Thanks for posting that anecdote. It appears to be a purely
electrostatic motor unless I am misreading it. It compares the
magnetic propulsion of the iron disk in the presence of a rotating
electromagnetic field to the mica disc, a dielectric, in the presence
of a high voltage DC field.
I know there is the Poggendorff effect which uses slanted electrodes
with high voltage DC to produce motion in an electrostatic device (as
in the Testatika) but there is no mention of such an arrangement here.
I found my copy of Childress Vimana book and am going through it
looking for the spinning ball bearing experimet description, but so
far, haven't found it. The word is that the ball bearing experiment
is in 'Antigravity and the world grid' which I've not found yet.
I remember that experiment but didn't see any correlation because it
was mica as opposed to the metal ball bearing. It is certainly a
blend of electrostatics and inductance, or at least it appears to be
and thats the whole question.
I know Jefimenko designed several electrostatic motors, some with
appreciable torque. I've not read the book, but Norman Wootan has a
copy of it and says they are quite interesting.
---Bill McMurtry wrote:
>
> Hi Jerry,
>
> Page 84 - 85 of Ether-Technology by Rho Sigma. A fascinating read.
>
> Regards, Bill.
>
>
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