Pulse Motor from Old Parts

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Published 2016-07-01
Pulse motors are a class of brushless motors and are easy to build. Here we show you how to make one.

All Comments (21)
  • @jeffiscool1805
    You are very good at explaining things. Thank you for keeping things simple. Good job.
  • @kengamble8595
    Demonstrations like this are very helpful for explaining things for some of us and will bring up other questions and ideas which will bring up more questions and ideas ! I believe this is what gives us our amazing technology ! Thank you sir for your time !
  • @Misfitswitch
    Great vids. Thank you for explaining how everything works.
  • @juistian
    Simple construction and well described. Outstanding!
  • @ChuckRage
    This video was very easy to understand! Thank you for your interesting content.
  • @eitan71
    i love this channel :) thank you for sharing !
  • @soltake6044
    I made a bedini generator and the back EMF tends to make the reed switch stick...
  • @kocnn
    Great video and explanation thank you,
  • @grain-diose
    This is not a pulse motor, but the product is beautiful.
  • @Ncky
    I connected pull up resistor and 12v to jack and it works like a charm. I had removed it with its chip near coils and i looked at datasheet for chip i conected 12v and pull up resistor on pin for on off and it works nicely at about 1500rpm
  • Try smacking on an AC current in the solenoid that changes direction with the frequency of magnet rotation(120 degress). That should change the magnetic field periodicly which switches between attraction and repeling the neodymium magnets. That being, ad a current direction switch a little behind the magnetic switch. In thought, the faster the motor turns, the faster the AC current should switch.the added attraction might improve the speed. I think that you would need an(or 3) extra magnetic switch and two transistors in parallel, so that it govern the direction of the flow of energy.I think that migth be an AC motor. Solenoid pushes a magnet away from the wire, turns of, switches on current in opposite direction, turns of, begins anew. - You might mess with radio signals though.
  • @thebeststooge
    That machine is from the late 1970's as my friend's dad had one like that back in 1979/1980.
  • @edifierbass7821
    yes i've seen some demo same like that except they uses a neodymium magnet on four sides or more acts like free energy
  • @alchemy1
    The only problem with this type of hook up is one needs high voltage, lots of turns of magnet wire, extra amps and hardly any rpm at the end. Might make for a better induction type of motor maybe. The bearing is definitely of high quality. Maybe a person could use it and use plastic or wood as drum with the magnets. That might throw some good RPM.
  • @fede142857
    Would it be correct to say that this is the same type of motor that can be found on a quartz clock movement? (although controlled by an oscillator instead of a reed switch, in order to mantain a stable speed)
  • @davidbolha
    Hi, If you'd added a Full Bridge Rectifier (AC symbol wires) on the leads of the Magnetic Reed Switch, then used the exit DC leads from the Bridge Rectifier & attach those to a VRLA/SLA AGM battery that is heavily sulphated, you would have a nice desulphator device that could rejuvenate your old UPS batteries. 😋🤓 Doug Konzen discovered this. 🙄 I also have 2 videos on that on my channel as well. 😉 Other than that, nice setup. 😄😆😎