Can You Boil Water With Sound?
Posted: February 2nd, 2008 | Author: Daniel Georges | Filed under: Science | Tags: , Green energy, New Zealand, Peter Davey, sound energy | 1 Comment »
New Zealander, Peter Davey may be the image of determination, and it seems to have paid off for him. The former Spitfire pilot aged 92, has spent the last 50 years finding a way to get sound to boil water, and he believes he’s worked it out.
As usual scientists are sceptical, and they have to be. If a device like was real, it would be revolutionary and create a whole new green power concept.
The device looks like a desk lamp, and doesn’t feel hot to touch. When the bulb is inserted it water, the water begins to boil. This brilliant idea came to him when he would listen to the saxophone and notice different objects around his house vibrate at different notes.
Professor Arthur Williamson has never seen anything like it, but believes there may be electrodes inside the boiler heating the water. He said he would love to try the device, but at the moment Mr Davey isn’t ready to release it to the public.
From my knowledge this isn’t impossible. Microwave ovens send frequencies out that cause atoms (mostly water) to get excited and heat up , and stories have told of the Tibetans using singing bowls for transformation of self and of matter.
I would love to see if this is real, but I have this feeling that we may have to wait a little longer. It has taken him 50 years to get this far, I doubt he is in any hurry.
For more info, click over to Digital Journal.
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an exert from a different web site says something different:
“I cannot wait to explain the principle to somebody who wants to take it on,” he said.
The Press invited a retired Canterbury University engineer, Professor Arthur Williamson, to look at the boiler and he was stumped.
He watched Davey boil various quantities of water, took notes of the energy used and temperatures reached. He left scratching his head.
“I don’t know enough about sound to know whether you can transfer that amount of energy via soundwaves. I doubt it,” said Williamson.
AND:
Mr Davey was fighting for almost 50 years to receive a permit for the industrial production of this heater. And during these almost 50 years, the permission was continually refused to him, no matter what research outcomes he submitted to please authorities, and no matter how hard he tried…When I met Mr Davey for the first time in 1990, he still was appealing to authorities, and still had a hope to receive a permit for the production of his heater – in spite of these almost 50 years of lost battles with bureaucrats. He was even showing to me a large stock of components he gathered to start a production immediately after the permit is granted to him. However, he gave up the experimental production of research copies of his heater.
This site tells :
Professor Arthur Williamson has never seen anything like it, but believes there may be electrodes inside the boiler heating the water. He said he would love to try the device, but at the moment Mr Davey isn’t ready to release it to the public.
HMMM…so much is done to suppress better technology, so hard, no wonder there will be some f%&# ups on the way.