Re: Frequency Controlled Resistance

Hexslinger ( hexslngr@internet-frontier.net )
Tue, 27 Jan 1998 22:56:31 -0800 (PST)

On Wed, 28 Jan 1998, Jerry W. Decker wrote:

> These guys said they had found that by injecting various frequencies in
> wire or into cooling conductive materials, that paths were setup which
> would have unusually low resistances. They said even overunity was
> possible but would not say onstage that they had succeeded. Later, I
> cornered a couple of them and asked a few questions.

Damnit Jerry - there you go being psychic again. :)
It's funny you should bring this up, since it reminds me alot of an idea
that I remember reading somewhere -- the idea was that: current flowing
through a conductor does *NOT* flow at a fixed rated -- but rather various
flows are set up at various DEPTHS in the conductor. Essentially, the
conductor becomes one giant waveguide - with different... um... I don't
quite know how to put it... uhh... "conduction bands" -- bands of charge
travelling at different speeds -- forming layers around the center --
which matches the wave conventional waveguides work for air or water.

I'll take "things that make you go 'hmmmm'" for $100, Jerry...
it makes you wonder if this difference in the flow can be engineered?
If you were to treat conductive wiring as a conventional waveguide,
then surely there must be a way to create a path of the lowest possible
resistance.

Speculation, anyone?