10:03 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/1/2013 9:31 AM, Emma Genius wrote:

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2
batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the
battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A N is the center or
neutral tap between battery A and B L2 is the (+) positive terminal
on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope
as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center
neutral tap. Probe A was connected to L1 Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a
1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Connect a vibrator from an old tube type car radio and with the proper
transformer and circuitry, you can make AC voltage. There was a time
when the word "vibrator" described an integral component of vehicle
mounted tube type electronic equipment. ^_^

TDD

[email protected] December 1st 13 10:25 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 16:03:56 -0600, The Daring Dufas
wrote:

On 12/1/2013 9:31 AM, Emma Genius wrote:

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2
batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the
battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A N is the center or
neutral tap between battery A and B L2 is the (+) positive terminal
on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope
as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center
neutral tap. Probe A was connected to L1 Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a
1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Connect a vibrator from an old tube type car radio and with the proper
transformer and circuitry, you can make AC voltage. There was a time
when the word "vibrator" described an integral component of vehicle
mounted tube type electronic equipment. ^_^

TDD

And connected to a 6 volt bosch ignition coil was an easy way to put
over 40,000 volts, 115cps power on the leading edge of a hood for a
very effective "burglar alarm"

Alex[_13_] December 1st 13 10:49 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 05:03 PM, The Daring Dufas wrote:
On 12/1/2013 9:31 AM, Emma Genius wrote:

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2
batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the
battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A N is the center or
neutral tap between battery A and B L2 is the (+) positive terminal
on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope
as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center
neutral tap. Probe A was connected to L1 Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a
1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Connect a vibrator from an old tube type car radio and with the proper transformer and circuitry, you can make AC voltage.


There was a time when the word "vibrator" described an integral component of vehicle mounted tube type electronic equipment. ^_^

TDD


Would that be single or 2 phase AC?

[email protected] December 1st 13 11:10 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 16:03:56 -0600, The Daring Dufas
wrote:

On 12/1/2013 9:31 AM, Emma Genius wrote:

Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2
batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the
battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A N is the center or
neutral tap between battery A and B L2 is the (+) positive terminal
on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope
as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center
neutral tap. Probe A was connected to L1 Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a
1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Connect a vibrator from an old tube type car radio and with the proper
transformer and circuitry, you can make AC voltage. There was a time
when the word "vibrator" described an integral component of vehicle
mounted tube type electronic equipment. ^_^


Well, it's now an optional add-on but it's still a type of tube that
gets mounted.

Fred McKenzie December 1st 13 11:23 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.


A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Fred

[email protected] December 1st 13 11:49 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.


A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!


Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Nikola Tesla[_3_] December 1st 13 11:58 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 05:25 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 16:03:56 -0600, The Daring Dufas
wrote:


Connect a vibrator from an old tube type car radio and with the proper
transformer and circuitry, you can make AC voltage. There was a time
when the word "vibrator" described an integral component of vehicle
mounted tube type electronic equipment. ^_^

TDD

And connected to a 6 volt bosch ignition coil was an easy way to put
over 40,000 volts, 115cps power on the leading edge of a hood for a
very effective "burglar alarm"


Maybe Elon Musk will put them on his new cars?

A 2 phase 40kV peak-to-peak 115 cps DC alarm system sounds impressive. ;-)

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 01:24 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
Fred McKenzie wrote:
In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.


A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Fred

Hmmm,
So there is no phase to speak of.

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 01:30 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.


A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!


Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form. Not even a noise. How come? We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit? It is
resistance only. If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.

Ralph Mowery December 2nd 13 01:45 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 

"Tony Hwang" wrote in message news:hpRmu.465294$,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign of
wave form. Not even a noise. How come? We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit? It is resistance
only. If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.


The theories are good, you just need education on them.

