Re: Tapping the Casimir force

Jerry W. Decker ( (no email) )
Sun, 11 Oct 1998 13:34:12 -0500

Hi Folks!

On re-reading the following experiment, it springs to mind that the
composition of the disk is important because of inductive coupling which
is a mirror image and thus could produce the reversed motion;

> Visualise two disks, vertically mounted on independant axles. One is
> free to turn on a bearing, the other mounted to a high speed motor.
> (I used a Craftsman router, 25,000 rpm.)

> Now imagine both disks are separated by a wall of plexiglass. When
> the motor mounted disk is spun at high speed, the free mounted disk
> will spin BACKWARDS!

> This is not the good part, though. Nor has overunity been shown, yet.

> If you were to now stop the motor, as your motor driven disk slows,
> so does the free disk, and then comes to a stop. (Momentarily) It
> will THEN PROCEED TO TURN IN THE OTHER DIRECTION, AND THEN SLOW TO
> A FINAL STOP!!!!!

> This is analogious to throwing something up in the air, having it
> stop, and then go up again briefly before it comes back down...!!!

> There is an obvious rotational force in the disk from the motor, but
> there is also a perpindicular "vortex" in the (aether?) that is
> capable of affecting a certain portion of mass of the "free to spin
> disk".

> This vortice is reversed at which point that it passes through the
> plexiglass shield between the two (much as an inverted image through
> a lens) i.e. , free disk, axle ---l>l<l--- motor, axle which is
> why they rotate in opposite directions. ^ (represents plexishield)
> > and < (represent vortices).

If the disks were conductive and a literal current was built up in them
to inductively couple and move the opposite disk in the opposite
direction, then the short reversal of motion at the end of the spin,
would be analogous to 'back emf'....a key to many free energy claims
that rely on coils and motors.

I will ask what the disks were made of and post that info.

--            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