Re: Woodward gravity reduction

Dave Nelson ( (no email) )
Sun, 24 Oct 1999 16:40:59 -0500

You need to be a little more specific regarding how they jumped. It is
normal for adjacent conductors to push away from each other to some degree
because of the magnetic flux generated. The mho's of your wire may have an
effect. Also, consider your pulses. Are you using AC or pulsed DC? Sounds
like you may have just hit a frequency that accentuates the effects of the
fields for the distance the conductors are separated. Synchronization of
expanding and collapsing magnetic fields.

Dave Nelson

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jerry Wayne Decker" <jwdatwork@yahoo.com>
To: <interact@Keelynet.com>
Sent: Sunday, October 24, 1999 4:03 PM
Subject: Re: Woodward gravity reduction

> Hi Folks!
>
> I have noticed that jumper wires hanging in space from
> an output terminal to a device will jump when current
> pulses through them. I never really thought about it,
> but why would the wire jump when this was low voltage,
> high current pulses...only about .5 to 1 amp?
>
> Does high density electron flow as in current have
> mass that could affect matter? I always thought it
> was a magnetic field repulsion/attraction, never
> imagined it could be a relationship to inertia.
>
>
>
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>
>
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> Please respond to jdecker@keelynet.com
> as I am writing from my work email of
> jwdatwork@yahoo.com.........thanks!
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