Jed,
We agree.
The main advantage of a 6 kW reproduction of Coler's generator at that power
level would be as an answer to those who claim that if magnetic energy can
in fact be extracted, the quantities can only be trivial.
The fact that Hitler's Navy supported Coler after the 6 kW demonstration
seems likely to have resulted from the potential application of this work
for the recharge of batteries in submarines. Incidently, his first type of
generator, demonstrated in 1925, was a 10 watt unit. Fortunately for the
Allies, production of the 6 kW units never took place as they proved
difficult to reproduce and had other problems characteristic of prototypes
involving new science. He once admitted he did not really understand how or
why his generators functioned.
Mark
From: Jed Rothwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Vo]: How to demonstrate magnetic energy extraction.
Date: Fri, 16 Jun 2006 11:22:42 -0400
Mark Goldes wrote:
One or more are likely to rapidly be knocked off as toys by companies well
known for that behavior.
That would be wonderful. That is the best possible outcome. If a toy
company sells a million of these gadgets, every scientist on earth will
have one, and your troubles will be over.
The Coler reproductions reveal no proprietary information. We have no
control or concern about the power levels.
But why make it so large? Is it easier to construct a large one? I suppose
a larger machine would be more expensive, more difficult to construct, and
more difficult to evaluate -- unless it self sustains.
Some gadgets only work on a large-scale, such as the tokamak. (One might
argue that it does not even work on a large-scale.)
- Jed