liquid
Master's Thesis 2006: HANDLING WATER - an approach to holistic river rehabilitation design
Submitted by esaruoho on July 10, 2008 - 12:22Master’s Thesis 2006, Institute for Ecopreneurship IEC, FHNW, Switzerland
HANDLING WATER an approach to holistic river rehabilitation design
Niels Werdenberg
Conservation biologist, environmental engineer
“…A wholly excellent work and highly recommended reading for any serious student of river engineering and water resources management generally.”
Callum Coats, Ecotechnology expert
Abstract
CutnPaste introduction to Jerry G. Gallimore
Submitted by esaruoho on May 13, 2007 - 03:23- Japan
- Russia
- USA
- 1975
- 1976
- 1977
- 1982
- 1986
- 1987
- 1988
- 200hz
- 7hz
- bismuth
- ceramic
- Charlotte King
- Christopher Bird
- conductor
- diamagnetic
- Dr. Robert Hazen
- Hiroshi Wakita
- James Clerk Maxwell
- Jerry Gallimore
- liquid
- microphone
- piezoelectricity
- signal
- Tom Bearden
- 1911
- 1973
- 1993
- copper
- crystal
- dielectric
- earthquake
- field
- magnetic
- sound
- temperature
- vibration
March 8, 1992 - http://amasci.com/freenrg/galli1.txt
Wrote books: http://www.borderlands.com/gallimore.htm http://www.borderlands.com/catalog/gallimore.htm
Handbook of Unusual Energies
Gallimore claimed, in an interview with Christopher Bird, that he had achieved room temperature superconductivity approximating 99% efficiency. The interview, which includes most of the material above, took place on July 21, 1976; it was published in 1977, in Vol. 2 of Gallimore's Handbook of Unusual Energies (p.115).
KeelyNet: Dale Pond: The Four Basic Types of Cavitation (January 1st, 1995)
Submitted by esaruoho on May 9, 2007 - 13:40CAVITATION
There are four basic types of cavitation. Fundamentally cavitation results
from a drop in pressure on a liquid creates pockets or bubbles in the liquid -
an increase in pressure causes these bubbles to collapse resulting in a
tremendous "local" force which can cause damage to metals, emulsification, de-
gasification, sonoluminescence and many other strange and wonderous phenomena.
Michael Riversong: International Tesla Society in Review: People, Politics and Technology
Submitted by esaruoho on May 9, 2007 - 12:29- Colorado Springs
- California
- USA
- 1905
- 1984
- 1988
- 1989
- 1991
- amplification
- chemistry
- David Hudson
- George Wiseman
- Hal Huggins
- harmonic
- homeopathy
- J.W. McGinnis
- Jack Couture
- liquid
- magnetism
- Michael Riversong
- Peter Kulish
- resonant
- Robert Golka
- shape
- Steve Elswick
- teslacoil
- Toby Grotz
- Walter Baumgartner
- Walter Russell
- William Wysock
- Yul Brown
- Nikola Tesla
- 1911
- 1920s
- 1992
- 1993
- 1994
- 1996
- 1998
- 2002
- bladeless
- car
- electricity
- energy
- field
- flow
- gravity
- overunity
- resonance
- turbine
- Viktor Schauberger
- vortex
INTERNATIONAL TESLA SOCIETY IN REVIEW:
People, Politics, and Technology
(c)2002 by Michael Riversong
Vortexscience.com: Bubble bubble, toil and trouble
Submitted by esaruoho on May 9, 2007 - 10:25Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Trouble
The most important discovery in Hydraulics in the last 100 years, since the observation of Cavitation is: The Elimination of Cavitation!
Water - compilation
Submitted by esaruoho on May 3, 2007 - 10:50i've been reading Nikola Tesla (the boundary-layer bladeless turbine) and Viktor Schauberger, and would like to draw attention to a few forthcoming quotes (i have them at home - will add tomorrow - finally added ;)).
however, when going online and trying to find info, this is the kind of stuff im looking for
1) Water, is at its densest, and heaviest, at +4C. this can be verified from WikiPedia - both statements.
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PAX Scientific - Meet Viktor Schauberger
Submitted by esaruoho on April 17, 2007 - 17:31- MIT
- PAX Scientific
- Stanford University
- english
- USA
- ant
- Archimedes
- biomimicry
- bird
- cavitation
- centripetal
- fluid dynamics
- Gianluca Iaccarino
- Godfrey Mungal
- impeller
- Isaac Newton
- Janine Benyus
- Jay Harman
- John Ernst Worrell Keely
- Leonardo Da Vinci
- liquid
- noise
- propeller
- Rustum Roy
- Santhanam Shekar
- 2002
- 2003
- 2004
- 2005
- 2006
- cold
- engineer
- fish
- flow
- friction
- geometry
- heat
- mathematics
- nature
- pressure
- resonance
- spiral
- suction
- turbine
- vibration
- Viktor Schauberger
- vortex
- whirlpool
enjoy! if you can.
Josef Hasslberger on Richard Clem's rotational engine
Submitted by cybe on December 5, 2005 - 21:23Comments to CLEM1.ASC (KeelyNet) by Josef Hasslberger
Richard Clem's rotational engine
Although I do not have any information on Clem or his device, I would like to comment on the principle of operation, which seems quite simple and straightforward to who has studied the writings of Viktor Schauberger, the Austrian naturalist and inventor.
Indeed Schauberger was working with vortex action in liquids (especially in water) and was finding effects that were at the time, and are still now, unexplainable with the normal principles of physics or thermodynamics.
As far as I understand the engine made by Clem was built around a cone with spiralling channels cut into it and when a liquid, in that particular case vegetable oil, got pressed through the channels, they caused the cone to turn and at a certain point the flow of the liquid and the turning of the cone became self-sustaining, up to the point of putting out a good and heavy (350 HP for a 200 pound engine) power output.
