Homemade Ram Pump

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 12. 10. 2012
  • This is a video testing my new homemade ram pump, 4' of fall 15' of head, 1" drive, 1" pump, 1/2" output.

Komentáře • 708

  • @jbouchard4877
    @jbouchard4877 Před 9 lety +283

    For those saying that there is water being wasted? That is basically wrong. This setup would be fed by a river, pond or spring. Etc etc. The "waste water" is simply going back into the ground. Right where it belongs. But it could also be rerouted into a pond or garden. The possibilities are endless.

    • @MrTkHussain
      @MrTkHussain Před 9 lety +2

      Yes

    • @ct92404
      @ct92404 Před 9 lety +4

      I'd imagine you could easily have the check valve inside some kind of bucket or something so that when it vents the water, you could collect it and wouldn't be wasting any water.

    • @Justwantahover
      @Justwantahover Před 7 lety +6

      Can't they make the waste water flow back into the river?

    • @carson3149
      @carson3149 Před 7 lety

      that is what he/she means

    • @jarodmorris611
      @jarodmorris611 Před 7 lety +10

      most people use them in a stream that is flowing into a pond or something like that so the water pulsing out flows down into the pond where it was headed anyway.

  • @hendrikhurter2635
    @hendrikhurter2635 Před 4 lety +6

    First person to actually explain how this works in laymans terms.

  • @mhdesigns4454
    @mhdesigns4454 Před 4 lety +2

    Best explanation of how a ram pump works...and I've watched them all!

  • @ChrisCraigie-oi1un
    @ChrisCraigie-oi1un Před rokem

    The best most informative presentation I have ever seen on Ram Pumps. Thank you for all the important information.

  • @Wilcosach
    @Wilcosach Před 9 lety +12

    Best Homemade Ram Pump Video i ever saw here on CZcams! Thank you for the video.

  • @hanelrosado6943
    @hanelrosado6943 Před 10 lety +2

    I just built my first ramp pump using your guidance, I think your video is very clear and simple. I replaced the pipes for PVC and used two vertical valves made in Mexico, the Italian made valves are more expensive at least in the hardware store where I got them in PR. Thanks a lot.

  • @adamgravelin3002
    @adamgravelin3002 Před 6 lety +4

    What a great video. I knew ram pumps were a thing, but I've never seen one and I've been insatiably curious as to how they operate. Great explanation!

  • @smart_03n
    @smart_03n Před 3 lety +1

    This is the kind of videos should be on CZcams...neat and explanatory. Thumbs up my man! 😉😎

  • @vertigo1961
    @vertigo1961 Před 9 lety +16

    Nice Video with a good explanation of how it works. My grandfather talked of using one of these Ram Pumps in the early 1900's to push water literally hundreds of feet horizontally and over 50 feet vertically to supply an elevated water tank (tower) that in turn supplies the house and farm with water. They put a water ram near the creek down in a gully. Then built up a small damn to create a pool from where they drew the water to feed the pump. To the people concerned about the waste water. The amount of waste water is irrelevant when your taking from a river and putting it's discharge back into the river. It makes you wonder who originally figured this out.

    • @JouniKyyronen-nv1ep
      @JouniKyyronen-nv1ep Před 6 lety

      Richard H pyramid were ram pumps but egyptians didnt build them they were much older

    • @grahambird1570
      @grahambird1570 Před 5 lety +1

      Babylonians . . . Originally !

    • @SirWagunther
      @SirWagunther Před rokem +1

      This exact system is found in the pit of the Great Pyramid...an Englishman by the name of Christopher Dunn wrote a book called "The Giza Power Plant" where he goes into the design and workings of the pump in some detail.

  • @ganzip6038
    @ganzip6038 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, saw others where it was hard to understand the principles.

  • @EileenMKeyes
    @EileenMKeyes Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you so much. I've seen complicated explanations of how these work that were hard to understand. Yours is simple and easy to grasp. Nice.

