Larry Jamison: Energizer (S.F. Examiner, Jan. 3, 1981)

 
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**Larry JAMISON**

**Energizer**



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[**https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqu1E-uPFCM**](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqu1E-uPFCM)**Larry Jamison's electrical energizer  // 
Mārcis Gulbis**Double wound means wound with bifilar winding . Bifilar
windings, which enhances capacitance between wires, which
causes current to flow through capacitance between wires,
which reduces energizer's armature reaction and counter
electromagnetic torque.



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**<https://www.newspapers.com/results/?keyword=January+3%2C+1981&publication-ids=9317>*San Francisco Examiner* (Sat., January 3, 1981), p.
A6**


**Inventor
Juices up a 200,000-Mile Car**

Memphis, TN (UPI)
--- A Mississippi mechanic claims he has invented an electric
car that will run 200,000 miles without gasoline, oil, water
or even recharging.

Larry Jamison calls
the motor the Jamison Energizer. The 65-year old Nettleton,
Mississippi man commutes to Memphis seven days a week to labor
on his invention, housed in his one-room shop.

Two years ago I
went to work on the idea full-time, and Ive been working
seven days and nights a week ever since, said Jamison.

He says he can wire
th dozen or so cylindrical-shaped motors and energizers into
virtually any truck or car --- at a cost of about $6,000.

The difference
between this motor and all the other electrical cars on the
market is tha mine never needs to be recharged, he said. It
produces more electricity than it uses and stores it in
batteries.

Also, those other
cars dont have any real power. Ive got a motor that will
outdo your Cadillacs and your Lincolns. When we get into
production, Ill guarantee the motor for 200,000 miles.

Jamison Thursday
displayed a 1977 Ford Courier pickup equipped with a Jamison
Energizer. He admits it has a couple of small bugs.

He said a control
switch that acts as an accelerator is giving him problems and
keeps him from driving the pickup himself.

Jamisons secret is
a shiny metal cylinder a little mor than a foot long and about
10 inches in diameter. He wont discuss what makes it work.

This is the only
one like it in the world, he said. I dont care what
electrical engineer you bring out here, this is different.
Its not in the book.

Jamison said no one
will believe his idea will work.

For two years,
people have been saying, Youre nuts --- it wont run.
Everybody just said I was throwing my money away --- that it
wont run a lick, he said.

As Jamison talked,
an associate drove the pickup back and forth across the shop.

Its working, he
told the onlookers. You can see that for yourself.

Jamison says hes
been contacted by major firms in Germany, France, and the US,
but doesnt plan to make a deal.

But I aint going
to let nobody have it, he said. I want to manufacture it
myself.

![](jamsnfig.jpg)

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[**https://www.upi.com/Archives/1981/01/02/How-about-200000-miles-between-recharges/4660347259600/**](https://www.upi.com/Archives/1981/01/02/How-about-200000-miles-between-recharges/4660347259600/)**How about 200,000 miles between recharges?**  
  
MEMPHIS, Tenn. -- A Mississippi mechanic claims he has
invented an electric car that will run 200,000 miles without
gasoline, oil, water or even recharging.  
  
Larry Jamison calls the motor 'the Jamison Energizer.' The
65-year-old Nettleton, Miss., man commutes to Memphis seven
days a week to labor on his invention, housed in his
one-room shop.  
  
'Two years ago I went to work on the idea full time, and
I've been working seven days and nights a week ever since,'
he said.  
  
Jamison says he can wire the dozen or so cylindrical-shaped
motors and energizers into virtually any truck or car -- at
a cost of about $6,000.  
  
'The difference between this motor and all the other
electrical cars on the market is that mine never needs to be
recharged,' he said. 'It produces more electricity than it
uses and stores it up in batteries.  
  
'Also, those other cars don't have any real power. I've got
a motor that will outdo your Cadillacs and your Lincolns.
When we get into production, I'll guarantee the motor for
200,000 miles.'  
  
