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Hand made fireballs
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 2:42 AM
 Report abusive post | Hand made fireballs
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A Tesla fireball is created by two or more transmitters broadcasting Tesla rays to create a slug of very high 'infolded' EM energy that is moved across three-dimensional space by manipulation of the ray parameters. When over or in the target, their contained EM energy is released in microseconds to create nuclear bomb-sized explosions or large earthquakes.
[link to www.nexusmagazine.com] [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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johnisevil User ID: 107612 6/20/2006 2:43 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Awesome. I've always wanted to be able to make fireballs with my hands like Ryu from Street Fighter II. |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 3:08 AM
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Patrick25 User ID: 107759 6/20/2006 3:13 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Wow, classic use of real cool new inventions and adding on ridiculous crap to it! You've done it again man!
There's no way we can create the amount of energy given off in a nuclear blast by other means with the technology we have today (or will have for a long time to come).
This is cool stuff, but won't blow things up at the scale a nuke would..unless you're talking 0.0001 kiloton nukes
Nothing is more efficient than nuclear explosions, with the exception of anti-matter explosions, which we can't afford to create because it costs about $25,000 to create just ONE atom of anti-matter. To make a 1kt bomb, it would cost us billions |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 3:16 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | FIREBALL NORWAY Events:
A. Astronomer Knut Jørgen Røed Ødegaard made the initial report
[link to www.aftenposten.no]
B. Department Chairman Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics at the University of Oslo pulls rank:
[link to www.aftenposten.no]
Professor Kaare Aksnes said it was regrettable that this comparison had been made, and that it was extremely exaggerated. Aksnes also said it was regrettable that the statement had apparently emanated from the Institute.
[Dept. Chairs are sensitive-political]
C. Peter Brown of the University of Western Ontario and his student, Wayne Edwards trump the report.
and
D. Bill Cooke of the Marshall Space Flight Center attempts to trump them all.
[link to spaceweather.com]
[link to cyberspaceorbit.com] [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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annwho2 User ID: 62251 6/20/2006 3:17 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Now that's an impressive list of fireballs. Great balls of fire. Have we only recently had so many, or has there always been a large amount of these? |
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Anonymous Coward User ID: 107875 6/20/2006 3:18 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Fuel Air bomb .....more bang for your buck....telsa bomb...dirt cheap. |
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Texas Uncensored  User ID: 107795 6/20/2006 3:19 AM
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Patrick25 User ID: 107759 6/20/2006 3:20 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Nah always been about the same...based on geological records and the tracking we've been doing for 100+ years.
They were more frequent billions of years ago when there was much more 'junk' floating around in the solar system than today.
The Norway 'fireball' was just a small meteorite.
No bigger than this one in the pic below:
[link to antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov]
The reports WERE greatly exagerated! The thing chipped a few rocks...not even a crater. |
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Patrick25 User ID: 107759 6/20/2006 3:21 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | 107795:
It's still just a cloud.
And I've seen MUCH faster. This is time-lapsed remember....these series of images took place over HOURS.
That cloud was moving at no more than 200km/h. Some have been clocked in the jetstream at over 300km/h.
And meteors don't move at 150km/h .. they move at ~75,000km/h+
Oh and by the way, those satellites are configured to look specially for clouds (density and reflectivity requirements) - Even if a 'meteor' passed at speeds slow enough to be captured (which again, is impossible), it wouldn't show up on this...sorry. |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 3:27 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Tectonic devices are now assumed. There have been open conferences:
[link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com]
General description
Full Title:
Induced Seismicity Due to Electromagnetic Impact Caused by MHD Generator
Tech Area / Field:
ENV-SEM: Environment / Seismic Monitoring
NNE-MEC: Non-Nuclear Energy / Miscellaneous Energy Conversion
Status:
3 / Approved without Funding
Deputy Executive Director:
DED US: Lawrence Wright
Senior Project Manager:
Karen Stepanovich Bunyatov, tel. 7+095+3214956, fax 7+095+7976014, bunyatov@istc.ru
Project Manager:
Avagimov A A
Phone: 7+095+4842377
Fax: 7+095+4857990
Leading Institute:
IVTAN (High Temperatures) / High Energy Density Research Center, Moscow, Russia
Supporting institutes:
NPO Soyuz (2), Dzerzhinsky, Moscow reg., Russia
Collaborators:
Shizuoka Institute of Science and Technology, Fukuoka, Japan
Tokai University / Earthquake Prediction Research Center, Tokai, Japan
Textron Systems, Wilmington, MA, USA
University of Tsukuba / Institute of Engineering Mechanics, Tsukuba, Japan
Project Summary
The objective of this Project is to determine physical nature of the induced seismicity under electromagnetic impact caused by the MHD generator and to develop a technology of the controlled electromagnetic impact (EMI) on the Earth crust [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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Texas Uncensored  User ID: 107795 6/20/2006 3:28 AM
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Patrick25 User ID: 107759 6/20/2006 3:30 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | It moved 15 degrees (about 400km) in 2.5 hours .. warp speed my ass |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 3:37 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Wow, classic use of real cool new inventions and adding on ridiculous crap to it! You've done it again man!
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Nukes are now old fashioned and now rather worthless as strategic weapons.
