Well look at Edward Farrow (who I incidentally found more info on if your interested, got a pdf of a news article). He has a spark gap device that is said to produce waves that attracts things below it and showed reduced weight on a scale. (it almost certainly increased weight of things above it)
Basically the same force and I have more correlations if you are interested of just such a thing. On 10/21/07, William Beaty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Sat, 20 Oct 2007, Jones Beene wrote: > > > Maybe it was a mistake to ever use the "cold" > > terminology (legacy of Tesla?)... but what description > > works better? > > Not Tesla, but Borderlands Sciences. Eric Dollard and crew. Peter > Lindeman. Here's an excellent weird video of their's from 1988? > > Tesla's Longitudinal Electricity, 1 hr > http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6461713170757457294 > > > Or if you don't want the 1-hr version, here's a short clip from youtube > > Tractor Beam, 6min > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N57o13ADadg > > > This "tractor beam" video is stunning for me. > > I've been trying to figure out how to put a synchronously pulsed x-ray > generator on top of a Tesla coil, a quick and dirty test. Having an x-ray > source floating at extreme high voltage AC should make it act as a > rectifier, pulse-ionizing the air and putting out DC at extreme high > voltage. It should produce weird electrostatic forces, perhaps moving the > air and solving the problem of how to make an efficient "lifter" > aircraft. > > I've become convinced that this is how Tesla's rumored "antigravity" > probably worked, see some illustrations: > > Tesla's ion ray technology > http://amasci.com/tesla/tesray1.html > > > So then I stumbled across their video... and they've already done this! > > They somehow found a small incandescent bulb which contains hard vacuum. > Stick it on a Tesla Coil circuit so the whole bulb sits at high AC > voltage, but also the filament lights up. And what do they observe? > Weird inexplicable forces! But they wrongly assume that they've > discovered something totally outside of physics, when I'm pretty sure that > they've just duplicated Tesla's single-electrode x-ray generator (and used > it to change their Tesla coil into a VandeGraaff.) AC to DC, plus fierce > x-rays too, so if I'm right, the lightbulb experiment above should make a > geiger counter go crazy. > > > > (((((((((((((((((( ( ( ( ( (O) ) ) ) ) ))))))))))))))))))) > William J. Beaty SCIENCE HOBBYIST website > billb at amasci com http://amasci.com > EE/programmer/sci-exhibits amateur science, hobby projects, sci fair > Seattle, WA 425-222-5066 unusual phenomena, tesla coils, weird sci > >

