Static
by Barry Carter
Created: 4/9/2010
Modified: 4/9/2010
I first learned about the ORMUS
elements in 1989 when my friend Jim got his hands in some energetic ORMUS water and started having
strange things happen. These strange things included lots of electrostatic sparks as described in
Jim’s Story at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/MyStory.htm
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/JimStory.htm
Since then I have posted a number of
comments on this to various forums. Here are some excerpts from these comments:
To TheWork 1/4/1999
A small meter for measuring electrostatic
energy is quite useful for measuring or at least identifying the presence of m-state
elements. Jim has modified an electrostatic meter to be more
sensitive but claims that a simple meter can be made from Radio Shack parts. He has promised to give me a design and parts list one of these
days.
According to Jim's theory, electrostatic
meters measure weak beta radiation from the m-state elements.
To WhiteGold 12/8/2000
One typically gets a very high reading
from an electrostatic meter in the presence of ORMUS materials.
BDnow2/3/2001
You can use a slightly modified
electrostatic meter to identify rock, water or air with a lot of ORMUS in it.
So, you still haven't seen Jim's
electrostatic meter circuit drawing.
I have resized the images and put them on
the web so you can look at them with your browser. They are at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/meter1.jpg
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/meter2.jpg
The use of an electrostatic meter to
detect ORMUS was first suggested by Jim. Jim has used his electrostatic meter since about 1996 as an
ORMUS detector. He says that he had to make it a bit more sensitive in order to put the ORMUS range at
full scale but that an ordinary, off-the-shelf meter will work. A couple years ago I got him to draw up a
schematic for a meter that anyone might be able to build and he drew the plan at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/ORMUSmeter.jpg
ona piece of scrap paper. You can see a
cleaner version of the circuit diagram at:
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/ORMUSmeter2.jpg
As far as I know, no one else has tried
this method for detecting ORMUS.
Others have also commented on this
topic:
Subject: electrically (static?)
charged
Date: Fri, 25 Apr 200322:13:07-0700
Hey Ya'll,
Does anyone have any ideas why
ORMs (new term avoiding previous and easier to type) would throw sparks from
dispenser bottle to fingers? They jump at least 1/2 inch, loud enough to hear across the room, and sting
too!
I quizzed Barry on this one and he doesn't
have a clue. This could get back to the Arkspark issues. Bottles certainly aren't
capacitors or Orgone generators. Go figure.
From: "Michael Burbury
Date: Wed, 10 Dec 200821:58:04-0000
Subject: [ORMUS] Ormus - To Magnet or Not to Magnet - that is the question...
Hi there all,
I seem to be getting increasingly confused
with respect to what people are doing to "create" their Ormus and observed
reports of how Ormus reacts to Magnets, EMF, Static Electricity Fields and so on.
In all my experimentation, I see that
Ormus is basically repelled by Magnets, EMF and the like, yet I see others
using magnetic blenders, even saw a bottle surrounded by magnets which simply made me think "what
self-respecting Ormus would want to stay in there!?!". Then you have the use of magnetite which is slightly magnetic, though generally does
not maintain a magnetic memory.
So the question is:
Does Ormus get
attracted to or charged by a magnetic or static electricity field - or does it get repelled by it?
Experiment
1.While doing a wet method precipitate, get
a very large piece of Styrofoam, rub it with a soft cloth to build up a large static electrical field,
then place it over the container you do the precipitate in. In all cases I
have tried this, the precipitate is repelled - in fact it RUNS from the field so fast it’s not
funny.
(Precipitation done in literally 5
mins!)
Experiment
2.Cut a hole in the same Styrofoam block big
enough to fit a small bottle. Put some precipitate into a small bottle and then into the Styrofoam hole
and cover it over so its dark. The foam has still got a fairly large static
electrical field, but this time, after only a few days, take the bottle out and you have TWICE the
precipitate in the bottle than what you had when you put it in there!
What tha!
Its seemsto be the same with magnetic fields as
well. If the field is all pointing in one direction (IE: North) and you bring that near some Ormus from just one side, it gets repelled. Yet, if the field alternates (IE: North +
South) and completely surrounds something that Ormus can hide in, it’s like a
mega attractant.
So I am confused. I have done experiment
after experiment and I am at a loss as to why Ormus can be attractive in some
situations, but repelled in others. However, I can see why the magnetic blender could use a little work -
there is nowhere for the Ormus to hide, so I'm guessing after a few seconds -
its outa there! Perhaps if the design had the ability to include both upper
and lower magnets and perhaps something suspended in the middle for the Ormus
to hide in?
Anyway, open thread for discussion, to
magnet or not to magnet?
Cheers...
Michael Burbury
http://www.OrmusMinerals.com/MB-ORMUS-Charger1.htm