Jamison Thursday displayed a 1977 Ford Courier pickup
equipped with a 'Jamison Energizer.' He admits it has a
couple of 'small bugs.'   
  
He said a control switch that acts as an accelerator is
giving him problems and keeping him from driving the pickup
himself.  
  
Jamison's secret is a shiny metal cylinder a little more
than a foot long and about 10 inches in diameter. He won't
discuss what makes it work.  
  
'This is the only one like it in the world,' he said. 'I
don't care what electrical engineer you bring out here, this
is different. It's not in the book.'  
  
Jamison said no one will believe his idea will work.  
  
'For two years, people have been saying, 'You're nuts -- it
won't run.' Everybody just said I was throwing my money away
-- that it wouldn't run a lick,' he said.  
  
As Jamison talked, an associate drove the pickup back and
forth across the shop.  
  
'It's working,' he told the onlookers. 'You can see that for
yourself.'  
  
Jamison says he's been contacted by major firms in Germany,
France and the United States, but doesn't plan to make a
deal.  
  
'But I ain't going to let nobody have it,' he said. 'I want
to manufacture it myself.'




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[**https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/54016739/larry-jamison**](https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/54016739/larry-jamison)**Larry Thompson Jamison**  
Birth --     17 May 1914   
Coldwater, Tate County, Mississippi, USA  
Death --     26 Jul 1984 (aged 70)  
Tupelo, Lee County, Mississippi, USA  
Burial --     Mount Zion
Cemetery    Independence, Tate County,
Mississippi  
  

![](LarryJamison.jpeg)

  
Larry T. Jamison, 70, a mechanic and inventor who contended his
"Jamison Energizer" would solve the nation's energy woes, died
yesterday morning at North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo
after along illness.  
  
Mr. Jamison, formerly of Memphis, said in a 1981 interview in
The Commercial Appeal that he perfected the device  a type of
electric motor that he claimed would provide electricity for
homes and run an automobile "around the world" without gas, oil
or water while serving a prison term in Texarkana, Texas, for
violating the federal firearms act.  
  
He was charged with stock fraud in 1983 in Alabama after
authorities there accused him of selling stock in a corporation
to manufacture his device, which critics claimed would work only
if the laws of physics were defied. Jamison claimed his
"energizer" would generate more electricity that it used,
permitting the excess energy to be stored in batteries that
never needed recharging.  
  
"I always wanted to try the impossible-- to do what people said
couldn't be done, " Jamison said in 1981. "I'd really like to
build a car for the people that would run on nothing."  
Mr. Jamison lived in Nettleton and Eupora, Miss., Rogersville,
Ala., ard Memphis, where he at one time had a shop at 1299
McLemore.  

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**Greek Patent GR76151**  
**[ [PDF](GR76151JamisonEnergizer.pdf) ]**

  


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****[EP 0 067 755](jamison/jamsnpat.pdf)  
[Energy Source Employing Electrical
Energizer](file:///C:/Users/Owner/Documents/0CivKit/RexResearch/jamison/jamsnpat.pdf)**** 


![](jamsnpat.jpg)  
![](EPfig23.jpg)

![](EPfig4567.jpg)

An energy producing
system is provided which produces energy for use, for example,
in an electric vehicle or in a home power plant. The system
includes an electrical energizer (60) including a double wound
rotor and a double wound stator, for producing electrical energy
which is stored in the system, e.g., in an battery (66) storage
arrangement, which provides initial energization of the system.
The stored energy is supplied to an electrical motor (68) which
drive the energizer (60) to thereby create additional energy.
The energizer (60) is able to supply the needs of the system as
well as to power a load.  
  
The present invention relates to energy producing systems and,
more particularly, to an electrical energizer-motor system for
providing energy, e.g., for an automotive vehicle or as part of
a home energy plant.  
  
With the advent of the so-called "energy crisis" and the
consequent search for alternative energy sources as substitute
for oil, considerable attention has been focussed on automotive
vehicles as chief users of oil products. One aspect of this
search has fostered renewed interest in electrically driven
vehicles such as electric cars and the like. A principal
shortcoming of prior art electrical vehicles has been the need
to recharge the batteries which provide the power for the
electrical motor drive system.  
  
