email wrote:----- Original Message -----
From: xxx@yahoo.com
To: kim_c58
Sent: Friday, April 25, 2014 5:10 PM
Re: A" lifter" is not the "disc"
by fruitbat » Fri Apr 25, 2014 12:17 pm
Oh dear,
Is it just me being obtuse, or are we still no where closer to being able to define the dangers to, and work up a mitigation strategy for those who wish to work with lifters?
IF it were just me being silly then of course I could stop, but last time I looked J Naudin had recorded around 10,000 sucessful replications, if all those people are growing a cancer shouldn't something be done about it? As you point out quite accurately, I do not have much of an undertsanding about the mechanism of gravity, indeed I personally currently subscribe to a little known and quite obscure idea that gravity is in fact a result of the intrinsic nuclear dynamics of an item of substance (mass) becoming upset by close proximity to a much larger item of substance, giving rise to an intrinsic impulsion resulting the smaller item moving towards the more massive item. I also am curious about the part that electrical charge may or may not play in such a process. So my lack of knowledge and understanding is a given.
However, I am not "ignorant" when soemone such as DAvidB throws a new idea or data point at me, such as "a charged up lifter may give you cancer" I do not IGNORE that data, but nether do I BELIEVE it without subjecting it to critical review. It is for this reason that I have asked you to supply further data relevant to the conditions that apply in my workshop. There is no strong source of E/M in my workshop, indeed, I cannot get a reliable cellphone signal in it, so the previous mobile phone related information that I was misdirected towards to is not particularly relevant, nor are the linesman related statistics.
I appreciate for many of you who's journey (presumably) has taken you far past the point where I am at, the "lifters" may indeed be an irrelevance, but for many of us, there are still questions that remain unanswered, and it is in this vacuum of facts and miasma of misinformation that we toil. (well others may "toil", me, I just do it when I feel like it for the joy of the work and the discoveries). Only yesterday someone questioned the inaccurate doctrine that states that a lifter will produce lift in the same direction irrespective of the polarity of the supplied electricity. Why that particular untruth is promoted so assiduously I cannot tell, but if I had not actually done the work myself, I would not be in such an unassailably strong position to set the record straight. (In my lifter the force vector reveses it's direction 180 degrees when you swap the supply wires over, but the magnitude of the reversed force is very much reduced. My measuring rig only resolves down to 10 milligrams, so I prefer to leave the quantifying and subsequent mathematics to others, who may have better equipment and aptitude for fine detail). If other people had not also done work in the field we would still have to be putting up with the silly "ion wind" story. In truth, there is much so work to be done all over this field that it's evident that we need MORE people building and working with lifters, not less.
Your warning is vague and proving to have little substance to back it up David.
The only practical safety advice you seem to have available to mitigate the alledged risk is to "stop doing the work" and not stand too close to the device when it is running.
I choose to ignore the first, and of course I am already doing the second.
That surely has to be the end of this particular conversation. I am personally a little disappointed that no actual useful information has come from it, that can be of assistance to myself or others, except the oft repeated advice of "don't waste your time" with lifters. I wonder how many times Otto Lilenthial, George Cayley or the Wright Brothers heard a similar refrain?
I think I'll take Lindas advice. "Shut up and build something". :c)
FB.
And then his question:
fruitbat wrote:And (just in case this is my last posting), would you be kind enough to explain (as if to a child) what is the big deal about the gravitor?
IN comparison the "lifter" clearly lifts slightly more than it's own weight, so the potential is obvious, but as far as I can discern the gravitor has a lousy power to weight ratio, so can I ask why it is of such great interest?
viewtopic.php?p=31902#p31902
I will be answering and making comment shortly.
Mikado