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Gyroscope concepts   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #27 of 59 |
Re: Gyroscope concepts


Interesting that you brought this up. Gyroscopic motion of water was
used by Victor Schaubager in the 60's. Once place that sells info on
this is Borderlands Sciences of Arcata, Ca. If you create a gyro of
water that is in a tube and reconnects to it's own end, the motion
of force expelled outward is obviously much greater than that
inward. Assuming that particle physics is just particles, this
process creates a particle vacuum, which I'm certain is why he was
able to make working flying saucers. Harassed by [EDIT; Expletive
deleteds;EDIT]in our own gov. he disappeared to Austria later. If you run
tapwater at 5000 rpm (or was it 50k?) in a 3/4" stainless steel (304 ideal I
think) tube that connects to itself (1) keeps sharp angle so it spins twice as
much as it travels throgh the tube (2) and is kept flowing using minor holes at
skin of tube w/spiral fins inside that are angled to efficiently intercept the
flow of the h20, you have
produce then a small antigrav field which if wrapped around a sphere
or standing egg or oval shape will levitate itself. Anyone ever
experimented with this stuff? Water is magnetic under such
conditions, and in a closed system can be monopolar. There's more to
it but I don't have his work in front of me. It was reported that
this made it's own power. I would theorize that tapping w/a wire
onto various points of the tube wrapped around an oval would
discharge an oscillation of electrons.




Sun Apr 1, 2007 7:17 pm

mikefromspace
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Message #27 of 59 |
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This is to start a discussion on the subject of Gyroscopes and Gyroscopic forces . There is a wide application range for Gyros, from simple stabilization to...
mysterygravity
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Nov 4, 2006
12:55 pm

Interesting that you brought this up. Gyroscopic motion of water was used by Victor Schaubager in the 60's. Once place that sells info on this is Borderlands...
mikefromspace
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Apr 2, 2007
1:14 am
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