One simple thing is the old teletype machines. They work by turning DC and
on off in period of around 22 miliseconds to select the leters to be
printed. The coils have an inductance of around 1 henry. While they will
pull in the levers with as little as 10 volts, it will be too slow for
correct printing. It takes so long for the DC to make its way through the
coil and the maximum magnetic field to be generated. One way around it is
to use around 150 volts and a series resistance of 2500 ohms. This keeps
the overall current down but lets the levers pull in faster.



[email protected] December 2nd 13 02:30 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!


Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.


Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?


You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?


Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.


Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.


No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

sam E December 2nd 13 02:56 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 05:49 PM, wrote:

[snip]

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)


It's always possible someone will turn the batteries around every year.
What you have then is a 32 nHz (nanohertz) square wave.




[email protected] December 2nd 13 03:08 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:56:00 -0600, sam E
wrote:

On 12/01/2013 05:49 PM, wrote:

[snip]

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)


It's always possible someone will turn the batteries around every year.
What you have then is a 32 nHz (nanohertz) square wave.


At some point, the batteries were manufactured, looking at it that
way... Someone put them into the battery pack...

Infinity is a *really* big number and WRT time, makes for a long wait.
;-)

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 03:30 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Tony Hwang" wrote in message news:hpRmu.465294$,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign of
wave form. Not even a noise. How come? We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit? It is resistance
only. If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.


The theories are good, you just need education on them.

One simple thing is the old teletype machines. They work by turning DC and
on off in period of around 22 miliseconds to select the leters to be
printed. The coils have an inductance of around 1 henry. While they will
pull in the levers with as little as 10 volts, it will be too slow for
correct printing. It takes so long for the DC to make its way through the
coil and the maximum magnetic field to be generated. One way around it is
to use around 150 volts and a series resistance of 2500 ohms. This keeps
the overall current down but lets the levers pull in faster.


Hi,
Are you talking to me? I worked on TTY too B4 I changed my career path.
Then you counter EMF or fly wheel effect, things like that, Eh?
Educated... I was in a p[osition to educate, Many times I was an
instructor in many different gears and subject,

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 03:34 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
sam E wrote:
On 12/01/2013 05:49 PM, wrote:

[snip]

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)


It's always possible someone will turn the batteries around every year.
What you have then is a 32 nHz (nanohertz) square wave.



Between two test leads, and fast enough it'll sown sine wave. Sine wave
is integrated kazillion sq. waves of diffferent amplitudes . Thompsons
theorem, right?

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 03:36 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.


Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?


You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?


Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.


Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.


No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

Hmm,
Learn what without theory. Experience alone does not cut it.
You have to have both. Feels like I am back at school sitting in a
class room or lab.

[email protected] December 2nd 13 03:42 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:36:03 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.


Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?


You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?


Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.


Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.


No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

Hmm,
Learn what without theory.


You flunked English (basic literacy), too, didn't you?

Experience alone does not cut it.


Don't make me laugh. What a *STUPID* statement.

You have to have both. Feels like I am back at school sitting in a
class room or lab.


You *obviously* need to be back there because you never learned even
the basics. ...'nother freakin' Cracker Jax engineer.


[email protected] December 2nd 13 03:47 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:34:11 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

sam E wrote:
On 12/01/2013 05:49 PM, wrote:

[snip]

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)


It's always possible someone will turn the batteries around every year.
What you have then is a 32 nHz (nanohertz) square wave.



Between two test leads, and fast enough it'll sown sine wave.


WTF???

Sine wave
is integrated kazillion sq. waves of diffferent amplitudes . Thompsons
theorem, right?


Square waves are composed of sine waves: Fourier.

You spew this crap and ignore the little thing of "infinity". Do you
have a brain?

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 03:57 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Tony Hwang" wrote in message news:hpRmu.465294$,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign of
wave form. Not even a noise. How come? We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit? It is resistance
only. If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.


The theories are good, you just need education on them.

One simple thing is the old teletype machines. They work by turning DC and
on off in period of around 22 miliseconds to select the leters to be
printed. The coils have an inductance of around 1 henry. While they will
pull in the levers with as little as 10 volts, it will be too slow for
correct printing. It takes so long for the DC to make its way through the
coil and the maximum magnetic field to be generated. One way around it is
to use around 150 volts and a series resistance of 2500 ohms. This keeps
the overall current down but lets the levers pull in faster.


