High Voltage Green Radiant Energy
Uploader Comments (NRGFromTheVacuum)
All Comments (31)
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A "unidirectional radiant impulse"? What?
You mean a spark?
The green is cause your burning copper oxides in the SPARK.
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Electrons are "green" by nature, because they can be recycled.
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By splitting the positive, do you mean something similar to the power supply used in the London Underground where the outer conductor rail is 450 volts above the earthed running and current return rails, while the inner conductor rail is 180 volts below the earthed running and current return rails?
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@NRGFromTheVacuum Whats D.A.R.C.? never heard of that. This is common knowledge for me as well, from benching so many iterations of context over the last 6 years or so... Still looking for the massive OU gain tho. :P
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"splitting the positive" - In your dreams...
That term refers to Aharonov Bohm effect which Richard Feynman referred to as a creation event as more energy out than in.
It splits an electron stream on a magnet - same as Kron negister did.
The green color is copper oxide and spark color has nothing to do with anything.
All free energy devices convert mass into the atomic energy contained within the mass.
All free energy devices use acceleration to do that.
I posted the secrets at overunity
The GREEN color is due to your Copper electrode choice. Try Tungsten and you will then have a white arc with nothing else changed. Its that easy to validate. ;)
bellerian1 1 year ago 2
@bellerian1 I Originally thought the same exact thing, and this explanation would be sufficient if the green only appeared while using copper. However tungsten electrodes did not change the color, it was still green.(I wish I had shown this now) The spark gap is actually two positives; Positive 6500-10,000 Volts to Positive 24 volts. There is only a negative charge when the spark is not green, when I say "standard static spark". I want to show more, but my job is almost the same as slavery :-(
NRGFromTheVacuum 1 year ago 2
@NRGFromTheVacuum Ah I c. That is interesting then. Did you retain the copper coil around the tungsten spark gap as well? I wonder if its somehow impacting the viewable color of the arc? I've done similar experiments using something called a trigatron which let me use an ignition coil to create a thready arc with a lower 250-300vdc 570uF cap dioded into the circuit which would discharge "thru the arc" causing it to sorta inflate... splitting the positive is interesting huh. :)
bellerian1 1 year ago
@bellerian1 Yes, I kept the copper strapping around the tungsten electrodes. The color in the video is way off from what was witnessed in reality. It was a deep forest green color. I have vaporized copper and excited it with a HVDC potential and the different color hue is quite extreme. Splitting the positive or negative can cause very strange effects, but this is normal when invoking negative probability's into a circuit. May be taboo for some, but its common knowledge in places like D.A.R.C.
NRGFromTheVacuum 1 year ago
I think with radiant energy you can either deplete or project a charge. This looks a lot like a gray tube, am I right?
I do think the green comes from the copper, try other kind of surrounding grid materials.
Are your sparks coming from the hv source directly or a capacitor discharge?
johnb003 3 years ago
Yes, It is just like a Gray tube.
The sparks come from a HV cap, discharging from HV positive to LV positive.
I am "splitting the positive" just as gray talked about.
NRGFromTheVacuum 3 years ago