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Time Machines & Experiments
Tesla and The Hyperdimensional Oscillator
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<blockquote data-quote="MODAT7" data-source="post: 217355" data-attributes="member: 13649"><p>Given all the buzz words, this does sound more sales&marketing hype than useful. It has nothing to do with the sci-fi lightning picture close to the top. At best, I'd say they put the step up converter from a stun gun in a little portable can and slapped a label on it. Or maybe the ionizer from one of those "wear around the neck" portable air purifiers. Don't wear this out in the rain. Remember that there is NO LIMIT WHATSOEVER that sales&marketing can make on the claims (sometimes the FDA will take notice, often, they'll ignore; consumer protection bureaus generally won't get involved; I'm not sure which country this is being sold from).</p><p></p><p>Without a schematic (which the company will not provide), there's no way to really tell what it does. It would need to be purchased and opened up... but the company probably potted the electronics in epoxy to help prevent something like that. I doubt you'd find a turning crystal inside. Even if you could get schematics, it's probably made in china, and they're known for not following schematics and making unauthorized changes to "fixed" designs.</p><p></p><p>I seriously doubt one of Tesla's inventions could be shrunk down that small. Since this thing claims to be a radio transceiver of some type, the REAL antenna alone could be longer than your arm. If it's a wire coil of some type, it could be larger than your fist. I think some of Tesla's scalar devices used a large flat metal plate as an antenna. Those are big red flags.</p><p></p><p>To get an idea of the smallest potential sizes, see pictures of some of the other radionics devices posted in the forums. While technically this may not be advertized as a radionics device, it's sure making the usual claims.</p><p></p><p>Now, if you wanted to snag original schematics from a Tesla archive and try to make a reproduction youself, that could be interesting. You would know it's a genuine Tesla device built to the proper specifications. It would likely be much cheaper, too. Come to think, you could also test different antenna types like I mentioned above. If you go this route, please post pictures.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MODAT7, post: 217355, member: 13649"] Given all the buzz words, this does sound more sales&marketing hype than useful. It has nothing to do with the sci-fi lightning picture close to the top. At best, I'd say they put the step up converter from a stun gun in a little portable can and slapped a label on it. Or maybe the ionizer from one of those "wear around the neck" portable air purifiers. Don't wear this out in the rain. Remember that there is NO LIMIT WHATSOEVER that sales&marketing can make on the claims (sometimes the FDA will take notice, often, they'll ignore; consumer protection bureaus generally won't get involved; I'm not sure which country this is being sold from). Without a schematic (which the company will not provide), there's no way to really tell what it does. It would need to be purchased and opened up... but the company probably potted the electronics in epoxy to help prevent something like that. I doubt you'd find a turning crystal inside. Even if you could get schematics, it's probably made in china, and they're known for not following schematics and making unauthorized changes to "fixed" designs. I seriously doubt one of Tesla's inventions could be shrunk down that small. Since this thing claims to be a radio transceiver of some type, the REAL antenna alone could be longer than your arm. If it's a wire coil of some type, it could be larger than your fist. I think some of Tesla's scalar devices used a large flat metal plate as an antenna. Those are big red flags. To get an idea of the smallest potential sizes, see pictures of some of the other radionics devices posted in the forums. While technically this may not be advertized as a radionics device, it's sure making the usual claims. Now, if you wanted to snag original schematics from a Tesla archive and try to make a reproduction youself, that could be interesting. You would know it's a genuine Tesla device built to the proper specifications. It would likely be much cheaper, too. Come to think, you could also test different antenna types like I mentioned above. If you go this route, please post pictures. [/QUOTE]
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