Yes the magneto-caloric effect.
This precisely what we think is happening (rather could be happening if there was actual gain) where the moving magnetic field creates EMF in the windings and cooling in the core BUT where the cooling loss balances the EM gain. Best of both. BTW – the windings around the billet are on x,y and z axes and the effect happens at what turns out to be the Larmor frequency of the ferrite. We did not know that initially. I should add – for the benefit of others who may wonder why this project was stopped… that Arthur Manelas suffered a severe stroke and is still bedridden but alive. It is one of those stories that I hate to repeat, since it sounds too much like the typical “OU cop-out” where the men-in-black arrived, or the inventor was poisoned, or the antigravity device broke through the roof, or in the case of Gene Mallove – murdered in a purely coincidental tragedy. There are some coincidences in life. BTW – Gene knew Arthur, and all of this is taking place in southern New Hampshire within a short radius of where Les Case also died unexpectedly and Rossi’s lab was located and several other alternative energy “coincidences”. From: Bob Higgins There is also such a thing as a thermomagnetic heat pump. It is usually envisioned with moving magnets. However, just as one can imagine a moving magnetic field from a 3-phase drive producing a linear magnetic motor, one can envision a motion-less thermomagnetic heat pump in a ferrite. There may be a thermomagnetic heat pumping effect involved in the cooling effect of the core. Bob On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 11:13 AM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote: From: Bob Higgins I am convinced of this connection: if one can document a cooling effect in a transformer core which should be heating up (but instead is significantly below ambient during operation) then that physical property is strong indication of electrical gain. This was documented in the Manelas device. Jones

