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by Steven M. Hampton |
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What makes it Go: $15 ebook packed with photos, details 200 pgs. Dean Drives and Davis Mechanics e-book Patent Secrets ebook The Pendulum Test 2009 click here
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To arrange for a DVD or a private demonstration, contact us at:
To arrange for a DVD or a private demonstration, contact us at:
To arrange for a DVD or a private demonstration, contact us at:
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The reaping of centrifugal force from rotary motion for propulsion has stumped us humans for centuries. The paradox, it seems, lay in the way we tend to think about our world at large. In the past, inventors and engineers generally thought in terms of how to make it work by manipulating mechanical matter and energy (preferably electricity). The quest is, and always was, to generate unbalanced impulses from a system that is physically symmetric.
But the enigma of inertial propulsion had a simple solution all along. Maybe just knowing how to do something is not as important as knowing when to do it. Norman L. Dean could think in multiple reference frames and found this elusive force by manipulating time within the cycle of a spinning rotor. But first he had to convert the rotary motion into oscillations. You can use any rotary-based oscillator, even the subtle oscillatory action of the atom may be “rectified” into an unbalanced force simply by diddling with the “fixed vector” t – the flow of time. How do you change the flow of time? Let’s say your estranged uncle died and left you with 100 brand new cars and they were just delivered to your backyard. You drive one car three miles to a dealer, haggle for a bit, then sell it for a pure profit, but you have to walk back home. You drive another car to the same dealer, haggle, and sell again for a profit and walk back home. You repeat this cycle until you have sold all your cars. By then you have enough money to move to a new home.
This is how a Dean Drive works. Your car lot may be likened to a source of electricity. You are the eccentric rotor in a Dean Drive that is shifted when you save time by driving to the dealer. To your neighbor, who is now quite sure you’re insane, your cycle of driving away a new car and walking back remains constant. But to you, time is saved driving to the dealer, you spend that extra time in haggling out a profit, then spend an equal amount of time you did in driving and haggling on your return walk back home. The system is still balanced, only the time varies within that system. It’s a question of different inertial frames of reference. Likewise, the Dean Drive convert energy – from electricity (cars) into rotary motion (round-trip) then into an oscillatory action (repeated round-trips), then shifting of the rotor (your drive), the clutching of the rotor (the haggling) to create centrifugal force (profit). The walk back home is within new space.
Levitating Loafers and Cool CAT Fission As we have seen in any given system, including electromagnetic, action and the subsequent reaction are not simultaneous events. As such, there are time delays between any and all relationships in the phenomenal world. This critical action time or CAT as coined by the late Dr. William O. Davis is a real phenomenon that forces us to take a long look at classical mechanics and even the premise of time. It is during the CAT we can take advantage of motion and do things only our ancestors dreamed of.
Periodic exploitation of closed systems has countless applications not only in motion, but also in thermodynamics and quantum mechanics. Anyone who’s played “hot potato” knows there’s plenty of time to pass it off onto some unsuspecting player before getting burned because that motion occurred within the CAT. This implies there’s sufficient time to keep matter near absolute zero for efficient super-conduction, or to produce electromagnetic super-storage batteries by taking advantage of matter’s delayed reaction to applied energy.
In the field of quantum mechanics we may someday build solid state inertial propulsion engine wafers that levitate simply by applying a voltage to stretch electron orbits on the topside of the substrate.[8] Davis Mechanics has already shown in closed systems, time – the t in calculus, is not a fixed entity like some stone monolith in the sky.[9] Dr. Davis's observations on matter and motion means that someday we may also generate electricity from machines that repeatedly impact atomic nuclei faster than its ability to react, creating a “cool fission” of sorts. We already change the flow of time on a daily basis in electromagnetic systems whenever we modulate a radio wave, shine a laser beam, or pump out a radar pulse. These are monopole systems. Manipulating time in machines that could power hovercraft, saucercraft or other aerospace systems could take us to the edge of the solar system - not in years, but weeks - and may even solve the energy crisis.
Endnotes / Bibliography [8] Wayne I.
Burnett, Ph.D., based on one of many conversations with author in Boulder, CO at Tecnetics, Inc.
on Feb. 1992. Dr. Burnett was a R+D engineer for McDonald Aircraft in the
1970s and is currently a retired technical consultant. |
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This site was last updated 06/07/10