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Overunity Machines Forum



World's first real Free Energy Flashlight - no shaking - no batteries! No Solar

Started by e2matrix, August 29, 2015, 09:01:12 PM

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TinselKoala

Quote from: e2matrix on August 30, 2015, 03:15:53 PM
Subharmonics?   Or very fine gauge very high wind coils?    Why does the mention of Neutrino's make it suspicious?  I've been hearing about Neutrino's for a couple decades.    http://www.ps.uci.edu/~superk/neutrino.html   Do we really understand Neutrino's yet?

Subharmonics, meaning exactly what? Lower frequency = longer wavelength.
High wind coils? Perhaps, but did you read up on the Schumann resonance and how it is commonly detected? You'd have some trouble stuffing such things into a handheld flashlight case.
Neutrinos? No, we don't really understand Neutrinos yet, but we do understand that they don't interact much with common matter and even huge detectors only see a tiny fraction of the total flux from the sun and other sources, and there isn't any way to use them as a power source.

That's why this thing, if true, would be a very significant scientific breakthrough, and such things have antecedents in the form of real research, published papers, teams of scientists, academic and industrial and military laboratories, etc.

e2matrix

Quote from: TinselKoala on August 30, 2015, 08:42:23 PM
Subharmonics, meaning exactly what? Lower frequency = longer wavelength.
High wind coils? Perhaps, but did you read up on the Schumann resonance and how it is commonly detected? You'd have some trouble stuffing such things into a handheld flashlight case.
Neutrinos? No, we don't really understand Neutrinos yet, but we do understand that they don't interact much with common matter and even huge detectors only see a tiny fraction of the total flux from the sun and other sources, and there isn't any way to use them as a power source.

That's why this thing, if true, would be a very significant scientific breakthrough, and such things have antecedents in the form of real research, published papers, teams of scientists, academic and industrial and military laboratories, etc.
Harmonics might have been more appropriate depending on which side of it you are looking from - the receiving coil or the transmitting device.    You should be able to wind about 299 feet (298.851 feet to be exact - a 1/4 wave antenna coil) of some fine gauge wire into a coil made for 783 KHz and it would possibly pick up harmonics of the the Schumann resonance at 7.83 Hz. 
As far as antecedents and Neutrino's .... well not everyone follows the rules - especially Aussie's and Russians  :D    I rather like that about them.   

e2matrix

I don't want to open a can of worms on this but I'm sure we all know about Steven Mark's TPU.   It just occurred to me that regardless of whether it was working from his nearby HV power lines or something else maybe Adgex has rediscovered something like a TPU effect. 


gravityblock

Quote from: TinselKoala on August 30, 2015, 08:36:19 PM
For certain (obsolete) values of "typical/average".
If you were building a "free energy" flashlight, would you select an inefficient LED? If you were paying attention, you might have read the LED data sheet I attached to my post. Those LEDs cost about 65 cents US singly and a lot less when ordered in quantity.

Adgex developed and successfully tested a line of autonomous household lamps ranging from 1 to 5 watts.  The 2 watts I used in my example almost falls in the middle of where they tested.  However, their flashlight can power a 5 watt light source from thin air. 

Gravock
Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again, and expecting a different result.

God will confuse the wise with the simplest things of this world.  He will catch the wise in their own craftiness.