File: RememberHistory.txt Date: 17 Jun 2008 To view this file, right click -> View source, then use Notepad to Format -> Word Wrap Remember History ---------- We need to remember the history of the Bessler wheel, which history has been greatly suppressed and largely forgotten. We need to recall the more complete history of the wheel. AEP - Jun 2008 ---------- The ancient Chinese used to know about the Bessler principle as demonstrated by the evidence of huge or massive wheels rotating about horizontal axes that they have left behind artifacts concerning. Still, something has caused them to somehow forget this important part of their heritage left from their ancestors. They should not have forgotten. They need to strive to remember their own heritage. I hope they at least begin to remember about their own yin-yang symbol and where the idea of the two dragons comes into play with respect to the Bessler principle. Another more recent destruction of much of their heritage occurred during their cultural revolution was a terrible thing, which thing they ought not to repeat even in other forms such as by the repression of their own people. Hopefully they can learn from the mistakes of the past by preserving their heritages / treasures. They would be wise to microfilm and protect the records that have somehow survived. The preserving of their records should include religious, family, historical, government, and seemingly mundane records (before time and other pressures destroy them by default). AEP - 26-27 Apr 2008 ---------- Bessler Principle Forgotten Across the Earth. The Bessler principle has been suppressed in four major parts of this earth (Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas). Asia. The ancient Chinese have apparently forgotten their own history regarding the Bessler principle even though they should have had enough relics of the past to remind them (the ancient yin-yang symbol with its hot spots, the two dragons tradition, and evidences of past massive wheels and/or axles rotating about horizontal axes). Ignoring heating near the central bearings, I suppose we can regenerate the yin-yang symbol nowadays using IR cameras viewing the sides of two compartment cylindrical containers completely filled with water with power externally supplied for rotation of the containers about horizontal axes. Power might not need to be externally supplied if friction is low enough for the full device. I suspect that the notion of the two dragons either referred to the two hot spots on the yin-yang symbol or roughly corresponded to the two E fields in the graviton. AEP - 14-15 Jun 2008 Africa. The ancient Egyptians have also forgotten their own history regarding the Bessler principle, even though the pyramids should have served as sufficient reminders in this regard. AEP - 14 Jun 2008 Europe. The Germans / Europeans had almost completely forgotten about the Bessler wheel, had it not been for John Collins beginning to remind them. AEP - 14 Jun 2008 The Americas. There is much forgotten ancient archeological evidence for the Bessler principle on the Americas, if one considers such. There were many roadways in the ancient Americas that were straight, flat, solid and smooth. Their vehicles could have had much mass rotating about horizontal axes. AEP - 14 Jun 2008 Coral Castle. In modern times, many (US) Americans have not figured out how the various versions of what is now often known as Coral Castle were built in Florida. The knowledge of its construction was lost with the death of its builder. Its builder, Edward Leedskalnin, left behind direct evidence that he could produce a bearing for relatively low friction rotation of a massive stone rotating about a vertical axis. The stone block about the bearing served as the entrance to Coral Castle. I read in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coral_Castle that the vertical axis gate depended on a truck bearing that rusted out and had to be replaced. Then the new bearing rusted out again and has not been replaced. Most heavy duty bearings on trucks are built for supporting heavy loads while rotating about a horizontal axis. I remember that I liked to crank my grandfather's grindstone up to full speed (which grindstone rotated about a horizontal axis). I remember that when doing work on one of my bicycles (when I had my bicycle resting upside down) that I liked to rapidly turn the pedals so that the back wheel would rotate at "full" speed. I imagine that some of Ed Leedskalnin's first low power production experiments might have been the filling of a bicycle tire tube and then a vehicle tire tube completely full of water (as vehicle tires in those days had inner tubes like current bicycles do today and so both tubes could be completely filled with water) and causing bearing suspended versions of such heavy tires/tubes to rotate rapidly about fixed horizontal axes. Later with his castle under way, I imagine that one of his more powerful production devices would have been a large stone cylinder attached to a truck axle so that it would rotate about a horizontal axis with relatively low friction (with the wheels firm or not rotating with respect to the ground). Once the stone cylinder was rotating at a high enough speed it would be extracting much continuous power from gravity (according to the Bessler principle). Often slow, powerful, continuous running loop cables (coupled to the spinning axle) could have been used to direct continuous perpetual power to locations in or near his castle through the use of pulleys attached to rocks of his castle. The speed of the continuously running cables or rather the rate of turning of the continuously turning cylinder could be governed by