Re: hydrogen generator

Jerry Wayne Decker ( jwdatwork@yahoo.com )
Tue, 16 Feb 1999 15:35:23 -0800 (PST)

Hi Nick et al!

Well, Nick, that's kind of true, but Meyer did call it 'fractioning
water' as in cracking the water molecule to release the hydrogen and
oxygen, which was to be combusted in the engine. Meyer claims to have
used a frequency.

Whereas Keely claimed that by instantaneously disrupting the molecule,
it would produce a tremendous explosion using the 42.8kcps...other
frequencies for triple dissociation were 610, 610 and 12kcps.

I still find it encouragingly synchronistic and supportive that the
late Henry (Andrija) Puharich found that the optimum dissociation
frequency for water was 600cps which he happened to stumble upon while
looking for a way to remove gases from the blood. When we had him in
Dallas, I told him about Keely's research with water dissociation and
named those frequencies, he'd never heard that before, so he was
surprised also.

Keely claimed that using 3 drops of water, exploded in a spherical
chamber he produced a pressure of 29,000 psi.

As I recall, air pressure at sea level is 14.7 psi. I've worked around
150 psi air pressures and that was enough for me, so like the term
billion in money, I have a problem fathoming even 1000 psi.

I looked through the about 357 patents at;

http://www.uspto.gov (under patent search)

and could not locate using meyer+engine+water

Just wanted to pull up the details of his claims and technique but
guess not today...it goes back to 76 so maybe I missed it.

I was thinking he used high voltage AC discharge at one or more
frequencies that he claimed cracked the water molecule, but can't
prove it without the patent...

---NickandSim@aol.com wrote:
>
> To Bill,
> You are confusing the keely dissociation frequency with
the stan
> meyer hv water splitter. The keely frequency is the frequency for
the
> ultrasonic dissociation of water into etheric force (allegedly)
> The stan meyer device is a type of electrolytic cell to break down
water with
> more than %100 efficiency (allegedly)
>
> Nick Field

_________________________________________________________
DO YOU YAHOO!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com