RE: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech
Robin - If there was a significant internal charge cloud within a brick, and the charges rode along with the motions of the surrounding gyrating molecules, there should be a detectable magnetic field, right? Something to look for in these experiments. -Original Message- From: Robin Sent: Friday, July 14, 2023 9:55 AM To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech In reply to Andrew Meulenberg's message of Fri, 14 Jul 2023 14:17:55 -0500: Hi, Years ago, I read in a magazine that elliptical motion of atoms resulted in a force. It occurred to me that two synchronized sound sources arranged such that the direction of the sound from each was perpendicular to the other, and with a solid cube placed where the two beams crossed, could generate elliptical motion in the atoms of the solid, if the amplitude of the sound waves was different for each sound source. >When the vertical component of the centrifugal force of the rotating >eccentric load exceeds the weight of the brick, the brick will move off >the ground. Non-vertical components will drive the brick horizontally >every time the net force exceeds the weight of the brick. Two small >synchronous motors, if properly aligned and fixed to a 1 ton rigid >load, could allow it to be moved by another small motor. No wheels are required! > >US Patent office refused a patent on this concept, despite seeing an >operating system with a small example. [snip] Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.
Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech
Interference between synchronous laser beams provides the basis for an optical lattice. The eccentric weights gives this on a macroscale. On Fri, Jul 14, 2023 at 2:58 PM Robin wrote: > >Hi, > > PS - the dimensions of the solid should be such that it is resonant for > the frequency of the sound. > Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof. > >
Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech
>Hi, PS - the dimensions of the solid should be such that it is resonant for the frequency of the sound. Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.
Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech
In reply to Andrew Meulenberg's message of Fri, 14 Jul 2023 14:17:55 -0500: Hi, Years ago, I read in a magazine that elliptical motion of atoms resulted in a force. It occurred to me that two synchronized sound sources arranged such that the direction of the sound from each was perpendicular to the other, and with a solid cube placed where the two beams crossed, could generate elliptical motion in the atoms of the solid, if the amplitude of the sound waves was different for each sound source. >When the vertical component of the centrifugal force of the rotating >eccentric load exceeds the weight of the brick, the brick will move off the >ground. Non-vertical components will drive the brick horizontally every >time the net force exceeds the weight of the brick. Two small synchronous >motors, if properly aligned and fixed to a 1 ton rigid load, could allow it >to be moved by another small motor. No wheels are required! > >US Patent office refused a patent on this concept, despite seeing an >operating system with a small example. [snip] Buy electric cars and recharge them from solar panels on your roof.
Re: [Vo]:EVOs, Hutchison, and ancient megalithic tech
When the vertical component of the centrifugal force of the rotating eccentric load exceeds the weight of the brick, the brick will move off the ground. Non-vertical components will drive the brick horizontally every time the net force exceeds the weight of the brick. Two small synchronous motors, if properly aligned and fixed to a 1 ton rigid load, could allow it to be moved by another small motor. No wheels are required! US Patent office refused a patent on this concept, despite seeing an operating system with a small example. On Wed, Jul 12, 2023 at 2:11 PM MSF wrote: > This is one of my favorite subjects. Not Hutchison, but speculation about > how the ancients were able to cut and transport those huge blocks of stone. > It might be that electrical effects are involved, but I'm not sure that's > necessary. Hutchison effects might be real, but those videos he made had > some rather obvious primitive video fakery. At least that's my opinion. > > Here's an experiment I did longer ago than I care to remember. It's > simplicity itself. I epoxied a small DC motor to the top of a brick and > placed it in a sandbox. The motor had an eccentric weight attached to the > shaft. Connected to the motor was a variable DC power supply. Obviously, > the frequency of vibration could be controlled by varying the current to > the motor. As the RPM of the motor increased to a certain level, the brick > began to move. Depending upon small adjustments of the current, the brick > might rotate in one direction or the other or shift slightly. When > stabilized, the brick could be moved with the touch of a finger. > > You could see light under the brick through the oscillating sand. This > doesn't exactly constitute levitation, but you could see how it could be > interpreted that way. There are so many ways of creating sonic frequencies, > it's hard to say how ancient peoples did it. > > There you have it. I encourage anyone reading this to replicate my little > experiment and tell us what happened.