@boguslaw,
I feel I have to agree with your last post here. But what is Einsteins trick? He must be wrong, but where is his error? Walter Russell's work seems to be more helpfull when you really want to understand nature.
As I pointed out in an earlier post here (in this thread) the search for elementary particles is completely deranged. It is like putting two grains of sand on top of eachother and then fire a menhir at it and study the debris, assuming that everything must have originated from either of the two grains.
The whole thing is complete ludacris, yet there are very learned serious people seriously scratching their very learned heads over this. They need a jolt of hadrons themselves.
@TeslaSecrets and madhatter,
I thought the Townsend battery is based on an electret generating an electric field. Then, with an electric field there must be ways to capture energy from the surroundings. This is, I think, what Tesla had in mind with Wardenclyffe. This may also be the cause of the "flickering tube" after it has been subjected to a strong electric field.
I am not sure on this last one, it is just that I have not yet found a better explanation.
Ernst.
I feel I have to agree with your last post here. But what is Einsteins trick? He must be wrong, but where is his error? Walter Russell's work seems to be more helpfull when you really want to understand nature.
As I pointed out in an earlier post here (in this thread) the search for elementary particles is completely deranged. It is like putting two grains of sand on top of eachother and then fire a menhir at it and study the debris, assuming that everything must have originated from either of the two grains.
The whole thing is complete ludacris, yet there are very learned serious people seriously scratching their very learned heads over this. They need a jolt of hadrons themselves.
@TeslaSecrets and madhatter,
I thought the Townsend battery is based on an electret generating an electric field. Then, with an electric field there must be ways to capture energy from the surroundings. This is, I think, what Tesla had in mind with Wardenclyffe. This may also be the cause of the "flickering tube" after it has been subjected to a strong electric field.
I am not sure on this last one, it is just that I have not yet found a better explanation.
Ernst.
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