Chet: I don't think that you or anyone on the forum should get into any discussions at all with your friend that is claiming COP 7. You are just opening the door for fudging and back-tracking and endless debates back and forth for nothing. It's a recipe for failure one more time. You said that he has COP 7 presumably because that's exactly what he told you. He has made the statement. So the onus is on this person to tell us how he arrived at this conclusion. We are making the fair and reasonable assumption that this person did his tests and made his measurements to arrive at COP 7 and that he knows what he is doing. We don't need any kind of internal debate on the forum to make up a list or establish a procedure or anything. Let this person present his COP 7 proposition and make his case no questions asked. AC and Giantkiller: You guys are demonstrating the Dunning-Kruger effect. I never said that Bloch walls don't exist, I simply said that they don't exist in a standard bar magnet. It's impossible for them to exist in an air coil. The reason is obvious, if one end of a magnet is considered a magnetic pole and the opposite end is considered an opposite magnetic pole then between them there must be a region which does not have the properties of either pole. There are not really "two pole regions" with some sort of a "neutral zone" in between them. In real life there is no such thing a a "magnetic pole" in the truest sense. That is simply a naming convention to facilitate talking about magnets and magnetic fields. Magnetic field lines travel in closed loops. So just like a circle has no start or end, magnetic fields don't have poles. So in a bar magnet the north and south poles are simply a distribution that lie between the magnet and the outside world? Pie-in-the-sky talk Giantkiller. You and many others often use terms that are meaningless without a qualifier. A "distribution?" A distribution of what? A bar magnet is simply a piece of ferrous metal with a homogenous arrangement of magnetic moments for the majority of the ferrous molecules so it looks like a single giant integral magnetic domain. There are no Bloch walls. So it appears that both of you may have been playing around with magnets on your benches for years without the most basic understanding of how they work. I suppose that we could make a reasonable extrapolation and assume that the majority of free energy experimenters don't understand how they work. That's why Bedini can spout his nonsense and get away with it. I recommend that both of you go to the Hyperphysics web site and do some other searches and reading in order to master "Magnetism 101." MileHigh
« Last Edit: 2012-01-06, 02:05:33 by MileHigh »
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