an electrostatic field can be created using a plate capacitor, once charged it would take very little to keep it charged.
Quote from: Dave45 on October 23, 2008, 08:50:52 AM
an electrostatic field can be created using a plate capacitor, once charged it would take very little to keep it charged.
Check out Stanley Meyer. He used potential, rather than current, to split water.
Quote from: Dave45 on October 23, 2008, 08:50:52 AM
an electrostatic field can be created using a plate capacitor, once charged it would take very little to keep it charged.
I'd be interested to learn how to charge a plate capacitor like that..... " statvolts " describe the energy density, just not detailed enuf.
If you built plates with a one inch hole in the middle and stacked them when you were finished you would have a hollow capacitor once charged the void would have an electrostatic field, I think, I haven't tried it yet still gathering materials. It wouldn't be an electromagnetic field that takes moving current, once charged it would take very little to keep it charged.
Also was wondering if it could be charged with a certain frequency if the field would resonate that frequency perhaps one that would break water molecules, or make them excited so they would break easier.
Just some idea's that I have been contemplating.
If the cap was hooked to ac current would that creat an electromagnetic field, got to get into the shop.
Quote from: Dave45 on October 25, 2008, 11:57:47 AM
If the cap was hooked to ac current would that creat an electromagnetic field, got to get into the shop.
wat measuring tools do you have to know how much ES field you are generating? stavolts,statamps, statwats?