
How You Can Get Rid of Your Electric Bill Forever
Do you realize that you can get rid of part or all of your electricity bill by making your own, low-cost permanent magnet generator? There is zero outlay to generate electric power this way, even though the machine requires some electricity to keep it spinning up to speed. The apparatus even generates its own electrical power for that. When it is rotating at full speed, it uses no outside electricity at all to keep it running perpetually. In truth, these generators are capable of putting out around five times the electrical power they require to keep operating.
How much do the parts cost to put together a permanent magnet generator? The cost may surprise you: Between one hundred and five hundred dollars, depending on the size of the permanent magnetic generator and, to make things easy, the parts are easily purchased just about anywhere. You can locate them at your nearby hardware or home improvement store.
Complete schematics, parts lists and instructions are currently sold for a very low price, often less than . These directions are so trouble-free to adhere to that just about any person can easily construct a permanent magnet generator without help. When you have built one or two for yourself, it is easy to launch a profitable business concerned with making these devices for the public. If you end up producing more electrical current than you can use and if you are still connected to city power, you can sell the excess back to the electric utility when your meter functions backwards.Permanent magnet generators are pollution-free and emit no toxic fumes. They are not noisy and don't require much room. You could even install one inside a city apartment to decrease your electricity bill to nothing. Some individuals construct small permanent magnet generators to furnish part of their power needs, thus bringing down their monthly bill from the electric power company. Others construct bigger permanent magnet generators that can produce around 7000 watts, sufficient to run a small house. If you have to have even more electricity, you can easily wire the output of 2 or more generators together to create any quantity of free electrical current.
To give you an idea of what seven thousand watts of power can power, I own a sixteen hundred square foot dwelling in Hawaii that has been completely run on solar power since 1999. It has an array of forty solar panels, each with an output of 75 watts. 40 x 75 watts = 3000 watts. With just three thousand watts (and a battery bank), I can use my computer and refrigerator all day, cook my meals in a microwave oven and use a toaster. At night, I can watch 1 or 2 DVD's while powering a small TV and a surround sound system. I keep the lights switched off when not needed. All light bulbs are the fluorescent type.
In the summer, when the Hawaiian sun shines brightly from dawn to dusk, I never even need to consider how much electric power I am consuming. In the winter, when the days are shorter and when there are more overcast days, I have to turn off the main power switch before I go to bed and turn it back on after sunrise. The electrical refrigerator just "coasts" all night and the food is still reasonably cold in the morning. Where I experience difficulty is if I have to deal with an all-day overcast for 2 or more consecutive days. Then, I need to use a back-up three thousand-watt gasoline generator to keep the house electrified and the solar batteries charged. This happens maybe three to four times a winter and hardly ever occurs in the summer.
A permanent magnet generator, unlike a solar system or a wind turbine, can function twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week and it generates the same amount of power day and night, rain or shine. You can employ it to charge a battery bank, like solar (but around the clock) or you can just forget the expensive, high-maintenance batteries and connect it to your breaker panel directly. I could use a permanent magnet generator to replace my gasoline solar backup generator. I did not know about permanent magnet generators in 1999 when I paid over ,000 to build my solar electric system. I will soon need to replace the six giant solar batteries which will cost another ,000.
About Author
Bob Gillespie writes on many subjects including permanent magnet electrical generators. He is a full-time Internet marketer and author who lives on the island of Maui in Hawaii. Learn more about permanent magnet electrical generators at Bob's blog at: http://generator-magnet.inetwyoming.com Other blogs of possible interest: http://tesla-generator.inetwyoming.com and http://free-energy-devices.inetwyoming.com



What is the difference between a permanent magnet generator & a field excitation generator?
The field excitation generator needs a DC voltage through coils of wire to establish a magnetic field before the generator can produce an output.
A permanent magnet generator does not need a DC voltage to produce an output. The permanent magnet establishes the magnetic field.
In a permanent magnet generator, should the magnets on either side of the coil rotate?
or will it produce electricity if one side rotates and the other remains stationary…
This is hard to discuss without diagrams. Hard to see what you are thinking. Try an internet search on “permanent magnet generator” for lots of information including pictures and diagrams.
In general, permanent magnet generators are small and of limited output, because the output is limited by the power of the magnets. Most generators and alternators use field electromagnets, which can be made to have a much more intense magnetic field.
But you can build a simple generator with a horseshoe magnet and a rotating armature. Theoretically, you could make a generator with a rotating magnet and a stationary coil, but it would be a weak, clunky thing.
Again, an internet search on “electric generator” will get you what you need.
How can I make an electric generator that does not use a permanent magnet?
There are lots of places to find methods of making small generators that use permanent magnets, but I have always wondered how they do it when there aren’t any such magnets available.
permanent magnet generators?
how to design a permanent magnet generators….plz help
Large commercial generators do not have permanent magnets. The rotating field is magnetized via slip rings that feed current into it’s windings. The current is generated by the exciter which is either a small generator attached to the end of the shaft or, in modern applications, an electronic SCR converter.