Interesting. I have read much of what is on the net and a ton of old texts,
yet my work was an off shoot of the effects a magnetic field might have on
electrolysis.

Should I receive an invitation and I can slip away from the bandits and
bootleggers, it might be interesting to compare notes.


-----Original Message-----
From: RC Macaulay [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 14, 2006 7:03 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Vo]: Re: Magnetic effect on water


Dr. Stiffler wrote,


>I have a question for the group and will follow up with additional coverage
> of the research that brings questions like these to the forefront.
>
> Assume (2) 150mL Pyrex lab beakers filled with distilled, de-ionized
> water.
> Seal both tops of the beakers with Al foil to reduce evaporation. Place
> one
> beaker in the center of a ring magnet (we used ones taken from audio
> woofers), the rating of which is not relevant at this point.
>
> Place the second beaker at least a meter from the beaker and the ring
> magnet. Now let both sit undisturbed for 24 hours.
>
> Repeatedly here is what I have found. The beaker within the center of the
> ring magnet, does not reach equilibrium with ambient temperature (yet the
> magnet itself does). The beaker that is one meter away from the other
> setup,
> does reach equilibrium with ambient.
>
> Additionally the beaker within the magnet has a white precipitate where
> the
> other one does not.
>
> Before I go further, has anyone done anything similar?
>
> *I do not subscribe to the effects of magnetic field on pure water, yet I
> now have question on that understanding.
>
> Thanks...

Howdy Stiffler,
Much studies around including some pretty far out stuff in the " ORMUS"
areas. WE have a research test setup at our Weimar Texas shop. Our next
series of tests will start a log on the use of magnets and solenoids both
for flows and water vortex studies.

Richard


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