@itchyundies looked at it after you pointing it out and it did look like clouds breaking up in the low horizon sunlight. But I was not there to witness it in person,so!
Also these entities do not stay still as I have witnessed them and have never seen them as a stationary mass.
You know to me they look like living plasma, of sorts perhaps feeding off of grid line magnetic fields. It would be interesting to see how they react to RF energy like 100 watts on different frequencies.
@orgasmictomato You could use a HF amateur radio, most have a large frequency range and tuning with an auto-tuner if so equipped. Or use a citizen’s service radio which is good for 20-watts after turning up the pots inside and they are easy to add a 100-300 watt amplifier which is enough to light a fluorescent tube held in your hand from 6-feet from the antenna All told around 150-200 dollars.
A di-pole is easiest and can be directional or build a simple yagi/beam antenna.
@69blackbox and @commandorando123 and @IceFritzLanger thanks, it looked like it was tumbling over and over through the binoculars. The first one on the video, that is. then it slowed down and just seemed to pulse light at different rates.
@itchyundies looked at it after you pointing it out and it did look like clouds breaking up in the low horizon sunlight. But I was not there to witness it in person,so!
Also these entities do not stay still as I have witnessed them and have never seen them as a stationary mass.
orgasmictomato 10 months ago
You know to me they look like living plasma, of sorts perhaps feeding off of grid line magnetic fields. It would be interesting to see how they react to RF energy like 100 watts on different frequencies.
orange70383 11 months ago
@orange70383 do you have a RF generator as I do not, did see one for sale on web in NY though..... was 500W unit ...... second hand, 2 bids so far.
But how to direct the signal toward them? without a transmitter and aerial?
Don't think it had a oscillator though to vary frequency.
orgasmictomato 10 months ago
@orgasmictomato You could use a HF amateur radio, most have a large frequency range and tuning with an auto-tuner if so equipped. Or use a citizen’s service radio which is good for 20-watts after turning up the pots inside and they are easy to add a 100-300 watt amplifier which is enough to light a fluorescent tube held in your hand from 6-feet from the antenna All told around 150-200 dollars.
A di-pole is easiest and can be directional or build a simple yagi/beam antenna.
orange70383 10 months ago
Thank you very much for this video.
Have a nice sky , and a beautiful day =)
IceFritzLanger 11 months ago
Very good catch!!
69blackbox 11 months ago
@69blackbox and @commandorando123 and @IceFritzLanger thanks, it looked like it was tumbling over and over through the binoculars. The first one on the video, that is. then it slowed down and just seemed to pulse light at different rates.
orgasmictomato 11 months ago
Pretty cool.
commandorando123 11 months ago