Well, all I can say is that somebody would be building something out of more than hot air.htmagic wrote: I thought the March Hare was especially interesting. Maybe I should put this on the skin of a craft, charge it up with high voltage, and have a grinning Cheshire cat as a logo...
MagicBill
I apologize, I missed the part about light and electrogravitic communication in AM's post. His post reminded me of selenium rectifiers. I suppose the scent of the fox I picked up was a red herring. I will endeavor to follow the proper fox. On second thought, I will be the one hound that leaves the pack and follow my own nose, sometimes the pack only follows the leader because that is the way that everybody is going.htmagic wrote:But it wasn't selenium rectifiers using bismuth that got us on the start of the trail. It was light and possibly electrogravitic communication. Sometimes the hounds need to pick up the scent of the fox.AM wrote:
"Tubeless Receiver Claimed by Professor, Using Bismuth & Copper"
Recently it was announced at Mercer University (Macon GA), that the Westinghouse Electric & manufacturing Co. had offered Dr. Palmer H. Craig, head of the physics department of the university, $100,000 for a new device which is supposed to replace vacuum tubes as amplifiers and detectors.
The device is called an "electromagnetic detector and amplifier" and consists of a series of bismuth plates stacked in a pile and interlaced with copper wires. The bismuth plates are protected by a coating of sulfur because bismuth, a very brittle substance, is likely to crumble.
The Lone Hound listenning to a distant Master.
Addendum: For those that don't know about selenium rectifiers, they have the ability to heal themselves....chew on that.