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Saturday, February 10, 2024

How to make mini generator, How to make free energy generator


 How to make mini generator, How to make free energy generator

Did you know that rotating a DC motor generates energy..?


We will be using this technique to make a free energy generator for our projects. The motor here used is a Geared 6v, 50rpm DC motor. The multimeter reading shows that this generator can output up to 16v at 300mA, enough for small projects.

  Procedure

On a piece of Thermocol, make space for DC motor.

Using adhesive, paste the thermocol on the cardboard base. (Note: Do watch the video for visual clarity of procedure).

Also, paste the motor on the thermocol piece.

Cut a small piece of skewer and attach it tightly vertically to the motor shaft.

Take a small ice cream stick and drill a hole on the side.

Glue it perpendicular to the skewer attached to the motor shaft.

Take another stick and drill a hole.

Attach a Skewer to the stick and paste it on the stick connected to the motor.

Our Free Energy Generator is Ready

Connect a LED on a breadboard and Rotate the motor using the Handle

The LED turns ON with full brightness (If the LED doesn't turn ON then change the direction of rotation)

Note: I connected about 8 LEDs and a 9v DC motor, this generator did provide enough current to power all the components.

However, I yet did not test the limit for this generator. If anyone makes this, surely share the experiences in the comments section.


 How to make mini generator, How to make free energy generator

Did you know that rotating a DC motor generates energy..?


We will be using this technique to make a free energy generator for our projects. The motor here used is a Geared 6v, 50rpm DC motor. The multimeter reading shows that this generator can output up to 16v at 300mA, enough for small projects.

  Procedure

On a piece of Thermocol, make space for DC motor.

Using adhesive, paste the thermocol on the cardboard base. (Note: Do watch the video for visual clarity of procedure).

Also, paste the motor on the thermocol piece.

Cut a small piece of skewer and attach it tightly vertically to the motor shaft.

Take a small ice cream stick and drill a hole on the side.

Glue it perpendicular to the skewer attached to the motor shaft.

Take another stick and drill a hole.

Attach a Skewer to the stick and paste it on the stick connected to the motor.

Our Free Energy Generator is Ready

Connect a LED on a breadboard and Rotate the motor using the Handle

The LED turns ON with full brightness (If the LED doesn't turn ON then change the direction of rotation)

Note: I connected about 8 LEDs and a 9v DC motor, this generator did provide enough current to power all the components.

However, I yet did not test the limit for this generator. If anyone makes this, surely share the experiences in the comments section.

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