Hmm,
To increase voltage but not the current and also to minimize counter
EMF. As well you know fly wheel effect..... Education is to teach the
theory by understanding the math behind it and through experiment to
confirm it in the lab. Theory without real life experience is useless.
First thing I learned after leaving school, on the first job site.

Today's young engineers hardly do manual calculations. They just tap the
keys on computer. When I showed my son old slide ruler i used to use,
the look on his face....He is a consulting engineer in civil.

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 03:59 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:36:03 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.

Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?

You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?

Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.

Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.

No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

Hmm,
Learn what without theory.


You flunked English (basic literacy), too, didn't you?

Experience alone does not cut it.


Don't make me laugh. What a *STUPID* statement.

You have to have both. Feels like I am back at school sitting in a
class room or lab.


You *obviously* need to be back there because you never learned even
the basics. ...'nother freakin' Cracker Jax engineer.

Hi,
By any chance you have any one who worked at Honeywell? Ask him about
Gold tiger ring.....

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 04:01 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:36:03 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.

Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?

You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?

Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.

Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.

No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

Hmm,
Learn what without theory.


You flunked English (basic literacy), too, didn't you?

Experience alone does not cut it.


Don't make me laugh. What a *STUPID* statement.

You have to have both. Feels like I am back at school sitting in a
class room or lab.


You *obviously* need to be back there because you never learned even
the basics. ...'nother freakin' Cracker Jax engineer.

Do you know by any chance wwhol worked at Honeywell? Ask him about Fred
Miller award and gold tiger ring.

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 04:06 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:34:11 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

sam E wrote:
On 12/01/2013 05:49 PM,
wrote:

[snip]

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

It's always possible someone will turn the batteries around every year.
What you have then is a 32 nHz (nanohertz) square wave.



Between two test leads, and fast enough it'll sown sine wave.


WTF???

Sine wave
is integrated kazillion sq. waves of diffferent amplitudes . Thompsons
theorem, right?


Square waves are composed of sine waves: Fourier.

You spew this crap and ignore the little thing of "infinity". Do you
have a brain?

Very funny you know that and not the other one?
We are talking pretty well same thing. Integration
and differentiation. Fourier used these.

nestork December 2nd 13 05:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tony Hwang (Post 3159000)
Very funny you know that and not the other one?
We are talking pretty well same thing. Integration
and differentiation. Fourier used these.

Sorry Tony, but krw is correct on this one.

Fourier postulated that every periodic wave could be represented by the sum of a series of sinusoidal waves.

So far as I know, the vice versa isn't true. You can't represent a sinusoidal wave as the sum of a series of square waves or saw tooth waves or any other kind of wave (spherical wave) for that matter..

A Pictorial Introduction to Fourier Analysis/Synthesis

If that were the case, then anyone explaining Fourier Synthesis would make the point loud and clear that you can represent any periodic wave as the sum of a series of ANY KIND of wave, square, sinusoidal, sawtooth, take your pick. But they don't say that. They say that you can represent any periodic wave as the sum of a series of sinusoidal waves, and they stop there. So, the idea that a sine wave can be represented by the sum of a series of square waves just doesn't work for me.

That's because in Fourier synthesis, there is a mathematical relationship between the waves comprising the series; you just can't hobble together various sine waves of varying amplitudes and frequencies to get something that fits. There has to be a mathematical expression by which one can determine what each wave in the series to be summed should be.

Tony Hwang December 2nd 13 05:23 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
nestork wrote:
Tony Hwang;3159000 Wrote:

Very funny you know that and not the other one?
We are talking pretty well same thing. Integration
and differentiation. Fourier used these.


Sorry Tony, but krw is correct on this one.

Fourier postulated that every periodic wave could be represented by the
sum of a series of sinusoidal waves.

So far as I know, the vice versa isn't true. You can't represent a
sinusoidal wave as the sum of a series of square waves or saw tooth
waves or any other kind of wave (spherical wave) for that matter..

