Re: idea

Jerry Wayne Decker ( jwdatwork@yahoo.com )
Fri, 20 Nov 1998 10:35:21 -0800 (PST)

Hi Dave et al!

With regard to the guy claiming to have a 60cps, 120VAC, 50 amp power
generation unit that used a coil inside a capacitor.

On checking the guy out we found many errors.

He at first said he used an inverter, then later retracted that.

His power claims were always estimates, not based on actual measured
loads.

He claimed he burned up his first unit by connecting it to the earth.

He claimed he had built many Tesla coils, the best at age 12 which put
out 15 foot lightning bolts.

He claimed his power 'estimates' were derived from an experiment using
two 22 gauge stranded wire alligator clips from Radio Shack,
connecting the power unit to a tin water bucket (ungrounded) filled
with water. He claimed the water began to boil, the bucket turned red
and the water vaporized within a short period.

Even he was not able to duplicate his original power unit that burned
up.

No one in our group of 4 builders was able to duplicate even his
remotest claim.

We found the idea interesting, that a coil placed between two charged
plates would produce power.

And even more bizarre was the idea that energy as in POWER (Watts)
does not actually manifest in the wires until those wires were outside
the capacitor plate area.

As if this energy was either translated from some scalar form or
manifested from a downshift in frequency or energy level of the
aether/zpe.

Once again, we saw that one of the most certain tests for an
electrical free energy system does not involve any kind of measuring
device, but simple calorimetry where the load consists of a heating
element and the heat produced is measured as a proof of power.

It also brings up the critique of reporting on EVERY spook claim that
comes down the pike or keep quiet about it and wait to see if it pans
out, then report it.

The second option opens up the possibility of suppression since only a
very few would know and could tracked more easily than a large number,
so I'll stick with the open reporting and EXPECT them to flake out but
always hopeful that one day, we will have a report that is truthful
and without error.

---David l Tingley wrote:
>
> I have been thinking (obsessing maybe?) about tapping the rotating
> magnetic force inside a capacitor after reading the message
forwarded by
> Jerry Decker about the guy who claimed he had a device that he
charged up
> for 10 seconds then extracted 60 cycle AC at up to 50 amps forever by
> creating some sort of imbalance. It was speculated that he was somehow
> charging a capacitor and then extracting power from the static field.
>
> It occured to me yesterday that it doesn't have to be a static field.
> What if you charged up 4 capacitors instead of one and then hooked
them
> up "scalar wave battery charger" style, alternating two in parallel
with
> two in series? This would create the rotating magnetic fields
inside the
> capacitors which would reverse with each charge-discharge cycle. A
coil
> placed between the plates of each cap would theoretically then be
able to
> produce AC as the magnetic fields rotate through it.
>
> Is there someone out there who could set this up and test it?
>
>
> Dave
> ====================================
> dave.tingley@juno.com

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