keelynet

KeelyNet: John Thomas: Schappeller, Searl and anti-gravity

Submitted by esaruoho on
KeelyNET/SEARLE3.ASC

Schappeller, Searl and Gravity

This file originally posted on KeelyNet BBS
on 08/06/94 as SEARLE3.ASC, courtesy of John Thomas.
The following file is from the superb book
'AntiGravity : The Dream Made Reality',
the Story of John R.R. Searl,

KeelyNet: Jerry Decker: Who Was John Worrell Keely?

Submitted by esaruoho on

Article on the Theories of Keely

by Jerry W. Decker

FORWARD

Who was John W. Keely?

John Keely was an independent researcher specializing in the properties of sound during the mid to late 1800's.

What did Keely discover?

He was purported to have discovered techniques based on incredibly sensitive vibratory mechanisms which would allow the use of the Aether for practical purposes.

What devices did he build?

1) a machine to split the water molecule for the instantaneous release of tremendous pressures

Thomas Townsend Brown and his flying discs

Submitted by esaruoho on

Thomas Townsend Brown and his flying discs




(word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
PO BOX 1031
Mesquite, TX 75150

May 5, 1991

BROWN2.ASC
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From the November, 1958 FATE magazine.
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Two diagrams are available for this article which are listed on

KeelyNet: Excerpts from: Electronics World & Wireless World concerning Stanley Meyer

Submitted by admin on

Excerpts from: Electronics World & Wireless World
( January 1991) ~ KeelyNet File MEYER1.ASC

Eye-witness accounts suggest that US inventor Stanley Meyer has developed an electric cell which will split ordinary tap water into hydrogen and oxygen with far less energy than that required by a normal electrolytic cell.

Richard H. Clem

Submitted by admin on


http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clem1.htm
http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clemindex.htm

" A local man (Dallas) developed a closed system engine that was purported to generate 350 HP and run itself. The engine weighed about 200 pounds and ran on cooking oil at temperatures of 300 F.

It consisted of a cone mounted on a horizontal axis. The shaft which supported the cone was hollow and the cone had spiralling channels cut into it. These spiralling pathways wound around the cone terminating at the cone base in the form of nozzles (rimjets).

When fluid was pumped into the hollow shaft at pressures ranging from 300-500 PSI (pounds per square inch), it moved into the closed spiralling channels of the cone and exited from the nozzles. This action caused the cone to spin. As the velocity of the fluid increased, so did the rotational speed of the cone.

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