You must have some asymmetric quality, You may gain this by having the em
fields not exactly cancel each other or by some other means such as the shape
of the coil, wind a caduceus on a cone or something, remember shape is what
is important.
The main problem with a caduceus wind is that the original was two snakes
twisted around a pole in such a way that they did not cross over, this is
called a bucking bifilar today, A caduceus as used today does not cancel all
magnetic fields, they cancel either the longitudinal flux or circular flux
around the coil but not both.
John Berry
Jerry W. Decker wrote:
> Hi Folks!
>
> The following email was sent to me and I thought folks here would be as
> intrigued by it as I was. Any ideas on how such a Caduceus Capacitor
> would be built, i.e. shape, construction details?
> ----
> You sent me an email with only the following comment;
> > Check out a Caduceus capacitor tune the dielectric to desired
> > dielectric saturation point and D.C. power supply for desired lift
>
> Are you saying you've done this?? What is a Caduceus capacitor? I mean
> what form does it take?
>
> I remember the Caduceus file where a ferrite rod is wrapped with Smith
> type (45 degree angle) coil windings. The claim is that an energy beam
> (scalar?) is emitted from it.
>
> There is a paper online about using stacked disks (with a hole in the
> middle) and dielectrics that you can use to entrain and direct aether to
> produce thrust...it is referred to as an 'electric rocket'...requires
> high voltage applied to this stacked capacitor network. It is on Bill
> Beaty's site ( http://www.eskimo.com/~billb ) but I don't recall the URL.
>
> Are you implying that using a Caduceus 'capacitor' will also produce such
> a thrust when powered by a DC power supply. Does that DC have to be high
> voltage as with TT Brown and DeSeversky?
>
> If you would send some description of how this 'Caduceus Capacitor' is
> constructed, I would appreciate it....thanks!
> --
> Jerry W. Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
> http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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