Re: Smith Coils

mbgupta@julian.uwo.ca
Sat, 14 Feb 1998 18:23:07 -0500

Thx Bob,

I have the book you are referring to. That's what made me ask the question.
Below is an excerpt which I found a search on the net. Very interesting
article. See the web site for whole article.

Does anyone have the referances mentioned below particularly Ref: 44 on the
construction and also on the ref Bob sites?

Thx

Chris Gupta

Reference 43 to the chapter, Cohering the Zero-Point Energy, in the book
"Tapping the Zero-Point Energy", by Moray B. King, p. 100:

"W.B. Smith, 'The New Science', Fern-Graphic Publ., Mississauga, Ontario,
(1964). This esoteric work claims that the energized caduceus coil
(opposing helical windings on a ferrite core) creates a 'tempic field'.
[This is a region where the time component of the space-time metric is
altered. Such a claim might be supported if the ZPE were a hyperspatial
flux orthogonal to our three-dimensional space, and the pulsed magnetic
field opposition on the ferrite lattice induced an orthorotation of this
flux.]"

Reference 44:

"G. Burridge, 'The Smith Coil', Psychic Observer, 35(5), 410-16, (1979).
This article explains how to wind a caduceus coil (previous reference) and
reports on some observations made by investigators experimenting with the
coil."

http://www.hamptons.com/members/mproject/documents/tech-1%20-phil%20exp.txt

At 01:48 AM 2/14/98 -0500, you wrote:
>Okay, I found the book. Here's a few bits of it
>that may answer your question:
>
>Begin hand wiring the wire in the middle of its
>own length, winding the two wires in opposite
>directions around the core and carefully crossing
>the wires on the same opposite points each time
>around.
>
>The book case was based on a 9" long iron core.
>
>The description calls the results an Energy Sink.
>Namely, current fead into it just disappears,
>causing NO radiation or heat. It is also rumoured
>to have zero impedance (???), among many other
>strange RF characteristics.
>
>Other things it mentions is that minor variations
>in the construction change in how it operates.
>Although still in unusual ways.
>
>The section in the book goes on for several pages.
>
>Supposedly there was a technical article published
>in 1980 by Gaston Burridge, called "The Smith Coil".
>This was in Volume 35, Ed.No.5 of "Psychic Observer"
>magazine (!).
>
>Sounds like a simple and bizarre area to research!
>
>Bob
>