  • @davidrobinson4127
    @davidrobinson4127 Před 7 lety

    interesting stuff. i have family members that were deep miners in West Virginia...when a mine was small and remote...remote being defined as electrical service was unavailable...those mines used ram pumps to pump water out of a mine...you've done a great illustration of the concept...keep teaching that kid!!!

  • @rossboraan3580
    @rossboraan3580 Před 9 lety +2

    Brilliant! I've seen many ram pumps but you have something a bit different and easier to build. The two brass swing valves are the key. Nice job!

  • @danielzhu4368
    @danielzhu4368 Před 2 lety

    Thanks,for a great demonstration of how water hammer works

  • @beebob1279
    @beebob1279 Před 5 lety +3

    I've heard of the ram pump but never saw one. Thanks for the demo. It looks relatively simple. I looks like a lot of work for moving such a small amount of water but I get where it adds up over a day. And, the wasted water at the valve just goes into the ground I guess. Fun.

    • @stormytooman1947
      @stormytooman1947 Před 4 lety

      The working set up is in a stream, so the " waste water" stays in the stream. This video was a demonstration of how the pump works.

  • @markm8188
    @markm8188 Před rokem

    This is the best explanation I've heard. Thanks.

  • @AdnanMohmand
    @AdnanMohmand Před 7 lety +1

    Thanks for explaining this project very well.

  • @AjLloyd-uy2tr
    @AjLloyd-uy2tr Před 4 lety

    Well done. Best explanation on CZcams for how to construct and working principle. Thank-you

  • @andrewford80
    @andrewford80 Před 8 lety +31

    Very clear explanation. Thank you

  • @1crazynordlander
    @1crazynordlander Před 11 lety

    We have been enduring a severe drought here in SW Minnesota. I live in a rural area and my work takes me to a couple of towns that are in a hilly area. It is fun to come across streams and realize that these are spring feed. I don't have any in my immediate area but there are a multitude of them just 10 miles south and west of my location. This would be perfect for a situation where a person has access to a spring. I live in the flat land so I depend on a well. Good Work as usual!

  • @garyhopkinssr8561
    @garyhopkinssr8561 Před 2 lety

    One more time from me guy your RAM pump seems to work better than most I've seen pretty cool man

  • @laclu453
    @laclu453 Před 5 lety +1

    The best explanation so far. Good job .. now I can easily build my own. Awesome with only a 4 ft. drop.

  • @JasonSmith-qx3zh
    @JasonSmith-qx3zh Před 4 lety

    For anywhere but off the grid super awesomely done!

  • @selectedsolutions
    @selectedsolutions Před 6 lety

    Nice homemade, i also have mine at 2" out and installed partially submerged in rice irrigation canal

  • @morenteria2988
    @morenteria2988 Před 5 lety

    You did a excellent video my friend! Very well explained. Enjoyed it!

  • @savannahagventures2012

    Great work there ! I will be testing this soon for my farm house.

  • @wyattholcomb2317
    @wyattholcomb2317 Před 5 lety

    Nice job dude, excellent job explaining. You are one smart guy. THANKS

  • @MrAquaboyz
    @MrAquaboyz Před 11 lety

    Great work...such an amazing off-grid idea. Thanks for sharing

  • @bushranger71
    @bushranger71 Před 10 lety +2

    great idea…thanks for uploading!

  • @MrElf31
    @MrElf31 Před 7 lety

    awesome example of a working Ram Pump..never seen that much lift displayed. impressive

  • @BikerTrashWolf
    @BikerTrashWolf Před 10 lety +2

    @Nathan Davies
    The system is made to be used off a stream so the water that goes out the exhaust would normally just go back into the stream. I think I read somewhere that for every gallon of water it pumps it will take 7 gallons to run the pump.

