Well, according to "spherics" in the AVEC Disclosure, "Cold current" will charge batteries and can even replace them in circuits.
He explains "how", but not "why".
What is "cold current"? I've never heard a good explanation of it, and many think it is a myth.
However, if rotating or moving aether induces a current in a conductor, then it induces a polarization current in a dielectric. (I used "polarization" because I think it is more accurate than "displacement" in this case.) IF correct, this could be the alias "cold current", which is good for lighting bulbs, and charging caps and batteries.
So, how do you produce this "cold current"? Not the way Bedini claims to do it. You have to make aether real rather than virtual. The only way that I know of to do this is to pulse a large coil, or a nuclear bomb. I'll take the coil method.
It is my understanding that pulsing a coil can not equal a rotating field which is cumulative, but if you just want to charge a battery, it may be good enough.
You might be able to dumb the coils on a 10-coiler and step the spike up through a pulse transformer. Send this to your RE coil.
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