Floyd Sweets device worked, but it is aetheric as well as electromagnetic.

It has accounts of antigravity, freezing wires, and once when overloaded it
made a vortex sound...

Many of the more credible coils and magnets free energy devices have other
anomalous effects besides mere overunity.

And what of the unexpected electrical energy in Rossi's work?
Or the mysterious lack of radiation in LENR?

The problem is that if you replicate an electromagnetic free energy device,
it won't work because it is a hybrid of electromagnetic and aetheric
engineering, and the aetheric part is dependent on details that are too
readily lost.

I can easily make this kind of energy and I now know how to basically
transition the aetheric so that it melds with electromagnetic energy.

The aetheric energy is also related to Kundalini, Chi etc.., but there are
many variations of this energy.

A number of people on this list have felt an energy from images I have
made, you I have found light can effect the underlying aether, suitable
enough for the majority of random people to feel something.
Including in situations where zero possibility of the placebo effect exist.

John



On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 6:02 AM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> Bob Higgins wrote:
>
> In such cases, it is really useful to simulate the system with a model
> that is entirely without unknown physics and see how the model compares
> with observation.  If it predicts the same phenomena, you can be pretty
> sure that the outcome was simply outside your expectation.  SPICE is a
> wonderful first-principles tool for a lot of this with wires and magnets.
>
>
>
> Yes, it is a great tool, but the previously unknown parameter or exotic
> material is the problem. Plus– SPICE, or any simulation, can be fooled by
> an incorrect assumption – as here.
>
>
> http://overunity.com/7403/this-ltspice-simulation-model-will-blow-your-mind/#.V4u7yDVgs9M
>
> SPICE works only on the known, in fact only on the well-known - and is
> specifically poor at modeling leakage inductance… which is a factor in EE
> that normally is not a good thing. Perhaps, like lemons, it can be made
> into lemonade (if that is what Graham is doing) but not modeled. Driving a
> specialty magnetic core past saturation presents problems for any model
> when other cores are in spatial proximity.
>
> The one-and-only acceptable recourse here, as always, is to “close the
> loop” in some way. If a circuit self-resonates for hundreds of hours with
> only microfarads of capacitance, and especially if substantial cooling of a
> magnetic core is seen during this time – you can throw the SPICE model out
> the window, until of course it is modified… but that always happens after
> the fact.
>
> Do you have theoretical problems (aside from natural suspicions) with the
> presentation of a self-powering circuit, driving a computer fan over a cold
> core and thus cooling a space, such that the net thermal balance is
> increased in entropy?
>

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