the amount of water in the part cylindrical shaped basin. If there were too much water, there would be too much friction and the cylinder would slow to a halt. If there were too little water the cylinder would rotate uncontrollable too fast. The level of the water in the basin (possibly in his "BBQ" pit but probably not, if it was a little more like the name and running dry and hot) would govern how much power he had available. The level of the water in the cylindrical bottomed basin could have been governed by a float valve with the water running from the tank of water located above his "shower". With a mechanical based water pump (obtained from an old vehicle), he could have at times made sure that the water tank above his shower was kept full (using water from his well with any excess clean water allowed to drain back down into his water well if not collected and pumped back up to his water tank). Any water in the cylindrical bottom basin of the pit could quench the cylinder rotating in the pit by supplying additional friction so that it not run out of control. If Ed needed more power for a particular task at hand, he could have scooped out excess water and adjusted the water float down so that there would have been less friction from the water. If Ed needed less power he could have raised the level of the float valve so that there would have been more friction from the higher water level in the bottom of the basin. I suppose that he did not leave behind a direct example of a low friction bearing for rotation of a massive object about a horizontal axis, as such a bearing supported wheel would have been dangerous. I think that he was concerned about the safety of others. Doing almost everything he did would have been dangerous work so he had to be careful. I think that he did not want others to get hurt so he had to keep others away. I am convinced that Ed L. knew how the wheel really worked. He understood the Bessler principle by direct application of it for power production. I don't think that he told others directly so as to protect his livelihood but he gave all sorts of hints like understanding leverage. It is simple if one understands the Bessler principle. The Bessler principle amounts to power obtained from the leverage of the two part gravitons so it really was Energy Derived from Leverage or ED L. AEP - 14-17 Jun 2008 Ed L. may have had the means to put on and take off one of his perpetually running cables onto local pulleys associated with a particular task of interest. Then once he got it working on one particular task he could have been preparing the next task for when the first task was completed by his mechanical slave. For example one simple task could be tilting over a block using pulleys. Another task could be lifting up an edge of a block using a hydraulic jack. Another task could be to swing a suspended block back and forth (continually grinding on the surfaces of each) so that eventually there could be an ultra tight interface between the two. He might at times sleep while it was working on forming an interface or some other job such as lathing or carving out something. He had to be diligent though so that his mechanical slave not cause problems. Another task could be drilling a hole right down through the middle of a huge block of rock maybe using water as a coolant. If he didn't use a coolant something might have melted (rock or tool). To form the entrance/gate for his castle, he might have rubbed a smaller suspended block over the gate block until the gate surface was suitable. He then could have turned it over and repeated the process on the other side. He might have balanced the block of stone (for his gate) about one side over a sharp point and so marked it, then balanced it about the other side and marked it. He could have vertically drilled more than half way down through the balanced rock. Then he could have turned it over, balanced it again and vertically drilled enough through the rock until he made a good connection with the other end. He then could have put an axle down through the hole so that he could have rotated it about a horizontal axis. At first he could have rotated it slowly and then later he could have rotated it more rapidly. He could have used metal or rocks to clean up the edges of the gate. If it started to vibrate, he could have slowed it down to do more selective lathing until it could handle the higher rotational angular speeds without shaking. If the selective lathing didn't solve the problem, he could have stopped the rotation and done some selective polishing on surfaces to solve the vibrating problem. Apparently from the well balanced nature of the gate, he was able to solve the vibrating/balancing problem and it was able to rotate rapidly about its horizontal axis without shaking. The gate was installed with the axis vertical and he might have caused it to rotate rapidly about its vertical axis to put it through its paces and to do final adjustments with respect to the gate frame support. AEP - 16 - 17 Jun 2008 Ed L. essentially had a full time mechanical servant working for him (or whenever he wanted it to work for him). It was not a highly intelligent servant though. He just needed to keep the mechanical servant busy doing all the tasks that he could dream up unless he wanted it to just splash more water to maintain equilibrium and so get that water hot. If he needed more time to think about a future project he could have given his mechanical servant a long and arduous mechanical task to complete. It actually makes more sense that the BBQ pit was a secondary but powerful mechanical servant (working dry and hot as its name suggests) as for most purposes a servant below the