Date: Tue, 08 Jul 2003 01:13:36 +1000
From: Peter Mann
Subject: ORMUS in Aetheric Matter ?
It is my opinion that the subtle bodies (ranging through aetheric, emotional, mental, spiritual, soul and
crystalline) are comprised of progressively less dense matter in that sequence.
Considering the reported association of ORMUS with superconductivity, ORMUS elements may have the necessary
attribute to explain (for example) the dazzling speed and exquisite precision of the world-class table tennis
player. With neurons having a bioelectric transmission velocity of approx 6 feet per second, no way can the
biochemical central nervous system form the basis of calculating trajectories and controlling response at that
level. As an engineer with experience in the specialty of closed-loop control (courtesy of the Moog
Corporation) I can state with complete certainty that the CNS [central nervous system] is short of the bandwidth
required for that sort of activity by at least 4 orders of magnitude.
Date: Fri, 06 Feb 2004 00:56:56 +1100
From: Peter Mann
Subject: ORMUS in Aetheric Matter
Hi Barry,
I worked as a Project Engineer with Moog Australia for 4 years, between 1988 and 1992. That time with Moog
was (so far) the highlight of my engineering career.
William Moog invented the first electrohydraulic servovalves in the early 1950s, and it was the outstanding
stiffness, linearity, speed and precision of the servovalve that enabled Moog to become the leading company in
closed-loop control systems. It was Moog's servovalves that finally gave adequate control of the thrust
vector for the first successful American launches of large liquid-fuelled rockets (up until then they'd had a lack
of stability that caused them to go off course and crash, even though the USA had "acquired" most of Hitler's V2
rocket scientists).
Moog servovalves and hydraulic actuators still control the thrust vector on the Space Shuttles (i.e. they position
the angle of the rocket motors, which are gimbal-mounted), as well as positioning the flight control surfaces of
exotic (and aerodynamically highly unstable) aircraft such as the B2 stealth Bomber. The B2 is flyable only
because the onboard computer corrects the tendency to tumble away from the joystick setpoint hundreds of times a
second (modern combat aircraft are made more agile by designing them to be intrinsically unstable, and then using
fly-by-wire closed loop control to impose a facsimile of stability, so the aircraft is electronically nagged into
doing only what the pilot asks for).
My experience was in industrial applications for Moog's astoundingly fast and accurate equipment, and while working
for Moog I learned closed loop control design practices quite unlike the bizarre mathematical modeling that I
wrestled with in my undergraduate Control Systems subjects.
One of the rules of thumb that we designed from is that the controlling element (in that case, the servovalve) had
to be at least 3 times faster than the frequency of force-modulation that could be imposed on a structure (i.e.
must have a useable response frequency 3 times the physical resonant frequency of the physical structure that was
being dynamically controlled). Usually we did positioning systems, as was pioneered with the rocket motors,
but some applications we controlled with feedback on force or velocity.
If the valve was less than 3 times faster, the lag between feedback and the application of force could go so far
out of phase that the machine would be intrinsically unstable, and instead of going to position setpoint, it could
only oscillate around the required position. So this is where one part of the concept came from.
While I was at school, I studied Biology (had a talent for it), and I remember that back then (1967), the
transmission rate of an electrical impulse along the axon of a nerve had already been measured as 4 to 6 feet per
second, depending on the species whose nerve had been vivisected.
So far as I know, I am the first person to put these two facts together so as to logically establish that no way
can the electrochemical transmission of nerve impulses provide the control loop for the feats of dexterity that are
commonplace in sport, and that therefore we have compelling evidence that there is an "as-yet-unrecognised"
physical feedback/control system with a bandwidth orders of magnitude faster than the CNS. To illustrate that
with the most persuasive example, I chose table-tennis because the interplay between the top players is so
blindingly fast that I personally cannot visually follow the action with unbroken perception . . . and I was a
professional driver with a specialization in high-speed driving, so my visual skills are quite exceptional.
It sounds straightforward enough, but although I have been putting this idea about since year 2000, you are the
first person to pick up on the significance of this. And I thank you for that. Recognition, at
last!
Best Regards,
Peter Mann
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