Antigravitic wrote:Mikado14 wrote:I think what you have is a very elegant idea to load and discharge a Gravitor. How practical it is depends on further experimentation but it certainly is a very good start.
Mikado
I love talking to you, it's a good connoisseur of the electronics and electrogravitics
I am more than happy to converse with you. I have been working on Gravitors, not lifters, since 2008. This has been with another individual. At this link:
viewtopic.php?f=51&t=1183....you will see a conference some of us attended. Also, you will see photos of two of the Heavy Gravitors I have built.
The following link is a tutorial I posted on how to make an inexpensive die to cut mylar dielectrics. The reason for a die is not only the volume of dielectrics needed but a consistent uniformity for repetition and consistency for experimentation.
viewtopic.php?f=39&t=1003One of the power supplies we purchased was a surplus Spellman. It came with no HV connector. The following is how I made a connector to fit the Power Supply.
viewtopic.php?f=39&t=1004Linda Brown criticized me for making these posts so I decided to just stop and I never did finish the posting for the connector. I suppose I could show the finished job. My hope was to give ideas to others for making components as well as adapting surplus equipment to help others in experimenting. Perhaps I shouldn't have been so thin skin but at the same time, I didn't want the vitriol she was throwing out as well as her stating lies that were untruths in regard to the work I was doing. Her only credibility was the fact that she shared the same DNA as Townsend Brown. In any event, we don't need to hash that story.
Mikado