----- Original Message ----- From: "Horace Heffner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 5:41 AM Subject: Re: [Vo]:Miklos Borbas Thruster??
> > On Jun 2, 2007, at 10:17 AM, Michel Jullian wrote: > >> >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: "Horace Heffner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> To: <[email protected]> >> Sent: Saturday, June 02, 2007 7:38 PM >> Subject: Re: [Vo]:Miklos Borbas Thruster?? >> >> >>> >>> On Jun 2, 2007, at 8:43 AM, Michel Jullian wrote: >>> >>>>> >>>>> The stator wire tips are oriented radially. Their ion wind is >>>>> oriented radially. The field of the balls deflects that radial >>>>> wind >>>>> towards themselves. That deflection is clockwise as viewed from >>>>> the >>>>> top, for the device in the first photos of the web site. >>>>>> >>>> >>>>> It should deflect the radial flow from the axis stator >>>>> wires tangentially toward the front of the balls. I'm thinking >>>>> here >>>>> in terms of the first device, which had what I call the "stator >>>>> wires", or corona wires, arrayed radially around the shaft at the >>>>> same level as the balls. The ion flow from those wires, even in >>>>> the >>>>> complete absence of the rotor, should be radial. >>>> >>>> Without the rotor, leaving just its supporting and HV connecting >>>> spindle as the HV electrode (eg with a conductive ball on it so it >>>> doesn't emit), the ion wind from a stator emitter will form a loop >>>> in a radial plane, I guess that's what you mean by radial wind? >>> >>> Yes the above is correct in that I think when the balls are missing >>> there is a circular air flow, a couple of counter-flowing doughnuts >>> of air flow tangent in the plane of the balls, i.e. the plane of the >>> stator wire tips of the first tested gadget on the web site. >> >> Not sure what you mean, > > Here I was agreeing with you in part - the radial vertical slices you > want to focus on should slice two counter-rotating doughnuts, air > vortices, one CCW one CW in the slice. > > >> I meant that in the absence of the rotor each stator wire tip will >> create an ion wind loop in a _vertical_ radial plane (referring to >> the first device photographed on the web site too). > > Yes - two actually. Er, why two? >>> However, I meant looking at it in the plane orthogonal to the spindle >> >> horizontal then... >> >>> at the level of the balls >> >> i.e. about at the same level as the stator emitters... >> >>> the ion flow is outward radially when no >>> balls are present. >> >> Well no, it will loop back to the spindle of course, to close the >> current loop, > > > Yes, but not in the horizontal plane to which I referred. Ah, in projection you mean, I thought you meant the ions moved only in that plane because you wrote "_outward_ radially", in fact it's only outward for a short distance and then inward for most of the ion flight time. > In that > plane the direction of flow is radial only except when acted upon by > the armature, which action provides a tangential motion. Yes I agree. The projection of an ion's trajectory in that plane is no more a straight line when it's attracted to the rotor. Michel >> therefore creating a vertical wind loop as I said, or so I believe. >> The stator emitters are at ground potential, aren't they? >> >> Michel >> >>> When the balls are present they deflect this ion >>> flow tangentially, giving a vortex flow in that plane - at least >>> that's my contention. >>> >>> >>>> >>>> Kyle kindly proposed to do some more tests, a smoke test with the >>>> rotor blocked and another one without the rotor (and its spindle >>>> bluntes) would be quite instructive! >>> >>> Should be interesting. I'm off for while to do mundane things ... >>> >>> Regards, >>> >>> Horace Heffner >>> >> >

