Re: Vortex Voltage

Ken Carrigan ( (no email) )
Sat, 16 Jan 1999 19:50:03 -0500

Reall quick... Yup! The "internal" resistance on the power outlet maybe
somewhere around couple ohms whereas with water... the interal
resistance is about a meg ohm. So.. shorting out the high static voltage
and you might some some higher current but.. in short there is NO power
in the voltage from the vortex. Now.. if the vortex where mercury!!!
Then,,,
you would have some very very low interal impedance... Hummm <g>

v/r Ken Carrigan

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"
> Voice : (214) 324-8741 / FAX : (214) 324-3501
> KeelyNet - PO BOX 870716 - Mesquite - Republic of Texas - 75187

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