Author Topic: How the VIC Works - IMPORTANT!  (Read 58263 times)

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #56 on: March 09, 2015, 15:15:10 pm »
could the isolated ground be a connection to ground between a  capacitor ?  it could be made big so it represent a reference ˜stable˜, bouncing but a reference...source and sink for electrons...

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #57 on: March 09, 2015, 15:33:36 pm »
could the isolated ground be a connection to ground between a  capacitor ?  it could be made big so it represent a reference ˜stable˜, bouncing but a reference...source and sink for electrons...

Go back to your transmission line idea and you should be able to find your answer.

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #58 on: March 09, 2015, 17:27:05 pm »
Actually i'm bouncing between theories... my head is shaking... however almost ready for testing... just hooked up the vic coils and diodes and cells as required...

Well TS thats not a good answer...  8) hehe

what do you mean?

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #59 on: March 09, 2015, 17:35:41 pm »
Actually i'm bouncing between theories... my head is shaking... however almost ready for testing... just hooked up the vic coils and diodes and cells as required...

Well TS thats not a good answer...  8) hehe

Yah I agree.
« Last Edit: April 25, 2015, 15:54:48 pm by timeshell »

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #60 on: March 09, 2015, 17:42:19 pm »
could the isolated ground be a connection to ground between a  capacitor ?  it could be made big so it represent a reference ˜stable˜, bouncing but a reference...source and sink for electrons...

In actual answer, I don't think it really matters.  If you think of the reference in a centre tapped transformer, the "ground" in the VIC is kind of the same thing.  It doesn't need to be actually grounded.  It just acts as the reference ground for the other two branches of the circuit.

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #61 on: March 09, 2015, 17:42:26 pm »
Actually i'm bouncing between theories... my head is shaking... however almost ready for testing... just hooked up the vic coils and diodes and cells as required...

Well TS thats not a good answer...  8) hehe

Yah I agree.

The idea was that grounding the potential sent to water will double....
« Last Edit: April 25, 2015, 15:55:37 pm by timeshell »

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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #62 on: March 09, 2015, 18:14:17 pm »
Hi Fabio and Ts,

I showed and discuss the vic last weekend with a very old and wise man. Its actually the man who interviewed  Meyer in the video i released some time ago.
He also gave me the Meyer documents which i shared here on the forum.
My friend is very technical.
When i showed him the core of the vic and the coil setup his came with a nice answer.
The thin flat core is capable to do the transforming up to high voltage but because it is thin, the core cannot provide a lot of power....read amps.....

We also hooked the cell different up. In Stans schematic it is betweeb the 2 chokes.
In our schematic the cell is in parallel with the first choke.......
Put that into yr simulators.
Andrei Puharich talked about ac electrolysis....


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Re: How the VIC Works - Induced DC Current Voltage
« Reply #63 on: March 09, 2015, 18:31:37 pm »
I have two theories mainly steve... one say that the vic works to bring the potential up such like the electron must go up in a montain before jump but the higher it goes the stronger become the gravity ... where the cell must be connected in one way... that being because the inner electrode having a positive potential will have positive electric fields coming out of it disregard it is the negative electrode in the arrange

And another that actually we create two mountains where the electron need to go up but as it get on top it gets trapped and bounce elsewhere...


the main secretes for the cylinder types is how it is connected... how the vic is connected.... how its tuned... and what is happening....

if you can answer all this questions you are on the way...