  • @PEDROSORGANICPRODUCT
    @PEDROSORGANICPRODUCT Před 10 lety

    Wow!! nice job josh.
    Thanks for the info...

  • @j10flyer
    @j10flyer Před 5 lety

    Good clear no bs explanation thank you. Awesome set up.

  • @mgeisert6345
    @mgeisert6345 Před 5 lety

    Very interesting. The concept is very similar to the electrical converters "buck-boost" that can increase tension. The feeding tube act as a electrical coil and the vertical tube with foam as a capacitor. I never realized that this was also possible with water, thanks :-)

  • @udifjjchcjg3878
    @udifjjchcjg3878 Před 4 lety

    Thanks you explained better than most people in a short time 👍🏿

  • @ufohakunamaka6049
    @ufohakunamaka6049 Před 5 lety

    Thanks . I just completed building my ramp pump today. Thanks for the video

    • @SunnyCLT
      @SunnyCLT Před 4 lety

      Hows it working so far?

  • @chriscampbell3279
    @chriscampbell3279 Před 5 lety

    Good valve/gauge configuration. Thanx for the vid

  • @leokrick6062
    @leokrick6062 Před 8 lety +2

    Awesome! Thanks for sharing. I have watched a spring dump water over our hill for the past 30 years only able to divert it to a livestock tank. This will give us the ability to capture the power of the head to now divert this water to a large storage tank above our garden, fruit trees and berries. As far as the waste water, i plan on capturing the waste water in a stock tank for our livestock and as a wildlife water source. Thanks again, isn't CZcams great!!

    • @tonybazini1297
      @tonybazini1297 Před 8 lety

      +Leo Krick I agree ..You saving the electricity but wasting the water...

    • @realjmaloi
      @realjmaloi Před 8 lety +3

      +TONY BAZINI he's using the house water as a test to see if the system works. Normally the water source comes from a stream or a rain barrel. That way, the water comes from the rain, and is pumped, using gravity, to water fruit trees, or vegetable plants or any other reason you can think of that needs water, without using electricity to get it there. Open your mind and see the reasoning behind the project.

    • @jerapierce
      @jerapierce Před 8 lety +1

      I wouldn't call it waste when that little device is pumping water from a tiny stream 70 ft. uphill to a reservoir that produces water pressure for a home 50 ft above that same tiny stream.

  • @MrBuffalobrian
    @MrBuffalobrian Před 11 lety +1

    I wish you were my neighbor. I love these projects. Your videos are fantastic.

  • @MrDeekaph
    @MrDeekaph Před 9 lety +7

    This is exactly what I was looking for ... thanks :)

  • @TeaCius1
    @TeaCius1 Před 10 lety

    Excellent and easy to follow! Thanks for the great video

  • @mandykal
    @mandykal Před 6 lety

    Thank you... I was watching Homestead Rescue and I couldn't understand the concept because it was too quick watching the show... but thanks to you I know now... I can relate this valve function just like how our heart valves work exactly the same way pressure builds and closes a valve and opens the other...

    • @MrBrianwilliams1980
      @MrBrianwilliams1980 Před 6 lety

      This is exactly where i found this video. Amazing the things you can learn on those shows that can be applied to real life needs. Amazing video by the way 😎

  • @genutchannel
    @genutchannel Před 11 lety +1

    Great! Simplest, clearest explanation. I am building my own soon. Thank you!

  • @petrpetrov29
    @petrpetrov29 Před 10 lety +3

    fantastic system from future

  • @snowballis2cute
    @snowballis2cute Před 11 lety

    Nice Work! Thanks for taking time from your demanding schedual to Produce and Share these Valuable Videos

  • @dregnoir
    @dregnoir Před 11 lety

    Great off the grid work dude keep it coming great ideas are hard to find nowadays

  • @CaptainHalitosis
    @CaptainHalitosis Před 9 lety +3

    Thank you for explaining how this works. Great video.