'A Pictorial Introduction to Fourier Analysis/Synthesis'
(http://psych.hanover.edu/krantz/fourier/)

If that were the case, then anyone explaining Fourier Synthesis would
make the point loud and clear that you can represent any periodic wave
as the sum of a series of ANY KIND of wave, square, sinusoidal,
sawtooth, take your pick. But they don't say that. They say that you
can represent any periodic wave as the sum of a series of sinusoidal
waves, and they stop there.




Hi.
Didn't I say the same? This is how DAC, ADC circuits work, No?

Fred McKenzie December 2nd 13 05:58 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
In article ,
nestork wrote:

Tony Hwang;3159000 Wrote:

Very funny you know that and not the other one?
We are talking pretty well same thing. Integration
and differentiation. Fourier used these.


Sorry Tony, but krw is correct on this one.

Fourier postulated that every periodic wave could be represented by the
sum of a series of sinusoidal waves.

So far as I know, the vice versa isn't true. You can't represent a
sinusoidal wave as the sum of a series of square waves or saw tooth
waves or any other kind of wave (spherical wave) for that matter..

'A Pictorial Introduction to Fourier Analysis/Synthesis'
(http://psych.hanover.edu/krantz/fourier/)

If that were the case, then anyone explaining Fourier Synthesis would
make the point loud and clear that you can represent any periodic wave
as the sum of a series of ANY KIND of wave, square, sinusoidal,
sawtooth, take your pick. But they don't say that. They say that you
can represent any periodic wave as the sum of a series of sinusoidal
waves, and they stop there.


Nestork-

That is exactly what a college professor wrote a paper on, over 50 years
ago. As I recall, he used a series of step functions to synthesize
other waveforms, and suggested that the process was not restricted to
sine and step.

My memory is getting dim, but I think the paper was written by Dr. Wayne
Chen, who became chairman of the department of Electrical Engineering at
the University of Florida in the late 1960s.

I think the mathematics involved in the use of sine waves may be much
simpler!

Fred

[email protected] December 2nd 13 09:59 AM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 10:31:09 -0500, Emma Genius
wrote:


Here's what my genius mind came up with.

First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in series.

Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery pack.

So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:

L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A
N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B
L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B

So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as follows:

The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral tap.
Probe A was connected to L1
Probe B was connected to L2

As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5 volt negative phase trace.

Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.

The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Ok, now do this. Take two 12 volt car batteries. Center tap just like
you did. Put two starters on your engine. One starter will go
clockwise. the other will go counter-clockwise. Have them both turn at
the same time, and your engine wont start! How is that for genius?


[email protected] December 2nd 13 03:52 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:59:54 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:36:03 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.

Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?

You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?

Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.

Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.

No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

Hmm,
Learn what without theory.


You flunked English (basic literacy), too, didn't you?

Experience alone does not cut it.


Don't make me laugh. What a *STUPID* statement.

You have to have both. Feels like I am back at school sitting in a
class room or lab.


You *obviously* need to be back there because you never learned even
the basics. ...'nother freakin' Cracker Jax engineer.

Hi,
By any chance you have any one who worked at Honeywell? Ask him about
Gold tiger ring.....


You really are as stupid as you sound. Amazing.

[email protected] December 2nd 13 03:52 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 21:01:23 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:36:03 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:30:46 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 18:23:39 -0500, Fred McKenzie
wrote:

In article ,
Emma Genius wrote:

On 12/01/2013 10:43 AM, NotMe wrote:
I may try to patent the idea though I'll admit my 2-phase DC has a lot of
similarities with trader4's 2-phase AC.

A perfect analogy. DC is simply AC with a frequency of zero!

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

Hi,
If I measure battery output with 'scope, I don't see any slightest sign
of wave form.

Then you have no clue what you're doing with an oscilloscope. I use
mine on "DC" signals daily.

Not even a noise. How come?

You're incompetent?

