News:

Forum is currently set to Admin Approval for New Members
Pegasus Gofundme website



Main Menu

ZP Final Cut

Started by COSMO, March 04, 2014, 03:32:49 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

COSMO

I am watching the video...interesting...gives description of the various craft....alien reproduction...flux liners!!!.....someone has a big head start Luke!

http://www.coasttocoastam.com/show/2014/03/02

Troubling Deaths

First hour guest, UFO disclosure activist Stephen Bassett detailed a troubling pattern involving the recent deaths of ET/UFO researchers. Not only did fast acting cancers kill both author Philip Coppens and Starchild researcher Lloyd Pye, but the documentary filmmaker James Allen (who recently completed a film on alien propulsion with Mark McCandlish) appears to have been poisoned to death with heavy metals (toxicology report), Bassett reported. He warned that there could be a campaign to silence people who're getting too close to the truth about the ET presence.



Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

deuem

Cosmo, After reading that I can only say
I see nothing, I know nothing and I have forgotten everything.
Aliens are little green sponge bobs that live under trees. Yea thats it. UFOs are only fat moths with LEDs attached. And Area 51 is the 10th row to the right in Walmart. I am officialy wacky and have turned into a floating rock.
Will they leave me alone now, Please!

COSMO

#2
To be honest...I hesitated posting that....  ;)

Almost half way through...


Aaaaannnndddddd........it has a parachute!   ;D




Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

PLAYSWITHMACHINES

#3
QuoteAaaaannnndddddd........it has a parachute!   


They been stealing our ideas, LOL

SSShhhh...i know nuttin.... ::)
better watch this now, before it gets taken down 8)

ETA: Toxic metals won't work on me, full of the stuff already, i have so many heavy metals in me i set off airport scanners LOL

rdunk

I am paused at 1 hour! This is very interesting for we non-physics guys. I will view the balance a little later! Thanks for sharing this with us COSMO!

PLAYSWITHMACHINES

I'm about 1/2 way through.
So far they are pretty much correct IMO... ::) i even posted a diagram a few hours ago about this, funny that..... :o

PLAYSWITHMACHINES

Quoteenough energy in a coffee cup to boil the worlds oceans

About right, i was figuring ONLY 22 gigawatts per cc at the time i made this;




PLAYSWITHMACHINES

Moulding those plates in glass (or some polycarbonate resin) is a big job, even today.
i would know of only a few companies with the ability to mould something that big, Hmmm....

COSMO

Quote from: PlaysWithMachines on March 04, 2014, 09:37:39 PM
Moulding those plates in glass (or some polycarbonate resin) is a big job, even today.
i would know of only a few companies with the ability to mould something that big, Hmmm....

It sure sounds like the capacitor/coil configuration we have discussed.  I believe the center column is designed to generate the rotation......TORSION.....of the ether vortex.  AND.....the inclusion of a Faraday/homopolar generator!  All of the elements we have been talking about! 



Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

COSMO

Government flying saucer surplus....some day! 



Yeah...I'll take one of the old classic models!  lol

Cosmo
And you may ask yourself
Well...How did I get here?

robomont

White teflon cutting board has way highee dialectric and is lighter.actually kinda cheap to build.the central axis would be the hard part.
ive never been much for rules.
being me has its priviledges.

Dumbledore

PLAYSWITHMACHINES

LMAO ;D

Yes i need to test some teflon Robo, i have a few lumps lying around.
A lot of plastics i tested actually had quite a low breakdown, hmm must be tables out there on Wiki etc. I have a bunch of them already, need a few days to compile it ;)

The strongest insulator i ever found was the 'ceramic' glue sticks from Black & Decker. They are brown in colour, if you see them, buy them i need them, i can't get them anywhere.Sent messages to B&D but as yet no reply ::)
Took over 200Kv per mm, metered resistance was close to infinite.
And superb mechanical strength to boot....

So why is it no longer available?
Grrr >:(

ArMaP

Quote from: PlaysWithMachines on March 07, 2014, 08:13:19 PM
So why is it no longer available?
Grrr >:(
Probably because it took over 200Kv per mm, metered resistance was close to infinite and had superb mechanical strength to boot..... :)

robomont

I had charts ten years ago but basically the cutting board had the highest rating for the price.plus its easily machinable.plus they make screws and nuts from the stuff too.
ive never been much for rules.
being me has its priviledges.

Dumbledore

PLAYSWITHMACHINES

Right you are, both of you ;D