  • @crocodiledondii
    @crocodiledondii Před 8 lety

    Good explanation! Thanks. Now I understand how they work!

  • @josephvillatoro4215
    @josephvillatoro4215 Před 3 lety

    thanks, I have been trying to fully understand this comcept, you kinda seal that in my head thanks again. plain and simple.

  • @-ShootTheGlass-
    @-ShootTheGlass- Před 5 lety

    I’m going to try to use this setup to shift flowing water from down pipes when it rains to a tank I have up the back of my block. Worth a shot, thanks.

  • @goanglingblues
    @goanglingblues Před 5 lety

    Nice explanation, what people are having difficulty with is that you require water at an elevation behind the pump - the elevation and slope allows water flow, which provides the force (through gravity) to the system. You cant just drop this in a well, usually this is set up behind a small dam in a stream - so that you have constant water. The feeder pipe from the dam is then fed down elevation to the pump. If you have a well at elevation this will work, but you would waste a lot of water. If it is set up like most in a stream - there is no water waste - it just keeps flowing down the stream. Excellent video - THANKS!

  • @esumtm
    @esumtm Před 10 lety

    Greetings from Greece. Excellent video. I see some good answers you have given above. Nice work. Take care.

  • @RLZerr
    @RLZerr Před 10 lety +2

    excellent demo

  • @rmargan1
    @rmargan1 Před 11 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing. It is an amazingly simple technology that is so useful.

  • @chrispa9979
    @chrispa9979 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for this video I have now an idea to solve my water problem uphill.

  • @DanWebster
    @DanWebster Před 10 lety

    Very nice. I have heard of folks having these but never seen one in action.

  • @time4grace
    @time4grace Před 4 lety

    Thank you for making it very simple for all of us.

  • @billthompson9595
    @billthompson9595 Před 5 lety

    great tutorial on your pump. I am going to try it in our pond just to a water flowing. thank you.

  • @darrenlovelace3d
    @darrenlovelace3d Před 9 lety

    Well done Josh!

  • @hmoobs1
    @hmoobs1 Před 3 lety

    This is the best explaination and illustration video. Thank you

  • @garryjalbunagarcesa4714

    thanks for your small explanation and i appreciate that cause i have a plan to my home town and i used a water electric pump its so expensive and i get new idea from you ..thanks i lot for you sharing ...

  • @robertferreiro3466
    @robertferreiro3466 Před 5 lety

    Thank you for sharing...great project..

  • @oldironsfury
    @oldironsfury Před 8 lety

    Building one now, I was showing my daughter your video. Great example you have here !

    • @jerapierce
      @jerapierce Před 8 lety +3

      This is good for a scientific experiment, but if you want to use it for long term utility purposes the flap valve he is using for a clack valve is very prone to wear due to metal slamming against metal. I can sent you a diagram of a cheap to build long lasting clack valve Via email if you want it.

    • @ronesa818
      @ronesa818 Před 7 lety +1

      can you send me a diagram of that cheap to build? @jeremiah pierce? dannytamayocpi at gmail dot com

  • @mark8664
    @mark8664 Před 9 lety

    This is a great way of pumping water from the ocean inland to cool off the earth and getting water the areas that don't have water!!!

  • @francislewis5307
    @francislewis5307 Před rokem

    Awesome Video. is very clear and very well explained the concept behind it. I've seen complicated explanations of how these work, that were somewhat hard to understand. Yours is simple and easy to grasp. Nice.Thanks.

  • @MrRomynacido
    @MrRomynacido Před 9 lety

    Yeah that's a very good trial, it can be use to elevate water once electric motor is off of power due to destructive typhoon, and as well as when conserving elect. power. Thank you, thank you!

  • @rjtuhuh1
    @rjtuhuh1 Před 7 měsíci

    Great explanation ! Great job.

