×
INTELLIGENT WORK FORUMS
FOR ENGINEERING PROFESSIONALS

Log In

Come Join Us!

Are you an
Engineering professional?
Join Eng-Tips Forums!
  • Talk With Other Members
  • Be Notified Of Responses
    To Your Posts
  • Keyword Search
  • One-Click Access To Your
    Favorite Forums
  • Automated Signatures
    On Your Posts
  • Best Of All, It's Free!
  • Students Click Here

*Eng-Tips's functionality depends on members receiving e-mail. By joining you are opting in to receive e-mail.

Posting Guidelines

Promoting, selling, recruiting, coursework and thesis posting is forbidden.

Students Click Here

Jobs

magnetic turbines

magnetic turbines

magnetic turbines

(OP)
I have been doing research in the field of magnetic for several years now and I am looking for input into any new information on the effects of electromagnetic forces on dia/para-magnetic substances, specifically hydrogen gas. I have only a small research facility, but have allready discovered new and ( as far as I have been able to tell ) unpublished results. I am looking for other researchers who have made some progress in this pioneering field.

RE: magnetic turbines

      

         I am not a scientist, but I should have become one.  I have not been studying
the field of magnetics for long, but I have some ideas that I am sure you would be interested in obtaining. This electro-magnetic blue print is the subject of a long thought process without the use of a laboratory or specific physic calculations. I stress to you; I am not a scientist, but I have a craving at an older age for the knowledge that I was too immature to persue at a younger age although I was very inventive. This invention
includes using one model responsible for two different functions. The 1st fuction is using reversed polarity of magnetic energy to power an object. The 2nd function in this
same model includes using internal weight system that reverses the effects of gravity in this confined area which makes the object; with high rotation, weightless.  

RE: magnetic turbines

Gmann,

For what its worth, I had a friend of mine in Arizona that once discribed to me a college phyisics project that sounds very similar to your own.

He desided that he was going to build an electric flying saucer that defied gravity.  He used a typical saucer shape as his model.  The center of the saucer had a core that was seperate from the outside.  These two pieces were on bearings of some kind so that they could spin freely from each other.  Both the core and the outer ring (if you will) were loaded with coils of wire.  He basically reinvented the electric motor by doing so.  When these coils were powered, the outer ring and core would spin opposite of each other.  His therory was that if he could reach a surface velocity difference great enough in the gap between the inner and outer, that the saucer would lift off on its own.

He stated that he actually had a working model, and that it actually did lift off for a short time, about 10 seconds at 6 inches before it went down in flames.  Now he is either brilliant, or he happen to stumble on to something that is different than what he originalny engineered.  Or maybe he was jerking my chain.

Not beign a scientific natured person myself, my only guess to how this saucer even functioned at all is that the bench that he was working on was metal and the magnetic feild somehow repeled the saucer from the bench.  Either that or the saucer was ugly enough that the earth repeled the saucer on its own.  :)

Don Shoebridge
Sr. Product Developement Engineer
www.geocities.com/donshoebridge

Red Flag This Post

Please let us know here why this post is inappropriate. Reasons such as off-topic, duplicates, flames, illegal, vulgar, or students posting their homework.

Red Flag Submitted

Thank you for helping keep Eng-Tips Forums free from inappropriate posts.
The Eng-Tips staff will check this out and take appropriate action.

Reply To This Thread

Posting in the Eng-Tips forums is a member-only feature.

Click Here to join Eng-Tips and talk with other members!


Resources