Hi John,

Long time no see.

I suppose the easiest way is to change the sign of the resistivity
value from positive to negative. Rotor spins up indefinitely. Ain't
math grand?

K.

-----Original Message-----
From: John Winterflood [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 30, 2004 12:09 AM
To: Vortex; Mark Goldes
Subject: RE: Brady


Hi Mark,

At 13:28 28/07/04 -0700, you wrote:
>We have done some simulation work that suggests his technical
>claims might prove valid....

It seems to me that any simulation software based on the standard
laws of physics applicable to magnetic materials must have bugs in
it, or operator problems, if it suggests that a rotating magnetic
device (without even coils for lossy mechanical/electrical energy
conversion) can do anything other than turn rotational energy
into heat!

Maybe you have hypothesised a new law of physics and written it
into your simulation code?

Any info you feel free to share on how you would even start to
simulate such a device which must incorporate new physics would
be greatly appreciated!



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