  • @NickFrom1228
    @NickFrom1228 Před 10 lety +36

    Well done video showing a simple build method.
    1. You don't need the foam in the pipe. The compressed air does the work.
    2. The principle of a hydraulic ram is you take the potential energy of water at a higher elevation, convert it to kinetic energy as it moves downward due to gravity then effectively reverse that on the output.
    3. The variables involved are (mostly):
    A. Volume of water source (in effect size of input pipe), volume being pumped (output pipe)
    B. Elevation (head) of water source
    C. Adjustment of the clacker valves
    D. You work a trade-off of volume of flow to height etc by adjusting your system. I don't remember for sure but I believe faster allows more height and slower allows greater volume (this may be reversed, its been a while since I've messed with this).
    4. You should add a snifter hole
    Don't take my info as not liking your video, I actually think its great.

    • @jerapierce
      @jerapierce Před 8 lety +11

      for long term use you do need a diaphragm of some sort in the tower pipe, because the water flowing through will absorb the air little by little. I used a latex balloon, and it worked fine for over 2 years.

    • @NickFrom1228
      @NickFrom1228 Před 8 lety +7

      You are correct. The air will eventually disappear in most cases. This is the reason for item 4 in my original post. A snifter hole will allow small bubbles of air into the system, which will keep it perpetually running. But you have to do a snifter right. Too big and you will waste your capacity as you are pumping water out. Too small and it may plug (though a very small hole of about 1mm is fine). Peoples mileage may vary. If a balloon works though, I say go for it. Simple and cheap is always good.

    • @jerapierce
      @jerapierce Před 8 lety +10

      It was years ago that I built a home made one. I designed my own clack valve out of cheap stuff like washers nuts and bolts, and a pvc adapter. I didn't know what a clack valve even looked like, but the one I built worked good. I just went with an idea that a friend explained to me. I never had to have a shut off valve on the 1/2 inch pipe going up to my camp either. That pump along with a gas burning water heater converted to wood burning, and a 55 gallon drum hung in a tree above my camp for water pressure, I had constant hot and cold running water for about 2.5 years. I was off the grid living rent free. I loved it.
      I just left the whole set up in the Oregon woods when I went to Hawaii to roof after hurricane Iniki hit Kawaii. , Never been back there since Hawaii. Now I am retired disabled and unable to do stuff like that.

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog Před 6 lety +3

      Where does the snifter hole go?

    • @enzoorciuoli328
      @enzoorciuoli328 Před 6 lety +1

      Kube Dog I tin in da air chamber where it's needed

  • @TechTrixInfo
    @TechTrixInfo Před 11 lety +2

    This could really help, tks for the upload.

  • @mizrachtv2080
    @mizrachtv2080 Před 4 lety

    Nice tips. Sir. Very informative vlog.

  • @taufiqusman6655
    @taufiqusman6655 Před 5 lety

    Nice presentation with good explanation. Thanks

  • @karnabudhathoki6289
    @karnabudhathoki6289 Před 8 lety

    Sharing knowledge is a good job.............Thanks for ur videos

  • @moef.5326
    @moef.5326 Před 6 lety +1

    This is really cool.

  • @andrewdavis6917
    @andrewdavis6917 Před 7 lety

    Nicely done... very good explanation of how its made.

  • @nevillecreativitymentor

    Excellent work all round :)

  • @lockpicker774
    @lockpicker774 Před 8 lety +14

    BTW, you were correct the first time... The cap was welded on the top of the PVC, as in melted two different items to form a solid joint.

    • @eliasjarjoura445
      @eliasjarjoura445 Před 4 lety

      Dude they use an adhesive glue !!! Pvc glue !!! Its not welding

    • @stormytooman1947
      @stormytooman1947 Před 4 lety

      @@eliasjarjoura445 The two pieces melt and become one: welding.

    • @eliasjarjoura445
      @eliasjarjoura445 Před 4 lety

      @@stormytooman1947 as long as its not steel i can't see it as welding
      Note: I'm a welding inspector add up ultrasound and xray also, if its not steel i won't see it as a weld .

