@tinman
@ Paul-R
I thought of Paul's posted entry as I was on my way home last night. I simply didn't think of
www.pat2pdf.org's free downloads at the time.
Well, okay. This thread is generating interest, even though I don't know much about this particular type of device. Sort of like the old TV show,
"Time Tunnel?" Oh, BTW, I read awhile ago that tornadoes, hurricanes, and thunderstorms in general are claimed by a few researchers to generate monopoles---and these have properties that I also have little experience with. However, I mentally envision time travel and/or teleportation are in the realm of possibility.
I've read, for example, that a tire inner tube was somehow placed around the trunk of a tree on the ground without cutting and repairing the inner tube. Something teleported the inner tube there. Then there's the well-known instances of straw stalks being blown into a tree, apparently at ultrahigh speed. Or else teleportation.
Another inner tube was carefully lifted over a very high church steeple and set down as far as it would easily stretch without damage. Workers had to deliberately cut the tube off the steeple to clear it from public view and possible questions of how it originally got there in a thunderstorm?
These inventors may be playing with fire. The 'devil' in me would say that these occurrences could instill wonder and fear as to how the impossible happens. The devil would seem to be to be also like a Native American trickster and also something like an American leprechaun playing tricks on people.
LATER REEDIT: I was having trouble getting this guy's patent applications to run on
http://www.pat2pdf.org The error message(s) indicated the applications didn't exist. The application number that's the subject of this thread does actually load and run, however.
I finally remember running across his work in the past and then leaving it alone because I didn't understand what he was doing. I have learned something about electromagnetics and magnet field interactions on a deep mental level since then.
And also, putting a '0' after the year number in the Application number might get better results. I was also wrong on second look: The inventor does know a lot of calculus. You might find it useful to know it, too.
--Lee