At 08:20 pm 28-01-05 -0500, Colin Quinney wrote: >>The following Hutchison Effect forum post is beyond belief, > but then again after Bill Beaty's wandering stir stick, who knows? : > <http://www.hutchisoneffect.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=79> > QUOTE: > Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2004 3:13 pm Post subject: > Equipment used - HDR & Tesla Coil > > The equipment I used was three Hyper Dimensional Resonators, > two Tesla Coiil, two plasma balls, and one CB Radio to generate RF. > > The effect was that the copper pipes in my home twisted and broke. > I ended up with a $1600 water bill. > > I have seen many strange spooky events happen after I turn off the > Tesla Coils. Typically within 15 minutes of me turning them OFF. > > The greatest amount of RF generated by the Tesla Coils was at 67 > kilocycles as measured by my frequency counter. There was a secondary > peak at 120 kilocycles not 134 kilocycles as expected. > > Other strange effects include scorch marks, objects levitating, > and a strange smell. Not the ozone smell of the Tesla coil, more > like an ammonia smell. > > The effect is is sporadic and I have not yet captured it on film.
I find the above account entirely believable. After all we know that effects such as magnetostriction, etc., can alter the physical dimensions of metal objects so one would expect that playing around with very high magnetic and electric "atmosphere" pressures (for pressures is the easiest concept to use for understanding these phenomena) will have a dramatic effect on materials. One of the most fascinating and persuasive examples of such pressures is that given by coin shrinking. Googling will give plenty of examples but here is a Google cache example which I have found at random. http://tinyurl.com/45ywr One needs to look at Voltage and Charge in the same way as we look at Temperature - or rather the inverse of Temperature (Compreture, say) As Compreture increases, materials, with few exceptions, are squeezed to smaller and smaller dimensions. Cheers, and thanks again, Colin, for those very interesting references which I am in the process of following up. Frank