  • @pappysproductions
    @pappysproductions Před 4 lety

    That's amazing. Great video

  • @charlesatlast3436
    @charlesatlast3436 Před 9 lety

    I like your design, I built one out of SS and I am a happy camper. The design that you have should be at a cost that anyone in a poor country could afford to build.

  • @cyrushormusjee5112
    @cyrushormusjee5112 Před 4 lety

    Greetings. May GOD bless you and your family for sharing your expertise.Thanks. Regards...

  • @jerapierce
    @jerapierce Před 8 lety

    I made one of these with a home made clack valve. The clack valve was made using a spring and the water sprayed out horizontally about 50 ft downstream between clacks. While I was at work the next day, the clack valve bumped the pump about 30 ft. downstream.

  • @billozero
    @billozero Před 4 lety

    Like it a lot - thanks for sharing. Great for distributing water uphill

  • @toddhower8215
    @toddhower8215 Před 8 lety

    thank you for sharing that.. How very awesome.. tapping into the potential energy of falling water... in the right situation that could be very handy!

    • @louf7178
      @louf7178 Před 7 lety

      Todd Hower Interesting take on it: what is normally considered as kinetic energy you are calling "tapping the potential energy". I guess that is not untrue.

  • @rikkiesix
    @rikkiesix Před 11 lety

    Very nicely made
    In time i will make this for my father inlaw in the philippines
    Then they can pump water up to there tank
    Greetings from Belgium
    Erik

  • @VTwin4Christ
    @VTwin4Christ Před 11 lety

    Ever heard of a "tire pump"? Take any old tire (pref large)... Cover one side of the bead, then other side you have intake/output and vent. Run chain/rope up tree to big branch (or windmill)... As tire gets moved up/down, it pumps water. :) Far less noisy than a ram.

  • @christianfwilliams1
    @christianfwilliams1 Před 8 lety +2

    Hey, pretty neat. Just the explanation I was looking for.
    Good job. :)

  • @joshuaburks
    @joshuaburks  Před 11 lety

    Great question, although i dont have an answer for you as i have only used water weenies for my bladder, i believe 5-10psi would be a good start, if you do plan on using an inner tube i would suggest making your pressure vessel with a screw on top to access your bladder for pressure adjustments, keep me posted if you give it a try,....josh

  • @rhodagreen4722
    @rhodagreen4722 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for explaining how it works. .

  • @albertviacrusis9403
    @albertviacrusis9403 Před 3 lety

    I'll make one for the folks back home awesome project😍😍😍

  • @11coso
    @11coso Před 9 lety

    As an Engineering student this excites me.

  • @domingotorres3616
    @domingotorres3616 Před 8 lety

    Awesome pump !

  • @frank24751
    @frank24751 Před 2 lety

    Wonderful Job 👍

  • @kiranpgangadharan6750
    @kiranpgangadharan6750 Před 4 lety

    Nice explanation, easy to understand, not like hard explanation with braincracking physics, love from india

  • @kashmirwaves3972
    @kashmirwaves3972 Před 4 lety

    Thank you now i understand ur by u. Otherwise other videos was like suck my mind. U are a good teacher. Love u

  • @RehmatUllahKundi-Pai
    @RehmatUllahKundi-Pai Před 11 lety

    Thanks for sharing your experience with Ram Pump. I am great fan of Ram pumps and trying to promote these in Pakistan. I have built some heavy duty versions. You can see them under these titles: 1 . "My First Ram Pump" 2. "My heavy duty ram pump".

  • @bigmac3006
    @bigmac3006 Před 8 lety

    Excellent video!