We have distinctively separate
DC and AC thpory. Ever heard of impedance in DC circuit?

Absolutely. You've never heard of a "Thevinin impedance"?

It is resistance only.

Wrong. It has an impedance. AT DC, it has only a real part but
again, DC doesn't exist in the real world.

If that is not the cae, we have to redo all the theories.

No, you just have to learn something. The theories are all cool with
reality.

Hmm,
Learn what without theory.


You flunked English (basic literacy), too, didn't you?

Experience alone does not cut it.


Don't make me laugh. What a *STUPID* statement.

You have to have both. Feels like I am back at school sitting in a
class room or lab.


You *obviously* need to be back there because you never learned even
the basics. ...'nother freakin' Cracker Jax engineer.

Do you know by any chance wwhol worked at Honeywell? Ask him about Fred
Miller award and gold tiger ring.


No, not this time either, stupid.

[email protected] December 2nd 13 03:53 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 21:06:33 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

wrote:
On Sun, 01 Dec 2013 20:34:11 -0700, Tony Hwang
wrote:

sam E wrote:
On 12/01/2013 05:49 PM, wrote:

[snip]

Depending on how you look at it, DC doesn't exist in the real world.
It's just a very low frequency AC. ;-)

It's always possible someone will turn the batteries around every year.
What you have then is a 32 nHz (nanohertz) square wave.



Between two test leads, and fast enough it'll sown sine wave.


WTF???

Sine wave
is integrated kazillion sq. waves of diffferent amplitudes . Thompsons
theorem, right?


Square waves are composed of sine waves: Fourier.

You spew this crap and ignore the little thing of "infinity". Do you
have a brain?

Very funny you know that and not the other one?


The "other one" doesn't matter a crap. The fact is that "square
waves" don't exist in reality, either, stupid.

We are talking pretty well same thing. Integration
and differentiation. Fourier used these.


What a dumbass!

[email protected][_2_] December 2nd 13 04:37 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On Sunday, December 1, 2013 10:31:09 AM UTC-5, Emma Genius wrote:
Here's what my genius mind came up with.



First I obtained a standard D-cell battery pack that holds 2 batteries in series.



Next I installed a center tap between the two batteries in the battery pack.



So now I have a series battery pack with three terminals:



L1 is the (-) negative terminal on battery A

N is the center or neutral tap between battery A and B

L2 is the (+) positive terminal on battery B



So to prove I have 2-phase DC, I connected a dual-trace oscilloscope as follows:



The reference leads from both probes were connected to the center neutral tap.

Probe A was connected to L1

Probe B was connected to L2



As I expected, the scope showed a 1.5 volt positive phase trace and a 1.5 volt negative phase trace.



Clearly I have 3 volt 2 phase DC.



The only thing left to do is submit my paper to IEEE.


Since you're a genius, perhaps you can do what no one else
here except myself has been able to do and that is give
a definition of the electricl engineeing term "phase".
You have 10 people pontificating on it, yet not one of them
can define it. I gave the defintion a week ago.

nestork December 2nd 13 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by (Post 3159207)
You really are as stupid as you sound. Amazing.

Is it possible for you to disagree with someone over something without insulting them?

It makes you look like a 14 year old when you do that.

Mark Lloyd[_11_] December 2nd 13 09:27 PM

I invented a 2-phase DC battery pack
 
On 12/01/2013 09:57 PM, Tony Hwang wrote:

[snip]

Today's young engineers hardly do manual calculations. They just tap the
keys on computer. When I showed my son old slide ruler i used to use,
the look on his face....He is a consulting engineer in civil.


I remember the first class I had in trigonometry. Most of the time, the
teacher was going around helping students find the (sin / cos / tan)
keys on their calculators. There was nothing said about what
trigonometry is, or why you'd want to use it (other than passing that test).

--
23 days until The winter celebration (Wednesday December 25, 2013 12:00
AM for 1 day).

Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.us

"Science is a first-rate piece of furniture for a man's upper chamber,
if he has common sense on the ground floor." [Oliver Wendell Holmes]


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