Call me a crackpot but I think you are all missing the point.

Ron's loop sticks (in which only some work) are when used properly able to
send out an EM field that does not decrease in strength with distance until
at a critical distance it collapses.

In other words the scanning coil proclaims that the magnetic field does not
get weaker with distance.

And that agrees perfectly with so many other Free Energy devices, if fact
most designs make perfect sense when looked at in such a light.

I don't think the way you are looking at this can possibly bring anything
other than a mess of confusion, if you want me to expand on the many other
examples of such effects I will but somehow (as with the tractor beam
Spark/Edward Farrow effect offer) I think all I will hear is crickets.

You should not all be skeptics in a debunking frenzy but it seems more like
that than people who accept the reality of Free Energy and want to put the
puzzle together (while remaining objective).


On 10/26/07, Hoyt A. Stearns Jr. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: William Beaty [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2007 10:44 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re: "Cold" electricity
>
>
> On Thu, 25 Oct 2007, John Winterflood wrote:
>
> >> thomas malloy wrote:
> >> As Jed pointed out, a pair of heavy iron frying pans might make a
> superb
> >> Faraday cage.
>
> >Yes, and they solve the problem of shielding low-freq magnetism.  For
> >example, to well shield the magnetic component of 60Hz you'd need many
> >inches thick of copper.
>
> Just 1/8" mu-metal or the iron frying pan will shunt the magnetic fields
> around the device under test.  Without a magnetic shield, it would be easy
> to couple a 60Hz magnetic field into the inductors inside, and it would be
> quite efficient. Try holding a magnetic tape degausser nearby to see how
> much power could couple inside.
>
> Hoyt Stearns
> Scottsdale, Arizona US
> http://HoytStearns.com
>
>
>
>

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