I have just joined some of the videos I have on the experiments we have done here. They are in chronological order and show how assymetrical capacitors still suffer some kind of thrust even in pressures below 5e-6 mbar. At this pressure, about 9 orders of magnitude smaller than room pressure, the forces that move the capacitors are much smaller, but can be easily seen by turning the high voltage on and off at the same frequency of the torsion pendulum that holds the capacitors. This seems to be, in fact, a residual force not related to ion wind.
Could the "a residual force not related to ion wind" be a electrostatic reaction to the chamber wall or the components inside the chamber?
Many electrogravity theorists claim Ion wind (drift) is 1000 time too small to account for the thrust.
If that were true, why would there be such a HUGE difference in motion in the vacuum as opposed to outside of a vacuum?
Joeviocoe 2 years ago
A coonvincing argument over the ion wind theory... Camera moving a bit much.
bennergh 2 years ago