Re: Vortex Voltage

Joel Ryan ( damoney@geocities.com )
Sat, 16 Jan 1999 17:16:40 -0800

I took an electronics class last year and I was under the impression that
voltage could be turned in to current. If you have two points with a
voltage between them, connect them with a conductor and current passes
between them to even out the voltage. Power outlets are an example of
this. They have a voltage drop between them but no current is flowing
because of the high resistance(air) between them. Put a screwdriver betw=
een
the points and now you have current. Are you saying that wouldn't happen
with the voltage created by the vortex?

"Jerry W. Decker" wrote:

> Hi Joel!
>
> With regard to the following excerpt describing Flanagans' test;
> > By means of another electrode touching the water he was able, when th=
e
> > vortex was moving at approximately one thousand revolutions per
> > minute, to record a charge of more than ten thousand volts emitted
> > from its swirling water: quite a boost from the cosmos."
>
> Joel Ryan wrote;
> >> Hey that's really cool! Could the 10,000 volts be transformed into
> >> a more usable voltage with higher current and power an engine to
> >> keep the vortex spinning? Or is that the obvious fact and the
> >> reason you posted it?
>
> I neglected to mention the forced ripping of the water molecule which
> releases high voltage as discovered by Lenard. The following URL
> doesn't detail any of his experiments with water but he is the same
> Lenard. Back in the 1800s, there were high voltage generators that
> produced the high voltage from water moving at high velocity through a
> tube that separated it with force. Here is one URL about Lenard;
>
> http://pl.nobel.se/laureates/physics-1905-1-bio.html
> =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
> I did a search on an experiment called the 'wasserfaden', literally
> meaning the 'water fountain'.
>
> It involves pushing water through a needle, like the one used to air up
> a football or basketball, at a velocity approaching 100psi...the water
> is shot downward in a high velocity stream into a tin bucket that is
> coated in wax so that it won't short out to the floor.
>
> As the water exits the head through the needle to stream into the
> insulated bucket, some of the droplets are forced apart into a very fin=
e
> mist which is highly charged and which glows and levitates in an orbit
> around the needle.
>
> I saw Walter Baumgartner do this same experiment in Los Angeles and the=
y
> turned out the lights but the water was so 'dead' in LA that it didn't
> hold much of a charge, so didn't glow too much but it did levitate and
> orbit around the needle, roughly in an 8-10" circle with the needle in
> the center.
>
> The ability of water to hold a charge is referred to as the 'zeta
> potential' and the higher this zeta potential, the more life giving the
> water is to drink and live on.
>
> Now I did a search on 'wasserfaden' and found a German page on who else
> but Viktor Schauberger at;
>
> http://www.pks.or.at/Viktor.htm
>
> where I excerpted the following interesting comment;
>
> "Er beauftragt seinen Sohn Walter mit der Wiederholung der
> =93Wasserfaden-Versuche": Es werden Spannungen bis 20.000 Volt erreicht.
>
> which I pasted to the AltaVista language translator at;
>
> http://babelfish.altavista.com/cgi-bin/translate?
>
> to provide the following German to English text;
>
> "He assigns his son walter the repetition of the " water thread attempt=
s
> "Voltages up to 20,000 V are achieved."
>
> Isn't that interesting? Now voltage ain't current but does anyone
> remember the guy calling himself ZPE who claimed to be able to milk
> power from a vortex?? Then weasled out of the 'promised release'?
>
> Could this be part of that secret?
> --
> Jerry Wayne Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
> http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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