Re: water moving song?

Mother ( (no email) )
Thu, 6 May 1999 23:26:03 -0500

>Jerry said
>Wouldn't acoustics by their very nature alter the
>subtle (supple) energy in the water?

Joseph replies,
Indeed that is very problem the acoustical chaotic noise created In the
impeller of a commercial pump,banging along the walls of a pipe and smashing
into 90 degree angles make the commercial production of energized water
extremely difficult.
I have eliminated part of the problem by using vortex flow and implosion
twister pipes,gentle sweeps over 90 degree turns,but still the acoustic wave
created by the pump,Shakes the life out of the water.

So what if you created a carrier signal that acoustically moved the water,
and embedded on that carrier signal was the information domains you wish to
impart in the fluid, now instead of signatureing the water at a specific
point in a delivery system you could now have the water which is ever
flowing in implosion dynamics, (collapsing in on itself and minimizing
friction loss from the eddie currents from wall drag)is now continually
being saturated with the energetic signatures that you desire to impart in
the fluid.
My bench top experiments with acoustic waves using ultrasound transducers,
also indicate that the gas liquid interface is maximized and the
micro-bubbles that assist in the transmission of nonlinear energies is
greatly multiplied. IR and UV spec confirm higher peak values in energy
transfer, and surface tension is usually altered by a few more dynes. BTW
researchers If you really want to get a bang in energy transfer to aqueous
solutions you can pull a vacuum degas the water (removes the nitrogen and
c02) and then use a small amount of noble gases my favorite combo is( Argon,
Xenon,Krypton) with dash of ozone start playing the music and that liquid
will start dancing and remembering that dance. talk about a homeopathic
that Works, but not to practical for a bottled water business.

I appreciate any and all input and suggestions from all of the researchers
out there, I do not have the electrical engineering to make the specific
drivers I will need more understanding of the limitations and abilities of
the current transducers on the market, so any sources for the stuff I would
appreciate.

Joseph Bender
h20@airmail.net