  • @joshuaburks
    @joshuaburks  Před 11 lety +2

    I believe you could use 2" for the whole shebang, 20' of drop is great!! Should get alot of lift outta that kind of fall, a spring check should work fine on the bottom of the pressure vessel, might have to play with spring tension, might not, good luck on your project, hope it works well for you, keep me posted,....josh, oh and as for drive pipe i believe steel is ideal however pvc works and i have seen hundreds with pvc drives that worked flawlessly.

    • @aurorasinplex5947
      @aurorasinplex5947 Před 2 lety

      gov will have all heads for this tech thay teach us that we always have loss but never talk about
      the converted gain we can make from eletromagnets
      if u convert all the wast thermal energy around
      you u can use it universally as energy u need a true sine wave bipolar like the power comp dose a
      true pure sinewave like a grid tie inverter
      once the signal is made the system will turn on and
      consume wast thermal energy from the
      environment and space around you... there is free energy but
      it comes from Universal thermal loss and converted into a gain. so a pole Transformer and a
      microwave Transformer have a common between each other u can take 2 microwave Transformer provide
      a pure sine wave grid tie inverter to it or a true bipolar sinewave that inter acts with nature in
      a perfect spherical motion like a flower of life.. if ur home provides this use it as a Source
      signal then u can simply stack the Transformers on top of eachother in correct fasion and note
      that the 1 wire on the Transformer must stay connected and the other disconnected your only useing
      1 wire on the hi side .. so test ur self
      2 microwave transformer stacked on top of eachother same
      face sides. one side 120 to the wall and the other 120 side to what u want to power and useing the
      Transformer just the way it came out the microwave with the wire attached causes the energy in its
      perfect spherical motion to converted wast thermal energy to amp for u hot to cold in to out...
      should look a bit nuts with u use a form of wireless energy but its interacting with the
      environment...this is my work a compilation of Otis car. Tesla. and many other very smart people
      nowadays i think i found the gate source and drainif this gets out to much that it works the
      power
      comp and mib will have our headsdont do this at home warning high voltage yet i cant stop u lol DO
      NOT TOCH THE CORES OR THE WIRES OK u will die make sure u dont touch the core if the hi wire is
      mounted to it u dont have to mount the hi on the core if u dont want u connect the 1 hi wire to
      the same side hi on the other transformer then the core should besafe to handle if nessary
      grab your multimeter and prove me wrong
      thats what u do i have my whole home on this
      and u can take
      one of the lows side out the wall and hook it up to other stuff and power it for verry little amp
      makeing nature convert and pumping latent heat effect into the device.
      and u can have a microwave
      hi volt cap in between the hi side and make a system that powers its self
      u can flip the switch on
      ur breaker and the room stays on up to 2kva
      with both lows in the wall this is the zero point that
      was taken from us...

    • @aurorasinplex5947
      @aurorasinplex5947 Před 2 lety

      gov will have all heads for this tech thay teach us that we always have loss but never talk about
      the converted gain we can make from eletromagnets
      if u convert all the wast thermal energy around
      you u can use it universally as energy u need a true sine wave bipolar like the power comp dose a
      true pure sinewave like a grid tie inverter
      once the signal is made the system will turn on and
      consume wast thermal energy from the
      environment and space around you... there is free energy but
      it comes from Universal thermal loss and converted into a gain. so a pole Transformer and a
      microwave Transformer have a common between each other u can take 2 microwave Transformer provide
      a pure sine wave grid tie inverter to it or a true bipolar sinewave that inter acts with nature in
      a perfect spherical motion like a flower of life.. if ur home provides this use it as a Source
      signal then u can simply stack the Transformers on top of eachother in correct fasion and note
      that the 1 wire on the Transformer must stay connected and the other disconnected your only useing
      1 wire on the hi side .. so test ur self
      2 microwave transformer stacked on top of eachother same
      face sides. one side 120 to the wall and the other 120 side to what u want to power and useing the
      Transformer just the way it came out the microwave with the wire attached causes the energy in its
      perfect spherical motion to converted wast thermal energy to amp for u hot to cold in to out...
      should look a bit nuts with u use a form of wireless energy but its interacting with the
      environment...this is my work a compilation of Otis car. Tesla. and many other very smart people
      nowadays i think i found the gate source and drainif this gets out to much that it works the
      power
      comp and mib will have our headsdont do this at home warning high voltage yet i cant stop u lol DO
      NOT TOCH THE CORES OR THE WIRES OK u will die make sure u dont touch the core if the hi wire is
      mounted to it u dont have to mount the hi on the core if u dont want u connect the 1 hi wire to
      the same side hi on the other transformer then the core should besafe to handle if nessary
      grab your multimeter and prove me wrong
      thats what u do i have my whole home on this
      and u can take
      one of the lows side out the wall and hook it up to other stuff and power it for verry little amp
      makeing nature convert and pumping latent heat effect into the device.
      and u can have a microwave
      hi volt cap in between the hi side and make a system that powers its self
      u can flip the switch on
      ur breaker and the room stays on up to 2kva
      with both lows in the wall this is the zero point that
      was taken from us...