The present invention overcomes this problem through the
provision of electrical energizer-motor system which produces
more energy than is expended, thereby enabling the excess energy
to be stored in the battery system and to be drawn upon as
required. Thus, the need for recharging of the batteries
associated with conventional electrical vehicles is eliminated
with the system of the invention. It should be noted that while
the system of the invention has enormous potential in connection
with the use thereof in electrical vehicles, the system clearly
is not limited to such use and would obviously be advantageous
when used, for example, as the energy source for a home energy
plant, as well as in many other applications.  
  
In accordance with the invention, an energy producing system of
the type described above is provided which comprises an
electrical "energizer" comprising at least one double wound
stator and at least double wound, shaft-mounted rotor located
within a housing, electrical energy being collected from the
rotor through a suitable electrical take-off device and being
available for utilization by the system ; and an electrical
motor, powered from the energizer, for driving the rotor
shaft'of the energizer. A battery arrangement is used to
initially supply energy to the system and, as stated above, the
excess energy generated by the energizer over and above that
required by the system, and the system load, is stored through
charging of the batteries. The motor includes an armature
including a plurality of winding slots therein and a plurality
of windings, at least some of thl': windings being wound into
two circumferentially spaced slots in the armature, i.e., such a
winding is wound through a first slot (e.g., slot #1) and
returned through a second spaced slot (e.g., slot #5). Depending
on the energy demands, the energizer may include a pair of
stators and rotors, with the rotors being mounted on a common
shaft. The motor is preferably energized through an arrangement
of a commutator and plural brushes, while a slip ring and
associated brushes connected to an output bridge circuit form
the energy take-off means for the energizer.  
  
Other features and advantages of the invention will be set forth
in, or apparent from, the detailed description of the preferred
embodiments which follows.  
Figure 1 is a partially sectioned elevational view of the
electrical "energizer" of the invention ;  
Figure 2 is a block diagram of the overall energy producing
system of the invention ;  
Figure 3 is a partially sectioned side elevational view of a
modified electrical motor constructed in accordance with the
invention ;  
Figure 4 is an exploded perspective view of the basic components
of the motor of Figure 3 ;  
Figure 5 is an end view of the brush holder also illustrated in
Figure 4 ; and  
Figures 6 and 7 show details of the winding pattern of the motor
of Figure 3.  
  
Referring to Figure 1, a preferred embodiment of the "energizer"
device of the invention is shown. The device includes a jousing
10 in which are located, in a first chamber or compartiment lOa,
a first rotor 12 and a first stator 14 and, in a second
compartment lOb, a second rotor 16 and a second stator 18. It
should be noted that although two stator-rotor combinations are
employed in this embodiment, a single rotor-stator combination
can be used for some applications. Housing 10 is divided into
the compartments lOa and lOb by acenter plate 20 and includes a
pair of end plates 22 and 24. Both the rotors 12, 16 and the
stators 14, 18 are double wound and the rotors 12, 16 are nested
within respective stators 14, 18 and mounted for rotation on a
common shaft 26. Shaft 26 extends longitudinally through housing
10 and is mounted on bearings 28 and 30 supported by end plates
22, 24 and a further bearing 32 supported by central plate 20.  
  
A pair of slip rings 34 and 36 are mounted on shaft 26 and
cooperate with respective brush pairs 38 and 40. Slip rings 34
and 36 are connected to rotors 12 and 16, respectively, and
permit the current flowing in the rotor windings to be collected
through the associated pairs of brushes 38, 40. Brush pairs 38,
40 are mounted on respective brush holders 42 and 44. The
terminals of respective bridge circuits 46 and 48 are
respectively connected to stators 14 and 18 while conversion
bars 50 and 52 are connected to brush holders 42 and 44, as
indicated.  
  
A cooling fan 54 is also mounted on shaft 26 and a plurality of
apertures 20a, 22a, and 24a are provided in center plate 20 and
end plates 22, 24, respectively, to promote cooling of the
device.  
  
