Ya, this happends because around the rock is forming an electrostatic charge and field, because the etheric and magnetic energy flows around an object too. Keep going with the great work you are doing, very nice, tnks! All the best!
I don't think this is entirely accurate. The surface might look dry but inside it is wet. Ever heard of capillary action? Once the rock sits in the water the water gets sucked up into the rock. Then when you put the little bit of water on the top it completes the circuit. As long as the item is porous and is sitting in water it will have water in it. The water on top is just making better contact on the surface with the water inside of it when compared to the "Dry" spots..
Makes me wonder about iron pyrite/galena and other radio wave rectifier type rocks...whether they could work as a natural semiconductor. Certain spots working better, as with crystal radios. I know JB showed a rock some while ago from his backyard, but maybe this is a hands on laymans way of seeing the effects. Next test then, could be different rock types, which i'll do as well :)
I'm sorry I'm not sure what you're asking? In the video I show that the rock gives infinite resistance. I don't know why the energy can travel through the rock but it does.
following in tesla's footsteps? keep it up
chitowonder 1 month ago
Ya, this happends because around the rock is forming an electrostatic charge and field, because the etheric and magnetic energy flows around an object too. Keep going with the great work you are doing, very nice, tnks! All the best!
johnnyaum3 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
I don't think this is entirely accurate. The surface might look dry but inside it is wet. Ever heard of capillary action? Once the rock sits in the water the water gets sucked up into the rock. Then when you put the little bit of water on the top it completes the circuit. As long as the item is porous and is sitting in water it will have water in it. The water on top is just making better contact on the surface with the water inside of it when compared to the "Dry" spots..
jbignes5 1 month ago
rectifying em-fields, I guess
pixelcomet 1 month ago
what is the voltage of the source and which kind of electricity source is it?
tnx
gerhardusmaximus 1 month ago
Makes me wonder about iron pyrite/galena and other radio wave rectifier type rocks...whether they could work as a natural semiconductor. Certain spots working better, as with crystal radios. I know JB showed a rock some while ago from his backyard, but maybe this is a hands on laymans way of seeing the effects. Next test then, could be different rock types, which i'll do as well :)
slider2732 1 month ago
How conductive are the rock ions?
overunitydotcom 1 month ago
@overunitydotcom
I'm sorry I'm not sure what you're asking? In the video I show that the rock gives infinite resistance. I don't know why the energy can travel through the rock but it does.
ibpointless2 1 month ago
@ibpointless2
with the Ohmmeter you measured only on the dry surface , but not the wet crystall conductivity inside...?
overunitydotcom 1 month ago in playlist More videos from ibpointless2