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Author Topic: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils  (Read 265311 times)

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #240 on: November 15, 2010, 03:58:34 AM »
@all

Basically , its the matrix of realty , space is a fluid .

Imagine water in a glass , and dropping something in it , it create expending circles , and reflect on the glass and comes back , at resonance it creates mater , event horizon , that contain all realty ...

Some example of perfect solids and pattern repeated in the path of god.

If you wish to learn this is a good place to start http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6151699791256390335#

first 4h of 8h  :o then you may have a gimps into it...

Mark

 
« Last Edit: November 15, 2010, 06:24:16 AM by Mk1 »

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #241 on: February 14, 2011, 02:28:51 PM »
@all

Hi everyone !

I will not be looking at the So called Rodin Coil , Its not new or Marko Rodin's invention but lets stick to convention for now .

I have known about the the geometry of the coil and function intuitively first because i am a musician and it took the knowledge of the maths of the coil to finally figure how to tune a piano ( this is historic in nature check it out).

Here is a Chinese drawing     

And reference link http://www.sacredscience.com/archive/PetrusDiagrams.htm

Really worth a look .

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #242 on: February 14, 2011, 02:33:20 PM »
@all

I have yet to decide if i will continue here or start a new tread for the Rodin coil .

Phi will be the base for the coil , it will include all the knowledge i gathered from here put the one in my Leedskalnin tread .

But here is a first image and idea that will be used .

Mark

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #243 on: February 15, 2011, 12:42:13 PM »
@all

I finish my coil here is a preview

 http://www.youtube.com/user/abramrk1#p/a/u/0/J6QIIwFkO00

It has 4 poles 2 magnetic  North and South Iron wire and 2 diamagnetic East and West copper wire .

Mark

Magluvin

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #244 on: February 15, 2011, 07:04:52 PM »
Hey Mk1
You are still goin strong at these coils. How are they working out?  Does the angles help to propagate current in the iron better than the copper to copper?

Glad to see that you see something in these coils. I still have mine. I look at it and ponder what could be the key if there is one. I keep going back to the big thick yellow coil that Gates initially started with, and wondered if that was a way to go.  ;]

Mags

ALVARO_CS

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #245 on: February 22, 2011, 11:54:05 AM »
Hello Mk
I´ve been following this thread with great interest, although there is little moving around this "sacred" geometry`s point of view, and I think there is a lot of clues to be yet discovered (and placed into practical uses).
Thank you very much for your generous sharing and my best wishes for your success.
Attached some coils I winded related to the starship coil. I made one in a cardboard tube but I got the best results from the ones here posted.

Mk1

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #246 on: February 22, 2011, 01:51:59 PM »
@ALVARO_CS

Welcome to my tread , i know you posted another JT a few pages back , i am sorry i never got to thank you for your work .

Thanks again !

Mark

resonanceman

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #247 on: March 03, 2011, 02:35:57 AM »
Hello Mk
I´ve been following this thread with great interest, although there is little moving around this "sacred" geometry`s point of view, and I think there is a lot of clues to be yet discovered (and placed into practical uses).
Thank you very much for your generous sharing and my best wishes for your success.
Attached some coils I winded related to the starship coil. I made one in a cardboard tube but I got the best results from the ones here posted.
\
Alvaro

Just courious

Have  you tried a secondary on any of these coils?

The only way I see to add a secondary is to wind about 5 laps bifilar in the same pattern ......then connect them start to end like a JT......that would give  you a 10 to 1 step up ..........hopefully.

Using old CDs is a great idea.
I am working on a magnet motor.......I am now thinking of making it a little bigger and using CDs for the rotors

gary

ALVARO_CS

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #248 on: March 28, 2011, 08:51:11 PM »
@Gary
Thanks for your interest.
I tried secondaries winded over a ferrite rod and placed in the middle in a perpendicular plane.(trying to collect from the mag. vortex in center).
I guess it should be a pulsed vortex, as I used it in a joule thief.
Sorry for the delay in reply.(I have read much of your work in this forum, and learn a lot from it, so . . .thanks again)

resonanceman

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #249 on: March 28, 2011, 11:42:05 PM »
@Gary
Thanks for your interest.
I tried secondaries winded over a ferrite rod and placed in the middle in a perpendicular plane.(trying to collect from the mag. vortex in center).
I guess it should be a pulsed vortex, as I used it in a joule thief.
Sorry for the delay in reply.(I have read much of your work in this forum, and learn a lot from it, so . . .thanks again)

ALVARO

Thanks    I saw where you said that ferrite in the center enhansed a JT made with  your coils
How did the secondary work out? WHat kind of voltage and current did it put  out.

I was thinking that if a vortex is there  a simple coil in the center might  tap it.

I wonder if iron wire would work better than copper.

HHHmmmm.

What  about a coil wound on a plastic tube or wooden dowel that just fit through  the hole in the CD?
If you then grounded one end of that coil  and connected the other end to the right capacitor ........ wouldn't  you have a JT Tesla coil?


gary
 
« Last Edit: March 29, 2011, 12:09:21 AM by resonanceman »

ALVARO_CS

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Re: Fibonacci, platonic solids and Vortex coils
« Reply #250 on: April 03, 2011, 11:02:09 AM »
@Gary
I have great difficulty lately with my internet, (very expensive in Spain, and at present I´m economicaly broken)
So I cannot be online as I wish.
Although I keep on experimenting and I´ll try the variants as per your suggestions. As some of you in this forum, I get much from salvaged TVs, PCs and so on.
I´ll try to do a series of tests with measurements and post here with photos.
Cheers
Alvaro