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The electric field of a magnet

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  • Faraday disc - YouTube
    Last edited by Dave45; 05-12-2012, 03:26 PM.
    Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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    • Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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      • The system has to be in a vertical position
        Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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        • Layer after layer can be wrapped on the secondary's one end connected to a capacitor the other ends twisted together for more amperage and voltage.
          Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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          • I know you want me to come on here and say I have a working system and this is how you do it, that will never happen.............. till the dollar crash's and the world goes into panic.
            They are waiting planning preparing another false flag soon, Im afraid we are in for stormy weather.
            Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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            • I got this in an email..........




              A cowboy from Texas attended a social function where Barack Obama was trying to gather support for his Health Plan. When Obama discovered the cowboy was from President Bush's home area, he started to belittle him by talking in a southern drawl and single syllable words.
              As he was doing that, he kept swatting at some flies that were buzzing around his head. The cowboy says, "Y'all havin' some problem with them circle flies?"

              Obama stopped talking and said, "Well, yes, if that's what they're called, but I've never heard of circle flies."

              "Well, sir," the cowboy replies, "Circle flies hang around ranches. They're called circle flies because they're almost always found circling around the back end of a horse."

              "Oh," Obama replies as he goes back to rambling.
              But, a moment later he stops and bluntly asks,
              "Are you calling me a horse's ass?"

              "No, sir," the cowboy replies, "I have too much respect for the citizens of this country to call their president a horse's ass."

              "That's a good thing," Obama responds and begins rambling on once more.

              After a long pause, the cowboy, in his best Texas drawl says,

              "Hard to fool them flies, though. "



              it's all good.
              Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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              • Waves and wave theory

                In longitudinal waves the displacement of the medium is parallel to the propagation of the wave. A wave in a "slinky" is a good visualization. Sound waves in air are longitudinal waves.


                Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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                • Originally posted by Dave45 View Post
                  Waves and wave theory

                  In longitudinal waves the displacement of the medium is parallel to the propagation of the wave. A wave in a "slinky" is a good visualization. Sound waves in air are longitudinal waves.


                  I would think sound waves would be more akin to transverse waves since they travel in a 360 degree radius, longitudinal waves would be the way electricity travels in a wire.
                  A Tesla coil would put out a transverse wave like a sound wave, moving away from the core in waves or pulses in a 360 degree propagation.
                  Coils and coil core combinations put out different fields (waves) I think it also has to do with position in relation to the wave as to how we see it.
                  Iv never really studied this in depth but is very interesting,
                  dave
                  Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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                  • I guess a focused sound wave as in a speaker would be considered a longitudinal wave.
                    hmmmmmmmmmm
                    but an open explosion would be more akin to a transverse wave.

                    Wild, puts a whole new meaning to the phrase "catch a wave"
                    Last edited by Dave45; 05-13-2012, 01:19 PM.
                    Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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                    • Originally posted by Dave45 View Post
                      I guess a focused sound wave as in a speaker would be considered a longitudinal wave.
                      hmmmmmmmmmm
                      but an open explosion would be more akin to a transverse wave.

                      Wild, puts a whole new meaning to the phrase "catch a wave"
                      hope this helps visualize it

                      Explosion Shock Waves In Slow Motion - YouTube

                      Signs and symbols rule the world, not words nor laws.” -Confucius.

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                      • I see many designs but are you going to build one? One experiment is worth 1000 designs .

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                        • I know its hard to believe but I am building, very slow, seems there is always something, I just put a water pump on my sons truck and found that there are two freeze plugs leaking
                          So I guess no free time this weekend maybe next.
                          But hey Im working and able to buy parts
                          It'll get there
                          dave
                          Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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                          • Originally posted by broli View Post
                            I see many designs but are you going to build one? One experiment is worth 1000 designs .
                            A thousand designs to find the one that makes total sense, We can bury ourselves in circuit designs and never see the real picture, the circuit only needs to be simple until the right device is found then work the circuit to tune the device.

                            This is the circuit we can pulse a device with or without the ignition coils.

                            I would not be surprised if this device exhibits weight loss
                            Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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                            • Right now Im reading a couple of pdfs sent to me by a member very interesting,

                              Iv been pondering the ice and the effects it has on an inductor, it seems to decrease resistance therefore it increases the magnetic field.

                              As heat will destroy a magnetic field or weaken it at least cold seems to increase it, Im not talking about extreme cold but just below freezing,

                              I froze the c cores with the magnets between the c cores, but I had accidentally reversed the magnets they were repelling each other, they will still attract in this mode through a ferrous medium, anyway it made some interesting fields, but when I thawed it out the core had been broken in several places, I found this puzzling. Did the field get so strong it severed the ferrite?

                              Some thoughts on ice
                              Ice has a very high dielectric value, Im no scientist so no numbers but I would guess extremely high, high enough to separate the particles from the field maybe

                              Also I think the ice creates a vacuum of sorts.

                              Ice and its attributes might be just enough to push the right device over the edge.
                              Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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                              • Iv been reading Tesla's big mistake

                                I think the writer's fail to take into account that Tesla was using the earths magnetic field to send and receive, he called them earth currents.

                                They setup an independent model in a sea of particles but fail to realize we live on a giant magnet and cannot help but to interact with that magnet, in free space their model may prevail but not here.

                                I havent finished reading it yet so maybe I jumped the gun here but so far this is my conclusion.

                                These are very interesting articles,
                                The REAL Science of non-Hertzian waves, by Paul Nicholson
                                Tesla's Big Mistake?
                                Half of the Answer is knowing the right Question

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