On Sat, 10 Nov 2001, I Anderson wrote:
> Forget the bulb, it is not needed, and serves no useful purpose as far
> as I can see.
> You would need one that worked at 36+ volts anyway.
There is a useful purpose, but hopefully not needed. If the rods
were to short together, there would be a large cur
Let me add:
Usually you will find a white strip running along one edge, or
when you cut the connector off the end and strip back some of
the insulation, you may find one copper and one silver colored
(tinned copper, not silver wire). If all the adapters you are
going to place in series are identi
ket, a speed controller box
it would plug into woud be 0 -115 out, and touching both leads, or
the hot lead and ground, could kill you.
John
> John Kolb wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, Tony Moody wrote:
> >
> > > A speed controller for a Dremel drill or for an electric
On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, Tony Moody wrote:
> A speed controller for a Dremel drill or for an electric train or for a
> slot car setup should do a fine job of slowing down a small dc motor.
> You will probably have to start up at a medium speed setting then slow
> down to a crawl for continuous stirring
On Fri, 4 May 2001, Arthur Rambo wrote:
> I have used rectal insufflation ozone @22-28 mcg dosage 1 1/2 minutes,
> held for 20 mins. once a day for 21 days on, 7 days off, repeat to
> approx. 100 doses for hep c. (30 years abnormal liver function)
> Acheived normal liver function.
Careful with
On Fri, 13 Apr 2001, Ivan Anderson wrote:
> If you have exchanged cells you have exchanged DNA. Of course most of the
> DNA you import is in food, and I know that if you eat too many carrots you
> start to look like one :-)
Oh my gosh, my round belly is from donut DNA :(
John
--
The silver-lis
On Tue, 21 Nov 2000, Marshall Dudley wrote:
> russ e rosser wrote:
>
> > If the
> > wands were in series with the short, I'm afraid *the body* might supply
> > enough resistance (up to 1 Meg ohm, initially) to delay the breaker
> > response.
>
> 120 VAC and 1 megohm gives .12 mA. That is not en
On Tue, 21 Nov 2000, russ e rosser wrote:
> Very enlightening, but would any of this apply to 'wall warts', which
> never have a 3rd prong? --Russ
The GFI's don't measure the current in the ground lead, but react
to the difference in current between the hot and neutral side of the
power line. Th
On Mon, 20 Nov 2000, russ e rosser wrote:
> Yes. Try them & see; let us know what works.
>
> Although current is the danger, voltage pushes the current. The
> (unlikely but possible) danger of a transformer shorting is the sudden
> jump from 9-12 to 115V, which would multiply the current comm
On Wed, 25 Oct 2000, Duncan Crow wrote:
> Hi Dean;
>
> Thank you for your input. I'm glad we have our discussion group. The fusing
> was strictly a guess. The design is not mine. The first one I saw had a
> 3-amp fuse. Yes, wall current is dangerous but functional. Three families
> had been usin
On Wed, 9 Aug 2000, blue_eyes wrote:
> I just checked the Mouser Electronics catalogue (on compact disk)
> and found "regular" LEDs that are blue (430nm), green (565nm),
> yellow (585nm) and red (660nm).
Of course, these put out a beam of light anywhere from 36 to
120 degrees wide, not the 1/2" c
On Fri, 4 Aug 2000, Marshall Dudley wrote:
> I think I will try holding the negative electrode in my hand, and applying the
> positive pulses with a piece of 14 gauge silver wire directly to the wart
> after wetting it with CS. That might drive silver ions directly into the wart
> enhancing the e
On Tue, 1 Aug 2000, Marshall Dudley wrote:
> Wow! That is impressive. I don't see how anyone could do that much
in one lifetime. Is it all in this lifetime, or is he counting past
lives as well?
Wayne Green's brag list is all from this life. He's also
a member of Mensa - didn't see that list
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