shower tank might have been powerful enough. The clean warmed up water spray kicked up from the mechanical servant below the shower water tank could be allowed to be either collected and sent up to the water tank or allowed to go back down into the well. (If I ever visited the Coral Castle some of these details might be more obvious or if others have actually visited there, they might be able to substitute in the correct details.) Also the cylindrical basin shape of the BBQ pit suggests that it normally ran without water in it, as there would not be room for a float valve in it (and putting water in it would send out a bunch of water thereabout and for safety sake, with all the water spray being kicked up, it might not be a good idea to get close to it to adjust a float valve). It seems likely that the BBQ mechanical servant was linked to the mechanical servant below the shower so that the BBQ mechanical servant could supply extra mechanical power and the mechanical servant in the shower could supply the feedback control stability so as to keep the process from running away. If Ed needed more mechanical servants he could have built them if he wanted them. AEP - 16 Jun 2008 If Ed L. had some people come toward him in the dark, while he was doing work outside his castle (which was not his usual place to do work), he might dump or spill a large bucked of water (for that purpose) into the basin in the shower containing a mechanical servant. That would quickly stop that mechanical servant. He could then quickly collect his pulleys and wire cables and toss the cable loop ends over the top of the walls of his castle. this would quickly remove any external evidence of what he had been doing. He would not then let them inside his castle (unless he picked up the cables and pulleys within). He would especially not let them into his water filled shower, where a stationary mechanical servant would be visible. AEP - 17 Jun 2008 As we try to bring back to our memory (or the lost memories) what likely happened during the building of Coral Castle, we need to benefit from the lessons learned. One of the lessons that comes out of Coral Castle is that here we have yet another example of a modern day Bessler-like wheel. It or they (the wheels Ed L. built) apparently did not use Bessler's type of bearing. The then modern technology was good enough for Ed and should work for us today. Ed's wheels were over-unity engines that operated using graviton power because there was enough rotating mass in the wheels and axles, with them rotating fast enough, so that more power could be collected from the gravitons than was lost to friction. He had to add friction to control the process. Using such common modern technology, we can begin to produce power now but for safety sake we need to be careful being so close to such rapidly rotating devices. Ed L. well understood by practical application the use of the Bessler principle. AEP - 16-18 Jun 2008 As an aside, it should be possible to make a stone bearing for rotation about a horizontal axis, using very fine particles of stone as the "lubricant". There would be no danger of it rusting out. I am guessing that there could be multiple same-radius circles to help keep the fine stone lubricant from leaking out. I don't think that Ed L. built such a horizontal axis bearing but maybe others in the New and/or Old World used such stone bearings. I think Ed L. relied on ordinary vehicle bearings for his mechanical servants. I wondered about the truck bearing for supporting his block for his gate that later rusted out (with Ed not there to take care of or oil the bearing). Since the bearing was examined by others when it was replaced, there must have not been anything unusual about it. It seemed to me that normal truck bearings are for rotation of something massive about a horizontal axis but the gate supported rotation of something massive rotating about a vertical axis. Such bearings must be used somewhere within old trucks. Maybe there was some such a bearing that trucks used in connecting to trailer loads that they haul That is all that I can currently imagine. It also seems possible to me to build stone bearings for rotations about a vertical axis that would not rust out, as its "lubricant" could be very fine stone powder that would not rust out. I am guessing that there could be concentric circles to help hold in the fine stone lubricant and very rapid rotational speeds, as the vertical axis bearing is born in bearing. AEP - 16 Jun 2008 ---------- USA. In the United States of America, our history is being modified for example by the miracles in the lives of the founding fathers being selectively deleted from our history or the history rewritten. It is as if the government is unconstitutionally favoring / establishing an atheistic religion. The miracles are being removed from our public school text books and God is being unconstitutionally cast out. The people making the decisions as to what to remove from our history and what to include are making a huge mistake when they favor choices of casting out God. All law has a moral basis and if one casts out the morals and the miracles of God, the government is unconstitutionally favoring an anti-God religion at the expense of the truth, and such a thing would not be good for the country. Our constitution was written for a moral people and if we choose immorality, we are in essence choosing our own destruction or separation from God. We need as much help from God as we can get. AEP - 26-27 Apr 2008, 14 Jun2008 ---------- Use Back on browser to return to Main or go to http://www1.iwvisp.com/LA4Park/ or http://mysite.verizon.net/aldlin/ (all after exiting, if in "View source" mode).