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Object of the experiment: resonating a tetrahedral electromgnetic array in in 6 polar dimentions. Need to build at least 3 oscillators. Sine wave preferred.

2007-04-04 11:48:29 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

Excuse my mis-spellings. The tetrahedral has been tested several years ago but only with two drivers. Results were promising. End result? Need more drivers then I'll let you know.

2007-04-04 11:57:04 · update #1

Some definate anti-grav effects were noted and documented with 2 generators but in only 2 planes.

2007-04-04 12:02:38 · update #2

Each oscillator has to drive 1/3 of a dual tetrahedral array. Picture a 3-dimentionl star of david (no religion intended). The ideal driver assembly would have a minimum of two drivers for each 1/3 of the array. This would enable a 3-dimensional phasing depending on the frequency of the individual drivers. Am awaire of the various oscillators, just need a basic, possibly colpits, to prove the theory without investing too many dollars.

2007-04-04 13:19:34 · update #3

I have built the array. Actually 6 drivers would be optimal because the phase adjust would be simpler viv-a-vis voltage and beat frequency. I'm going for phase cancellation in the center of the array.

2007-04-04 13:25:38 · update #4

1 answers

See especially the Colpitts and phase shift oscillators. The phase shift will probably give you the cleanest sine wave with the fewest components. If the op amp alone can't provide enough drive power, follow it with a simple 2N2222 transistor amplifier stage.

You might save yourself some time by searching the web for a commercial audio oscillator board with multiple independent channels.

I probably should have first asked what each oscillator is expected to drive.

2007-04-04 12:46:28 · answer #1 · answered by Frank N 7 · 1 0

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