Pegasus Research Consortium > Inventors
Hyperspace Portal
onetruekeeper:
I am almost done with the portable hyperspace portal idea but I need some technical information. For example, if I wanted to create a torroidal magnetic field about 8 feet in diameter using a battery power source, just how small can the electromagnetic coil be made? The device has to be small enough and lightweight in order to be carried either in a backpack or a small suitcase. The magnetic field strength is of no consequence. In fact, the weaker the field strength the better. It would put a lesser strain on the battery life. To those who think a very high field strength is the best, look what happened to the crew on the USS Eldridge ( Philadelphia Experiment ) or the Hutchison Effect with it's bizarre effects on matter. I don't want to end up with my body fused into the wall... ;D Any advice or info would be greatly appreciated. Cheers!
robomont:
we have delvedinto this subjet,big fans of philadelphia experiment.
madness was one of the setbacks of saidexperiment.
i think it may be possible but its going to be a frequency issue.
alot of folks dont understand that they were degaussing the ship.that means they laid big diameter rope net over the ship.then they wrapped a cable around the ship.in a corkscrew fashion from one end to the other.the rope net acted as a way to keep the cable from grounding/shorting out on the metal deck.then they used an a/c power supply from generators on another ship.my guess is not more than 10,000 volts.as insulation on the wires back then probably couldnt handle more than that.
onetruekeeper:
Ok, I figured out the diameter of the magnetic coil. It is the size of a honeydew melon. All it need now is a field frequency modulator. I can get that from a electronics parts supplier. The field would only pulsate at a specific frequency and is not going to transmit any RF signals. Don't want the FCC on my back...LOL
robomont:
but magnetic fields need high current usually to work.a car battery has around 500 amps.what voltage and current does it need?
onetruekeeper:
--- Quote from: robomont on July 29, 2014, 11:10:36 pm ---but magnetic fields need high current usually to work.a car battery has around 500 amps.what voltage and current does it need?
--- End quote ---
A car battery has 12.6 volts. The maximum theoretical amp at even 1 ohm which is almost no resistance is 12.6 amps. How did you arrive at the 500 figure? A magnetic coil has resistance because the field is trying to collapse which will reverse the current. But even a very small amount of current from a standard D cell would work just fine. Anyway, I have decided not to build the full scale hyperspace portal prototype due to lack of funds and instead will try to build a small scale experimental model. I am not going to risk life and limb by stepping into a hyperspace portal unless I am confident that I would be safe. My hope was to be able to enter hyperspace using non-technological means such as some E.T.'s are capable of doing..LOL
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