Author Topic: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread  (Read 3792 times)

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The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« on: February 25, 2012, 00:43:02 am »
I've noticed that it has been awhile since some discussion of the resistor sandwich has taken place so this thread is to keep this important area of investigation open and alive.

My current observatios show changes in the waveform, gas output, power use and is such that I shall continue in the area until I understand it to the extent that I can make use of resistance tuning as meyer indicated is required to increase gas output.

Nixie bulbs are the indicators of current flow that I am using and with adding megaohms of resistance I attempt to dim the bulb by adding resistance and hence tune and observe.

My question is????     has anyone got any idea how to make a resistor sandwich?  what was the material meyer used?

btw, two electrodes spaced at one inch apart in cooking oil show 1 megaohm while in pure water only show 100kohm of resistance.....

comments are encouraged

kb 

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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #1 on: February 25, 2012, 07:01:42 am »
Great topic to being up. When you are doing your experiments, do you have the ground hooked up between the secondary and L2 or connected to the electrode? Stan shows both. Anyway I would imagine we would need less resistance if the ground was placed between the secondary and L2 since the coil will block amp flow.

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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #2 on: February 25, 2012, 16:22:27 pm »
Dave,

my wire to earth ground is connected to between the negative tube and the vic secondary, the resistance and bulb are added to the wire running to earth ground, resistance and current flow through this wire changes with voltage and frequency applied to the circuit...

set up between the tube and secondary alone with no connection to earth ground doesn't allow for any tuning and seems to cut out power and signal to the cell.....   it appears

I'll be mixing up some resistance compounds today and awaiting my ebay resistor order to arrive....  not much discussion of this topic on the web yet it could be a key component to better gas production
 
kb


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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #3 on: February 26, 2012, 03:30:09 am »
I tried some things similar to this but that was before I had a scope so I didn't gain anything from it. What I did notice is a drop in voltage when I did not use an appropriate resister. I believe I remember reading that you were seeing 15k volts? How has adding this resistor/ground effected your voltage measurements?

Dynodon, if you are watching this topic maybe you can shed a little light on something you once posted. I believe you said in Stans Vic the ground he shows in his schematics was not hooked up to anything? Anyway my question is was there an absence of the ground lead or was it an option Stan had and it just wasn't hooked up? Hopefully I remember your statement correctly but if not, maybe you can shed some light on that too.

If it just wasn't hooked up, maybe this could be a missing piece

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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #4 on: February 26, 2012, 16:37:27 pm »
Dave, these are some of the things I think about and try to test for and observe.  yet, I wonder about the importance too!  meyer is so specific about the required tuning of the negative resistance to allow for building a "fixed value" sandwich resistor...  yet I find this resistance changes with frequency, voltage and waveform and other things, something a fixed value reistor may not work best all the time for, just a thought

amyway, I'm counting bubbles while watching a bulb and varying several of these factors looking for some action... 

curious?  me too

lol...  I'm a sucker for a good conspiracy and sometimes think that with idea of meyer with holding a special magic part to the system and that it is the holy grail is what keeps me tinkering around with this


kb

 

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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #5 on: February 27, 2012, 00:43:49 am »
Dave,the isolated groung in the VIC circuit (five coil setup)wasn't tied to anything.It was isolated.
Don

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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #6 on: February 27, 2012, 03:58:08 am »
... here's probably my confusion point


Stan Meyer's Gas Generator Voltage Control Circuit US Patent: 4,798,661

maybe I'm mistaken but I don't even see any coils in this patient of the variable plate and resistor sandwich except for the variable transformer.

re-reading

kb




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Re: The Great Electron Inhibitor Sandwich Resistor Thread
« Reply #7 on: February 29, 2012, 15:55:01 pm »
kickbackemf, I found an article you might like. I was skimming another forum and found a topic called "Relaxation Time & Semiconductors", which lead me to this page.

http://www.latenightinthemidlands.com/profiles/blogs/the-secrets-of-free-energy-overunity-made-easy-why-there-is-no?xg_source=activity