With regard to interferring with gravity by using high voltage fields
as from one or more Tesla coils. I received this intriguing post from
an experimenter that I thought everyone here might be interested in.
He might send in a detailed paper of the experiment so others can
duplicate and/or further research the phenomenon. It is highly
reminiscent of the gravity drop tests by Don Kelly and Richard Hull
which showed that coils wound in moebius/caduceus shapes would fall
slower, even moreso with power applied.
=======================
> You wrote:
> ( about me writing )
>
> >That is an intriguing P.S. you made...is that one or more powered
> >gyros with small Tesla coils? How many gryros, how many coils and
> >what is placement?
> >
> >The idea of a spinning electrostatic field is seminal to both Searl
> >and Hamel who claim it will produce anomalous effects primarily
weight
> >loss. Also a guy named Pearson claims that when two energies collide
> >against each other, they can produce an excess of up to 18% more
> >energy than the original energy used in the collision...
>
==========================
> (me now)
>
> Jerry
>
> There are no actual gyro's.
> It was a board about two foot by three with tesla coils at the
corners.
> they were wired so the current flows in the big (pimary) windings
(at about
> 0.001 A, 10kv) were perpendicular to the long axis of the board. The
coils
> were aprox 10,000 windings on the primary, 10 on the 'control', and
wired
> parallel. When you twist a gyro in one perpendicular axis (to the
spin), it
> trys to twist in the other perpendicular axis. This was seen in this
setup,
> but the opposing tesla coil prevented the twist and so it was easy
to twist on
> the spin axis, yet almost impossible to twist in the other two.
>
> My physics tutor belived the electron flows were providing the gyro
> 'stabalising' effect, although the momentum was worked out to be
about 0.2
> newtons. The board could be moved by adjusting the control coils to
lower
> the effect along one edge of he board, and then that could be raised
or
> lowered about the perpendicular axis. once the coils were '
neutralised' the
> board world fall slowly back to the table, much slower than it would
with
> gravity, ie, visibly and measurably slower. This provides evidence
for an
> anti gravity effect, and this was put in our final paper.
>
> Unfortunatly, the tutor didn't/couldn't believe this ( the anti
gravity bit),
> even when presented with files from Keely, and we failed this
coursework
> (bummer.)
>
> I would like to try research into this, but I am doing Chemical
Engineering
> as a degree, and don't have much chance. The only working tesla coil
i have
> built (2 foot d. primary) is providing a lighting effect for discos
in the
> hall of residence I was in last year. ( 10' sparks! Behind a perspex
screen
> 6' behing the DJ) and the won't give it back, saying I gave it to
them and
> so it's theirs.
>
> Sorry that may be a personal rant, but, hey people need to know the
perils of
> lending people their tesla coils.
>
> P.S. dont try the spark effect near aluminum. Apparently x-rays,
capable
> of damaging human tissue are liberated.
>
> P.P.S. Are you a researcher, enthusiast, or just site master? The
reply to
> my e-mail kind of negates the latter, but there we go.
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