Well upon re-reading this message, I am starting to believe that the
"flipping" is supposed to be that the moving magnet physically flips and not
the field itself. Does anyone else agree or is there more to it?
Thanks,
Ed
-----Original Message-----
From: Jerry W. Decker <jdecker@keelynet.com>
To: KeelyNet-L@lists.kz <KeelyNet-L@lists.kz>
Cc: freenrg-l@eskimo.com <freenrg-l@eskimo.com> vortex-l@eskimo.com
<vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Date: Saturday, March 07, 1998 1:23 PM
Subject: Flipping Magnetic Fields??
>Hi Folks!
>
>This is an email I sent to a friend and researcher;
>
>> Well, better to try and fail....this info was shared courtesy of Wes
>> Crosiar..so thank him if you have occasion to communicate...he's been
>> ill with a flu and is better now...
>
>> Something odd you might be interested in...a fellow (Wes) says you
>> can take a magnet, like a cylinder or bar....put a thick metal piece
>> on one pole (doesn't matter)....then bring a similar magnet close to
>> the metal plate so that the approaching pole is identical to the one
>> it is moving near to.
>
>> As I am told, when you slowly move the magnet towards the metal plate,
>> you will find the magnets repel until right before you get to the
>> plate...then all of sudden, it will attract and both magnets will
>> stick to the plate.
>
>> He says this happens not because the attraction to the plate is
>> stronger than the pole repulsions (after all, it has magnetized the
>> plate with the same polarity so is essentially an extension of the
>> magnet pole energy)....but he says he watched the fields at different
>> points and when the magnets begin to attract, the moving magnet pole
>> actually FLIPS!
>
>> He believes this is the key to the Sweet device, the Minato
>> self-driven magnetic wheel and other devices....it is almost exactly
>> what Wesley Gary said happened with his magnetic 'neutral line'.....
>
>> Isn't that interesting???? I'm going to do that when I get some steel
>> plate...he says the thicker the
better....--------------------------------------------
>The email response was;
>
>>> Well - it does! (flip polarity)
>>> I have a few rare earths. This effect can be seen at 4 to 6 inches.
>>> The non metallic magnet turns and tries to spin around. (I just went
>>> in the shop and tested it!) There is something else odd, the magnet at
>>> a distance, turns about 30 to 45 degrees and stays there.
>>> (with regard to the Minato self-running bicycle wheel as at;
>>> http://keelynet.com/gravity/curtis0.htm ) I am trying to find a
>>> small smooth plate I can mount 1 nib to so I can see exactly what it
>>> does. It would seem many on a plate will turn.....
>
>>> But I have to test this magnet thingy! I find heavy chrome from my old
>>> motorcycle makes super conductor for magnets. I get more power using
>>> them than iron. If I can rig it, I will have pictures for
you. -------------------------------------------------
>Many of my associates think the Sweet device used such a magnetic bubble
>switch effect, and Wes says Coler and Hendershot also used it..>>> Jerry
>--
> Jerry W. Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
> http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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