--- In [email protected], Bronte Baxter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Bronte: > I've wondered about that point myself, but how about >this angle? If you take a pendalum hanging from a string >and spin it, it goes a while in one direction. Then, to >my recollection (I haven't done this recently), it suddenly >stops, pauses a second, then starts spinning > full-speed in the other direction.... > Are you talking about a pendulum or a gyroscope? Gyroscopes are seriously odd things, and can lose weight when spun up, and provide reactionless force. Have a look at this: http://www.gyroscopes.org/1974lecture.asp and google for "eric laithwaite". This guy did a lecture for the prestigious Royal Society, and passed a heavy spinning gyroscope to the audience. Nobody could pick it up when it was stationary. This lecture was expunged from the record.
Mix in magnetic fields, homopolar generators, electrostatic charges and you start looking at ufo design propositions. Then, take a stiff whiskey, and, if you dare, google for boeing, antigravity and patent. You can chuck B2 into the mix. Uns.