Secrets of Cold War Technology: Project HAARP and Beyond
[link to www.amazon.com]
Learn about Project Argus, Project Teak and Project Orange; EMP experiments back in the '60s; why the Air Force directed the construction of a huge ionospheric "backscatter" telemetry system across the Pacific just after World War II; why Raytheon has collected every patent relevant to HAARP over the past few years; and much more pertinent information on hidden Cold War technology. [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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Patrick25 User ID: 107759 6/20/2006 3:38 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Doesn't change the fact that your statement about these fireballs delivering as big explosions as nuclear bombs is 100% totally WRONG. |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 4:04 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Tesla implied that his experiments could impact earth in a most powerful manner and talked about generating a pulse that might split the earth in two.
As I understand it these fireballs are not thrown at earth from somewhere else... rather come from earth when the planet is tapped as a capacitor.
[link to www.nuenergy.org] [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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Patrick25 User ID: 107759 6/20/2006 4:09 AM | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Lots of people implied lots of things. Doesn't make them true.
And it's simple math. A 1kt blast (tiny tiny nuke) releases the equivalent of 210,000,000,000 kilowatt seconds of power.
So unless we can generate that much and are willing to use it for to destroy things...(bombs are much cheaper), this is a big crock :) |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 4:20 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | bombs are much cheaper
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And as fate would have it, a friend in Colorado Springs who directed the power company, Leonard Curtis, offered him free electricity. Who could resist that?
After setting up his lab, he tuned his gigantic Tesla coil through that year, trying to get it to resonate perfectly with the earth below. And the townspeople noticed those weird effects; Tesla was electrifying the ground beneath their feet on the return bounce of the wave.
Eventually, he got it tuned, keeping things at low power. But in the spirit of a true hacker, just once he decided to run it wide open, just to see what would happen. Just what was the upper limit of the wave he would build up, bouncing back and forth in the planet below? He had his Coil hooked to the ground below it, the 200 foot antenna above it, and getting as much electricity as he wanted right off the city power supply mains.
Tesla went outside to watch (wearing three inch rubber soles for insulation) and had his assistant, Kolman Czito, turn the Coil on.
There was a buzz from rows of oil capacitors, and a roar from the spark gap as wrist-thick arcs jumped across it. Inside the lab the noise was deafening. But Tesla was outside, watching the antenna. Any surge that returned to the area would run up the antenna and jump off as lightning. Off the top of the antenna shot a six foot lightning bolt. The bolt kept going in a steady arc, though, unlike a single lightning flash.
And here Tesla watched carefully, for he wanted to see if the power would build up, if his wave theory would work. Soon the lightning was twenty feet long, then fifty. The surges were growing more powerful. Eighty feet -- now thunder was following each lightning bolt. A hundred feet, a hundred twenty feet; the lightning shot upwards off the antenna.
Thunder was heard booming around Tesla now (it was heard 22 miles away, in the town of Cripple Creek). The meadow Tesla was standing in was lit up with an electrical discharge very much like St. Elmo's Fire, casting a blue glow. His theory had worked! There didn't seem to be an upper limit to the surges; he was creating the most powerful electrical surges ever created by man.
That moment he set the record, which he still holds, for manmade lightning. Then everything halted. The lightning discharges stopped, the thunder quit. He ran in, found the power company had turned off his power feed. He called them, shouted at them -- they were interrupting his experiment! The foreman replied that Tesla had just overloaded the generator and set it on fire, his lads were busy putting out the fire in the windings, and it would be a cold day in hell before Tesla got any more free power from the Colorado Springs power company! [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 4:33 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | From: BARDSQUILL@aol.com
To: Intermediary
Sent: Sunday, July 21, 2002 8:44 AM
Subject: Question for Dr. Tom
Question for Dr. Tom:
Under what "superpotential" conditions can the sun be triggered from earth?
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7/21/02 9:31:55 AM Pacific Daylight Time
Yes, he and I have talked about this several times. Here was his latest reply.
Well, with so many nations (10 or so) having longitudinal EM wave weapons, I would not be surprised. Longitudinal EM waves can deeply penetrate right through the earth -- or deep into the sun. With all the banging that's going on in weather control etc., God only knows how many LW antennas get pointed in the direction of the sun, pour out their back-feed in that direction, etc.
Cohen already confirmed the weapons could stir volcanoes into eruption, generate earthquakes, etc. Tickle deep underneath the sun's surface, and one can be stirring quite a brew. Don't know how the dickens one would estimate it, etc. unless one was on a project which used the interferometer technique to examine the interior of the sun, etc.
Isn't it coincidental that it's also synchronized with conflict in the MidEast, etc! In short, when conflicts and "planning for conflicts" are ongoing, the troops are stirring and burning the midnight oil, and manning the weaponry.
May be some of that is causing or helping stimulate more solar activity of that sort.
Cheers, Tom [link to www.cyberspaceorbit.com] |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 4:42 AM
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BlueDolphin User ID: 107894 6/20/2006 5:24 AM
 | | Re: Hand made fireballs | Quote | Hmmm, I wonder how many people who are seeing those "fireballs" are connecting the dots to this information you've so timely provided... ? ~
Thanks Kent  <<< !! VIVE LA RESISTANCE !! >>> |
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Emperor Kenton User ID: 74465 6/20/2006 8:50 AM
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