    • @aurorasinplex5947
      @aurorasinplex5947 Před 2 lety

      gov will have all heads for this tech thay teach us that we always have loss but never talk about
      the converted gain we can make from eletromagnets
      if u convert all the wast thermal energy around
      you u can use it universally as energy u need a true sine wave bipolar like the power comp dose a
      true pure sinewave like a grid tie inverter
      once the signal is made the system will turn on and
      consume wast thermal energy from the
      environment and space around you... there is free energy but
      it comes from Universal thermal loss and converted into a gain. so a pole Transformer and a
      microwave Transformer have a common between each other u can take 2 microwave Transformer provide
      a pure sine wave grid tie inverter to it or a true bipolar sinewave that inter acts with nature in
      a perfect spherical motion like a flower of life.. if ur home provides this use it as a Source
      signal then u can simply stack the Transformers on top of eachother in correct fasion and note
      that the 1 wire on the Transformer must stay connected and the other disconnected your only useing
      1 wire on the hi side .. so test ur self
      2 microwave transformer stacked on top of eachother same
      face sides. one side 120 to the wall and the other 120 side to what u want to power and useing the
      Transformer just the way it came out the microwave with the wire attached causes the energy in its
      perfect spherical motion to converted wast thermal energy to amp for u hot to cold in to out...
      should look a bit nuts with u use a form of wireless energy but its interacting with the
      environment...this is my work a compilation of Otis car. Tesla. and many other very smart people
      nowadays i think i found the gate source and drainif this gets out to much that it works the
      power
      comp and mib will have our headsdont do this at home warning high voltage yet i cant stop u lol DO
      NOT TOCH THE CORES OR THE WIRES OK u will die make sure u dont touch the core if the hi wire is
      mounted to it u dont have to mount the hi on the core if u dont want u connect the 1 hi wire to
      the same side hi on the other transformer then the core should besafe to handle if nessary
      grab your multimeter and prove me wrong
      thats what u do i have my whole home on this
      and u can take
      one of the lows side out the wall and hook it up to other stuff and power it for verry little amp
      makeing nature convert and pumping latent heat effect into the device.
      and u can have a microwave
      hi volt cap in between the hi side and make a system that powers its self
      u can flip the switch on
      ur breaker and the room stays on up to 2kva
      with both lows in the wall this is the zero point that
      was taken from us...

  • @MsQamarzaman
    @MsQamarzaman Před 5 lety

    Good jobe.A simple video to understand.

  • @cornelisannevancitters558
    @cornelisannevancitters558 Před 10 lety +1

    Duidelijk verhaal. Thank you.

  • @jimmyordiz1065
    @jimmyordiz1065 Před 2 lety

    very nice heavy duty long lasting.

  • @rudrarishi2523
    @rudrarishi2523 Před 4 lety

    Excellent video explanation,