Hey, to paraphrase Dustin Hoffman in 'Wag the Dog', 3000 volts is
'nothing'....<g>..
I've run 900,000 volts from my hands for up to 10 minutes at a time without
any damage (some would dispute that)....the trick is to not ground yourself
when near it...you know, play like Napoleon, one hand in the jacket and use
Teslas trick of 3" high rubber soles on your shoes....
It ain't as dangerous as the weenies make out, I've worked with Van de
Graff, Wimshurst, Tesla and all kinds of sparklers, always taking care to
keep the heck away from it when power is applied and when power isn't
applied, short it out with a screwdriver (insulated handle) before touching
it....remember, caps can hold a charge for quite awhile after power is
turned off...
That's odd about your book being stapled, I don't think mine was like that,
and you said 50 pounds??? Gee, if that's english pounds, isn't that about
$100+??? Something ain't right.
But the high voltage solenoids are so cool to see the magnet repelled like
that and with such force....anyway, it's late, I'm wired and exuberant,
ain't life grand...if you don't try, you'll never know, so do some of the
experiments...using common sense...looking forward to your new free energy
device when you get the prototype done!!!!!!!
----------
> From: Tim v.d.Hoff <tim.hoff@helinium.nl>
> To: KeelyNet-L@lists.kz
> Subject: "High Voltage and Free Energy devices "by George Moonhie
> Date: Tuesday, March 24, 1998 8:02 AM
>
> Hi All!
>
> A couple of months ago, I ordered via KeelyNet a copy of this book and
yesterday
>
> something dropped in my mailbox.
> It's a bunch of papers stapled to eachother saying "High Voltage and Free
Energy
> Devices" by George
> Moonhie. Could this be the book or is there more to come? :)
> No, seriously Jerry said it was worth it's price ( over ƒ50,- ) so I'll
believe
> him.
>
> But here's the question:
> Is it wise for me to go and experiment with the deviced described in this
book?
> I'm a high-school-student, I do know my Physics but I've never
> worked with High Voltage.
>
> Should I read something about that first, or can I get started with the
book
> described above?
>
> To tell you guys the truth I'm a little afraid of all those thousands of
Volts.
>
> Adios,
> Tim van
>
>
>
>