Re: Woodward gravity reduction

Jerry Wayne Decker ( jwdatwork@yahoo.com )
Sun, 24 Oct 1999 15:06:52 -0700 (PDT)

Hi Dave et al!

Its been a few years so I don't recall the
details...the wires were just alligator clip
connectors from radio shack that where hooking up some
circuit I was tinkering with. It was square waves in
one case and pulsed DC in another, never saw it on
sinewaves. The wires were at least 5" apart from each
other. I would like to blame electrostatics as the
most logical cause but it wasn't more than about 15
volts.

--- Dave Nelson <dfnelson@netdoor.com> wrote:
> 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

=====

=================================
Please respond to jdecker@keelynet.com
as I am writing from my work email of
jwdatwork@yahoo.com.........thanks!
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