Let me tease a bit further. But be sure this is _NOT_ a faked circuit in any
way, albeit cranky sometimes, but real.

If you have worked with tuned circuits (which this is not) as you approach
resonance from the low side and pass the peak moving down on the high side.
(Applying a sweep freq to a tuned circuit) You will see (unless the Q is
very high) a gradual up swing followed by a down swing and a peak in the
middle or resonance point. No when working with a phase looked loop circuit
for example in a 2way radio you used to see (older chips) a type of snap
into lock on when the comparator and local oscillator got within a couple of
hundred hertz. Now with this circuit (my example) as you approach a specific
frequency there is a shift internal of the core and a very solid and quick
lock to the excitation. You may have to pull the input 1khz before it will
break free. The local environment has a very strong field around the circuit
that is very interesting and (spooky) want of a more descriptive word.



> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jones Beene [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Saturday, January 27, 2007 12:45 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [Vo]: Re: Circuit cries foul
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Harry Veeder
>
> >> This is NOT an OU device :-(   it is an energy conversion
> device. Now where does the excess come from? Well that's a good
> question because only a certain ferrite core will allow the
> device to work...
>
> > That "certain ferrite core" wouldn't happen to be a barium
> ferrite core, would it?
>
>
> HV: I am not an electrical engineer, but if this _is not_ an OU
> device and the core is suppose to be the energy source, wouldn't
> the light intensity change with time as the core is depleted of energy?
>
>
>
> Perhaps so, but there could be a number of alternative things
> going-on here. Nice experiment BTW.
>
> Hopefully Ron will provide us with a little more detail, esp.
> since there are no shortages of opinionated armchair-fizzix
> experts and assorted free-energy-gurus who are available here at
> his beck-and-call on most weekends.
>
> Among the possibilities (in what may seem to be a reverse order
> of probability)
>
> 1) Very efficient antenna for collecting AC from the grid (or
> local RF broadcast). Is there an airport close by?
> 2) A real ZPE coherence device... the fading hope of many
> result-deprived readers.
> 3) The world's smallest nuclear reactor.
>
> OK. You may have thought the last entry above was blatantly
> tongue-in-cheek, added to cast this potential thread into the
> deep realms of SciFi  imagineering.
>
> However, if the active core is barium ferrite, then I am prepared
> to walk the proverbial plank of outrageous hypothesis -- and
> present what I consider to be a justifiable case for #3 above.
>
> Jones
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

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