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Quartz Melting Properties in Brown's/Rhode's Gas
Observation: fractures, then turns to a glowing glob,
then fractured pieces leap into main glob. Effect not yet replicated.
Report by T. Cullen
Pure Energy Systems
Aug. 18, 2004
From: [T Cullen]
To: warlab@aztecfreenet.or*g ; Sterling
Sent: Wednesday, August 18, 2004 10:53 PM
Subject: Interesting effect with Quartz and Oxy-Hydrogen
Dear Dr. Rhodes,
I have been following your recent correspondence with Sterling Allan and am very
interested in your research.
I have been doing some experiments with common duct oxy-hydrogen gas (brown's
gas) using a ER-1200 watertorch made by Eagle Research. Today, I observed an
effect that was quite startling to witness. I was melting some pieces of white
quartz using the flame from the torch. The quartz would fracture and break into
small pieces when the flame first hits it, but I kept the largest piece in the
flame until it started to melt.
After about 2 minutes, the large piece (approx 1 cm x 1.5 cm) melted into a glob
and all the sharp edges melted into a smooth surface. I was moving the flame
around and was melting the nearby small fractured pieces as well. The little
fractured pieces (2-4 mm uneven fragments) also melted into glowing globs. I
continued to heat the large piece until it became clear with yellow fire
radiating through it (total heating time about 7-8 minutes).
Then the unusual event happened: The glowing little pieces jumped into the big
piece! Several of the little glowing globs of melted quartz were somehow
attracted into the large piece, and sucked into it, similar to how smaller
droplets of water might be absorbed into a large drop of water. The little
pieces were approximately 2-5 mm away from the large piece. I know that when
glowing quartz pieces are pushed together, they will merge, but that is not what
happened. Several small pieces on different sides of the big piece
simultaneously leaped into the central larger piece and melted into it. I also
want to note that the pieces were not blown into the big one by the gas pressure
or the flame. Three attempts to duplicate the event failed, and I was not able
to get a repeat performance.
Have you ever seen this in your research? Do you have an explanation of what
would make the melting quartz be attracted into the large piece of the same
crystal (against gravity)?
Thanks,
T. Cullen
Pure Energy Systems
See also
Page posted by SDA
Aug. 19, 2004
Last updated August 19, 2004
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