Resonant Cavity?

Heuristicobfuscation

Resonant Cavity?
« on September 7th, 2013, 07:46 PM »Last edited on September 8th, 2013, 12:28 PM by Heuristicobfuscation
ok i never quite understood why in stan meyers drawing of the resonat cavity. the drafting looks like a bootle cross section, with a needle like electrode, in the middle,  with a ball at top  of electrode, can anyone explain that?

yet on the dune buggy the resonat cavity cells look quiet diffrent. they actually look like round tubes with holes..

Matt Watts

RE: Resonant Cavity?
« Reply #1, on September 8th, 2013, 10:52 PM »
Quote from Heuristicobfuscation on September 7th, 2013, 07:46 PM
ok i never quite understood why in stan meyers drawing of the resonat cavity. the drafting looks like a bootle cross section, with a needle like electrode, in the middle,  with a ball at top  of electrode, can anyone explain that?
I think that one is something using light with a mirror finish inside.  Best I can tell is the light hits the little ball in the middle and scatters in every direction inside the chamber bombarding the contents with photons.

zaneaussie

RE: Resonant Cavity?
« Reply #2, on September 9th, 2013, 04:38 AM »Last edited on September 9th, 2013, 04:40 AM by zaneaussie
Quote from Heuristicobfuscation on September 7th, 2013, 07:46 PM
ok i never quite understood why in stan meyers drawing of the resonat cavity. the drafting looks like a bootle cross section, with a needle like electrode, in the middle,  with a ball at top  of electrode, can anyone explain that?

yet on the dune buggy the resonat cavity cells look quiet diffrent. they actually look like round tubes with holes..
Hmm good question. I guess a lot of Stan's work is quite cryptic. I'll give a couple of thoughts.

It could be:

A precursory (proof of concept) resonant cavity for the water fuel spark plug? In other words this was a more advanced version of the earlier cell which could explain why it wasn't on the original buggy.
One way to get more information would be to have the measurements of the cavity itself i.e volume, length, area etc and we could calculate the frequency at which it was designed to resonate.
 Or it could also very well be what Dog-One said that it's some type of photonic exciter but the way I see it the middle looks like a cathode..whence electrolysis seems to be the goal but I could be wrong. Also noted is no 25 in the drawing which seems to me to be a spark device.

Interesting and good question

Any other thoughts?

Lynx

RE: Resonant Cavity?
« Reply #3, on September 9th, 2013, 04:55 AM »
Quote from zaneaussie on September 9th, 2013, 04:38 AM
Or it could also very well be what Dog-One said that it's some type of photonic exciter but the way I see it the middle looks like a cathode..whence electrolysis seems to be the goal but I could be wrong. Also noted is no 25 in the drawing which seems to me to be a spark device.
I'm thinking that the Meyer spark plug replacement injector device is an all in one HV-splitting-waterdroplets-into-plasma-injector, where the electric bit of it all could be explained here, http://www.overunity.com/5024/urgent-water-as-fuel-discovery-for-everyone-to-share/#.Ui21Kj9_aM4

zaneaussie

RE: Resonant Cavity?
« Reply #4, on September 9th, 2013, 05:15 AM »
Quote from Lynx on September 9th, 2013, 04:55 AM
Quote from zaneaussie on September 9th, 2013, 04:38 AM
Or it could also very well be what Dog-One said that it's some type of photonic exciter but the way I see it the middle looks like a cathode..whence electrolysis seems to be the goal but I could be wrong. Also noted is no 25 in the drawing which seems to me to be a spark device.
I'm thinking that the Meyer spark plug replacement injector device is an all in one HV-splitting-waterdroplets-into-plasma-injector, where the electric bit of it all could be explained here, http://www.overunity.com/5024/urgent-water-as-fuel-discovery-for-everyone-to-share/#.Ui21Kj9_aM4
That is exactly what it looks like! Perhaps this could be the simple "secret" to this system. A cavity resonance to split the water and a high voltage to ignite...