Added: 1 year ago
From: ArielBravy
Views: 766
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (19)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Comment removed

  • Hi Ariel, Bashar said ... a LITTLE electrical charge on the right FREQUENCY (7,5 Hertz) , I guess he didn't mean 110 volt (50-60 Hertz), cause now you make a short-circuit, due by the high amperage. I suggest using a frequency-generator, Bashar said also something about a pyramide of 3 feet tall, with an angle of 33 degrees, which the spiral coil should fit in.

  • @lucidrummer There was a video where Bashar mentioned a 3ft height for this. In my experience, lower frequencies are easier to work with. Three ways to lower the natural operating frequency of this is to use more windings, make them closer together, make the device physically bigger. Any of those directions taken will lower its natural operating frequency. And of course you want the oscilloscope's frequency range to include the harmonics, to view the real shape, not just frequency, of the wave.

  • Comment removed

  • @lucidrummer I agree, very low power to start w/, especially initially. Connecting & disconnecting a battery would stimulate its natural wave, which could be looked at on an oscilloscope. I'd use a 1.5 or 3v alarm battery. If it would ultimately require an AC input, you'd need the specs of that wave first to determine the specs of the AC you put in.... likely a very low power AC would do... probably somewhere in the several hundred khz range.... or in the case of his STA here, several mhz.

  • @lucidrummer In Bashar's Lab, he said as you're winding one cone, leave enough space between the windings for those of the second cone. This implies that once both cones are wound, the windings would be all compact & touching each other. This is why insulation would be required. The windings touching would also give it capacitance, which would hardly be there otherwise. Not sure how relevant that is though. The thinner the insulation (the closer the wires), the more capacitance it would have.

  • Comment removed

  • I love and appreciate what you're doing... I can so relate! I loved playing with electricity growing up. And I must say, if you wanna play with electricity, please learn about electricity first, because what you just did here was EXTREMELY dangerous and unwise.

  • Comment removed

  • Comment removed

  • It's so awesome you're experimenting w/ Bashar's space-time antenna. But I've got to say, from what I saw you are very, VERY lucky you haven't electrocuted yourself that way. Please don't repeat! That spark came from shorting a ludicrous amount of electricity, and had nothing to do with the STA, it had everything to do with shorting out your wall socket. Try an alarm battery or something comparable. This is a safe amount of electricity, and a far better match for testing of this kind of device.

  • Nice antena!!! But please use it like an electrical extenssion (in series with a fan or some load not as direct load because is very dangerous. The idea is make the antena resonates like tesla or ignition coil with specific frecuencies. Whatc the aromaz user works or copy this simple circuit watch?v=wXKR7rJdze8

  • thanks for the information. i hope to construct one soon.

  • Can you please elaborate on how you got measurements? I know it's supposed to be 33 degrees. Did you use any software? I am passionate about making one of these & am wondering how it can be wound on a phi ratio. Any insights?

    Wire should be insulated according to Bashar. don't know if you need that strong a spark since the idea of this device magnifies energy. I was under the impression that a 9 volt or car battery would do the trick, but maybe you got some turbo thing going on now. ;-)

  • @lucidrummer The only two measurements I could really target beforehand was the apex (33 degrees) and minimum height (needing to fit underneath a 3 ft. tall pyramid). Other than that, the height, number of windings, small and large end diameters, and distance between windings was something I discovered actually actually winding the spool of copper into a spiral shape and then "lifting" the center up into a cone shape.

    Regarding input power, I think it needs to be an AC input.

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more