Recent comments on the list about spinning water and magnets has got me
thinking.

I think I have observed that my lawn grows better when it is watered by
rainfall, than when it is watered by well water --- aka ground water.  Why
is this so? Does this suggest to you that perhaps the rainwater is more
magnetically structured than the shallow well ground water, which is former
rainwater filtered through some sand. My well water is drawn from sand only
ten feet below ground level. Or is it because the rainwater contains more
oxygen or nitrogen or what? Or does the pumping of the ground water alter
the water and make it less suitable for the grass?

My well water is pumped by an above-the-ground pump and the water is spun
through a cast iron pump casing with a plastic impeller before it reaches
the grass. Thus the well water, on its way from below ground to the pump, is
subjected to a vacuum that causes air bubbles to bubble out of the well
water on its way from the ground to the pump while still inside the pipes.
When the ground water is pressurized in the pump casing by the spinning
impeller, then the air bubbles collapse.

Spiroflex
===============
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dennis Lipter" <dlip...@accesshub.net>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Friday, December 17, 1999 8:19 PM
Subject: Re: CS>Spinning Water Magnetizer


> When I researched water magnetizers on the IBM patent database, all the
> water magnetizers of the type that clamp around pipes used alternate
> polarities. The magnets would have the north and south poles facing each
> other, the next set of magnets would reverse the polarities of both
> magnets and so on. I haven't a clue as to why this is so, I am just
> carrying forth that arrangement. Maybe in nature when water flows
> underground it passes magnetic fields from various directions and the
> alt polarity arrangement comes close to mimicking nature.
>
> Nutritional Intelligence Cooperative of North America wrote:
> >
> > why do you want to alternate polarity?
> >
> > jd
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Douglas Haack <gvagraph...@jps.net>
> > To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
> > Date: Friday, December 17, 1999 1:24 PM
> > Subject: Re: CS>Spinning Water Magnetizer
> >
> > >How do you mean exactly from "top to bottom"? What pattern of
placement?
> > >
> > >Thankyou, and in Silvation, Douglas Haack
> > >
> > >Dennis Lipter wrote:
> > >
> > >> Just bought a Krups "Midnight Cocktail"( $15.00 @ Sterns Dept. Store)
> > >> which is a small 16 oz battery powered cocktail mixer. It is much
like a
> > >> blender in its operation and creates spinning vortex when filled with
> > >> water and turned on. Take some domino sized ceramic magnets and glue
> > >> them to the outside of the water container so they encircle the water
> > >> top to bottom. I would use alternate polarity. The magnets could be
> > >> doubled up for increased strength. So now you have spinning water in
a
> > >> strong magnetic field! The unit is battery powered by two 1.5v
penlight
> > >> batteries and could easily be converted to AC operation using a small
> > >> transformer and rectifier. The momentary action on/off switch could
also
> > >> be supplemented with a toggle on/off switch for prolonged "spinning".
> > >>
> > >> Dennis Lipter
> > >>
> > >> --
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silver.
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