The energizer of Figure 1 is preferably incorporated in a system
such as shown in a highly schematic manner in Figure 2 wherein
the output of the energizer is used in supplying the energy for
driving a motor. To this end, the energizer, which is denoted 60
in Figure 2, is connected through a regulator 62 to battery
charger 64 for batteries 66 connected to a motor 68. These
batteries 66 are used to provide initial energization of the
system as well as to store energy produced by the energizer 60.
It will be understood that the energizer 60 provides energy
enough to power motor 68 (which, in turn, drives energizer 60
through rotation of shaft 26) as well as to provide for storage
of energy in the system. It will also be appreciated that the
system illustrated schematically in Figure 2 includes suitable
controls (switches, rheostats, sensors, etc) to provide initial
energization as well as appropriate operational control of the
system.  
  
In a preferred embodiment, motor 68 is of the form shown in
Figure 3. As illustrated, the motor is of a generally
conventional form (with exceptions noted below) and comprises an
armature 70 mounted on a shaft 72 within housing 74. Housing 74
includes a pair of end plates 76 and 78 which mount shaft
bearings 77 and 79. Apertures 76a and 78a are provided in end
plates 76, 78 and a cooling fan 80 is mounted on shaft 72 to
provide cooling.  
  
A commutator 82 is also mounted on shaft 72 and cooperates with
associated brushes (not shown in Figure 1) to conduct current to
the windings of armature 70. This cooperation is shown best in
Figure 4 which is an exploded view illustrating the armature 70,
commutator 82 and a brush holder 84. As shown in Figure 5, the
brush holder 84 includes eight brush mounts 86 each of which
defines a slot 88 in which a pair of brushes is mounted. One
brush 90 is shown in Figure 5, it being understood that two such
brushes are mounted in each slot 88 so that sixteen brushes are
required.  
  
The motor of Figures 3 to 6 includes eight pole shoes (not
shown) which are secured to housing 74 and which serve to mount
eight field coils or windings 92 (see Figures 3 and 4) about the
periphery of armature 72 in spaced relationship thereto.  
  
An important feature of the motor of Figures 3 to 6 concerns the
manner in which the windings for armature 70 are wound. As
illustrated in Figures 3 and Figures 6 and 7, a typical winding
WI is wound in two slots, with the illustrated winding being
doubled back and continuing from armature slot Sl to armature
slot S5 (see Figures 3 and 6). The ends of the winding extend
from slots Sl and S5 to the commutator 82, as shown in Figures 3
and 7. Similarly, the winding in slot S2 continues to slot S6,
the winding of slot S3 continues to slot S7, and so on for the
forty-nine windings.  
  
In a specific preferred embodiment, the motor described above is
a 48-volt, 412 horsepower motor having a top operating speed of
7,000 rpm. A rheostat control (not shown) is used to control the
input voltage and, as discussed above, the motor is powered from
the energizer of Figure 1. It will be appreciated that the
energy take-off from the system is preferably from the output
shaft of the motor although electrical energy may also be tapped
off from the energizer output.  
  
Although the invention has been described in relation to
exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those
skilled in the art that variations and modifications can be
effected in these exemplary embodiments without departing from
the scope and spirit of the invention.  
  


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**<https://www.zpenergy.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1728>****(from KeelyNet January Archives)**...In a
specific preferred embodiment, the motor described is a 48 volt,
412 horsepower motor (412 X 760 watts = 313,120 Watts) (313,120
watts / 48 volts = 6,523AMPS), having a top operating speed of
7,000 rpm.  
  


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 **Related:****ES2119690A1 -- Autonomous power regeneration system.****Inventor :     Del Castillo Jose Luis
Garcia****Abstract** -- The system comprises an electric traction
motor 1, a main generator 2, some auxiliary generators 3, a
battery 4, a load regulator 5 and a speed regulator 6. The
system is intended to generate its own operating power in
addition to providing an extra supply for other purposes.

 


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