A description such as this lacks much essential information necessary to
distinguish it from a 'mundane' electrical stunt. It's hardly wortth
speculating about. A lead-acid battery can supply very large surge currents
[as in starting a car] and with proper windings electromagnets can strongly
repel and if left connected would get quite hot. Capacitors can be charged
in parallel and discharged in series to provide extraordinary surge power
for rail guns and electromagnetic forming. AC fields can configured to
attract non-magnetic conductors and even insulators. Looks magical until you
think deeply.
Mike Carrell
----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Monday, February 26, 2007 2:30 PM
Subject: [Vo]: E.V. Gray experiment
There's a specific experiment that the late E.V. Gray performed that is
fascinating -->
Quote,
---
In the workshop, a 6-volt car battery rested on a table. Lead wires ran
from the battery to a series of capacitors which are the key to Gray's
discovery. The complete system was wired to two electromagnets, each
weighing a pound and a quarter.
The first demonstration proved that Gray was using a totally different
form of electrical current --- a powerful but "cold" form of the energy.
As the test started, Gray said: "Now if you tried to charge those two
magnets with juice from the battery and make them do what I'm going to
make them do, you would drain the battery in 30 minutes and the magnets
would get extremely hot."
Fritz Lens activated the battery. A voltmeter indicated 3,000 volts. Gray
threw a switch and there was a loud popping noise. The top magnet flew off
with a powerful force. Richard Hackenberger caught it with his bare hands.
What had happened was that gray had used a totally different form of
electrical current --- a "cold" form of energy. The fact that Hackenberger
caught the magnet and was not burned was evidence enough of that.
---
Does anyone know how to replicate this specific E.V. Gray experiment?
Personally I would disagree this is a new form of "cold" electricity. I
firmly believe the energy comes from the magnetic materials ambient
temperature.
Are there any photos of this experiment? What type of magnetic material
were the electromagnets made of? Was is merely capacitors discharging
across the electromagnets or was there a circuit? How were the
electromagnets situated?
Regards,
Paul Lowrance
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