Mark, I think we have discussed this before. No one other than the inventor, AFAIK ever got his thing to work. Many have tried and are still trying, and the idea is similar to Keely and Meyer (both crooks) but where is the study, the experiment or the testable OU device, or anything other than anecdote which shows overunity?
I hate it when disinformation like this keeps recirculating over the internet without at least some basis in demonstrable fact, or at least a valid theory to back up the anecdote. Is there a valid theory? > (Resonance is what shatters a crystal goblet when an opera singer hits the exact note which vibrates with the crystal's molecular structure.) That may be true with regard to the goblet, but the resonant frequency for water is now well-known, 22 gigahertz, though Puharich would not have known this in 1983. 22 Ghz is nowhere near the frequencies that Puharich used (it is orders of magnitude higher). All of Puharich's frequencies, singly and in combination, have been tired to no avail. A Russian chap on one of the watercar forums has done exhaustive research on this, but noboby wants to know the truth, apparently, because this mindless stuff about magic resonance keeps floating around with no study to back it up, and many studies that contradict it. Plus, if you had rights to the patent, and it worked, one would have to assume that you were remiss in not commercializing it, no? Jones

