Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Got through Professor Konstantin Meyl's _Power Engineering Scalar Field Theory: Faraday vs. Maxwell - Demonstration of Longitudinal Wave Transmission_

I am intrigued by an experiment brielfy described by Thomas Brown

here: "Eric showed me star streams and galactic formations in plasma bulbs (burned out light bulbs from LA Water & Power taped to a broom handle!)" source: http://alchemy2012.com/science.html

here: "Eric: If you take a low pressure gas (in a bulb) and place it in two superimposed dielectric fields then you get spiral formations such as Reich wrote about in his book COSMIC SUPERIMPOSITION. These formations appear as spheres, galaxies and other cosmic forms. " source: http://peswiki.com/index.php/PowerPedia:Eric_Dollard, and in _Free-Energy Research of Eric Dollard - A Collection of Contributions to The Journal of Borderlands Research_, Journal of Borderlands Research Mar-Apr 1987, page 20

The question then is what is the best way to generate a dielectric field?
I see 4 options from the literature, and there are certainly more.

1) Build an aerial capacitor with large separated metal plates (a la Galvani) and recognize that a dielectric field exists between the plates.
2) Use a variant of the Tesla Magnifying Transmitter (TMT) as described in his patents (US Patent No 649,621 and others), in Konstantin Meyl's videos/books, and in Eric Dollard's videos/books. This amounts to starting with a grounded LRC circuit which is powered by magnetic induction between the inductor and a primary coil. Replace the inductor with 2 inductors, each coupled to a primary coil with one powered and the other unpowered. Finally, replace the plates of the capacitor with aerial copper balls (or other capacitance such as a neon bulb) and separate the circuit into two by taking each inductor to ground rather than connecting them.
3) Build an 'analog computer' circuit as described by Eric Dollard and by Thomas Brown here: http://thomasbrown.org/Light&Electricity/light_and_electricity.html, and in one of Eric Dollard's videos on Longitudinal electricity
4) Use a cloud buster, basically a tube (flexible and/or rigid) of iron or steel connected to a flowing water source.

No comments:

Post a Comment