727 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
727 lines
35 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
|
|
(word processor parameters LM=1, RM=70, TM=2, BM=2)
|
|
|
|
Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
|
|
Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
|
|
PO BOX 1031
|
|
Mesquite, TX 75150
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foo Fighters and the Kugleblitz
|
|
by
|
|
Al Pinto
|
|
taken from ParaNet
|
|
additional material by Vangard
|
|
|
|
We, because of the infinitesimal size of the Universe, can
|
|
quite easily say that the probability of the Earth being the only
|
|
planet inhabited by intelligent beings is not logical. However,
|
|
while there is research going on today in order to prove the
|
|
existence of extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) by listening in
|
|
on the radio waves of space, I wonder; have we been contacted
|
|
already? Is there something in the UFO phenomenon that proves
|
|
the existence of extraterrestrials? Let's look at the facts.
|
|
|
|
Thousands of people from all around the world report the
|
|
sightings of strange aerial phenomenon every year. It has been
|
|
going on for many years, but not as much as from 1947 to present.
|
|
Due to the fact that so many people have seen objects in the sky
|
|
that they can't identify, we could at least admit that there is
|
|
sufficient reason to believe that UFO's exist. We can't
|
|
scientifically prove their existence just based on that fact but
|
|
we can't ignore it either. So our next logical step would be to
|
|
get more data.
|
|
|
|
Is the origin of all UFO's extraterrestrial? Is there a
|
|
possibiliy that at least some may come from Earth and Earth
|
|
technology? The answer to that question is yes, some are Earth
|
|
originated. People can easily mistake a plane or helicopter
|
|
flying at night as a UFO and have already. Some even thought that
|
|
Venus was one. However, while most UFO's could be explained,
|
|
there are an astonishing number of reports that cannot. They
|
|
include reports from people such as police chiefs, scientists,
|
|
pilots, and most interestingly, astronauts. There is plenty of
|
|
information publically available that is reputable about details
|
|
of their encounters.
|
|
|
|
Our next step should be to concentrate on these unexplainable
|
|
sightings. Out of these, is it still possible that the objects
|
|
could come from Earth? Dr. Renato Vesco thought so. In his book
|
|
"Intercept UFO," he writes about his experience and information
|
|
with Nazi Germany. I am going to include a paper written by him
|
|
but first let me tell you his credentials.
|
|
|
|
Renato Vesco is a fully liscensed aircraft engineer and a
|
|
specialist in aerospace and ramjet developements. He attended
|
|
the University of Rome and, before WWII, studied at the German
|
|
Institute for Aerial Developement. During the war, Vesco worked
|
|
with the Germans at the Fiat Lake Garda secret installations in
|
|
Italy. In the 1960's, he worked for the Italian Air Ministry of
|
|
Defense as an undercover technical agent, investigating the UFO
|
|
mystery.
|
|
|
|
Page 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
He writes:
|
|
|
|
"On November 27, 1944, a B-27 of the United States Air Force,
|
|
returning from a raid on Speyer, West Germany, encountered a
|
|
huge, orange colored light moving upward at an estimated speed
|
|
of 500 MPH. When the pilots reported, sector radar had
|
|
reported negatively, because nothing had registered on the
|
|
screen.
|
|
|
|
But the object seen by the returning bomber was only the first of
|
|
numerous others spotted by American pilots over wartime Germany
|
|
and promptly baptized 'foo-fighters.'
|
|
|
|
Fighter pilots Falls and Backer, of the 415th Squadron,
|
|
reported such an encounter a month later forcing the Air Force to
|
|
admit that such objects might exist. Later encounters with foo
|
|
fighters led experts to assume they were German inventions of a
|
|
new order employed to baffle radar.
|
|
|
|
How close they came to the truth, they learned only when the
|
|
war was over and Allied Intelligence teams moved into the secret
|
|
Nazi plants. The foo-fighters seen by American pilots were only a
|
|
minor demonstration, a fraction of a vast variety of methods used
|
|
to confuse radar and interrupt electro magnetic currents.
|
|
|
|
Work on the German anti-radar Feurball, or fireball, had been
|
|
speeded up during the fall of 1944 at a Luftwaffe experimental
|
|
center near Oberammergau, Bavaria. There, and at the aeronautical
|
|
establishment at Weiner Neustadt, the first fireballs were
|
|
produced. Later, when the Russians moved closer to Austria, the
|
|
workshops producing the fireballs were moved to the Black Forest.
|
|
|
|
Fast and remote controlled, the fireballs, equipped with
|
|
klystron tubes operating on the same frequency as Allied radar,
|
|
which could eliminate the blips from radar screens. This allowed
|
|
them to remain practically invisible to ground control.
|
|
|
|
The Nazi Feurball failed to interfere with the Allied air
|
|
offensive. The foo fighters had been launched too late and could
|
|
no longer change the course of events, but in themselves they were
|
|
significant not only because they were the outcome of a technical
|
|
evolution which could have led to more dangerous weapons, but also
|
|
because they showed that Nazi technology had moved in a direction
|
|
far beyond anything expected by Allied Intelligence.
|
|
|
|
As the fall of Germany approached, the Nazi Leaders reverted
|
|
to an ambitious project created by Gauleiter Franz Hofer who had
|
|
become high commissioner for the Italian Tyrol and the Southern
|
|
Alps. The project foresaw setting up an incredible fortress in
|
|
the mountains, including parts of Italy, Austria and Bavaria.
|
|
|
|
Hofer submitted his plan to Hitler's aide, Martin Bormann in
|
|
November 1944, having prepared for this moment back in 1938 when
|
|
Nazi agents carefully mapped all mountain passes, caves, bridges,
|
|
highways, and located sights for underground factories, munitions
|
|
dumps, arms and food caches. To complete work on this fortress,
|
|
Hofer demanded a slave labor force of a quarter of a million, to
|
|
be composed of 70% Austrian workers and 30% men of the Tyrolese
|
|
home guard.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
So-called U-Plants were to be set up underground as gigantic
|
|
workshops and launching pads for the secret weapons which were to
|
|
turn the tide of the war in favor of the Nazis.
|
|
|
|
Among these were some 74 tunnels along Lake Garda, in
|
|
Northern Italy, which were to be adapted and transformed into a
|
|
vast assembly plant by FIAT of Turin in close collaboration with
|
|
the department of Minister Albert Speer. Seven other tunnels
|
|
along Lake Garda, near Limone, were to produce several weapons
|
|
tested at the Hermann Goering Institute of Riva del Garda.
|
|
|
|
According to the archives of the German High Command and of
|
|
the Allied Combined Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee, other
|
|
plants in vital areas of Central Germany, code named M-Werke, were
|
|
to produce powerful missles such as the giant A.9/A.10 destined to
|
|
destroy New York and Washington. But most important was the
|
|
Alpine area, for it was from there that the supreme weapons were
|
|
to come.
|
|
|
|
This report, never released by the Allies, was made by a
|
|
French diplomat. It was forwarded to Free French Intelligence
|
|
Headquarters at Algiers. The top secret report reffered to the
|
|
blue clouds as something approaching anti-aircraft projectiles
|
|
based on the grisou (fire damp) gas found in mines, and which had
|
|
been succesfully tried against other bombers over Lake Garda.
|
|
|
|
The French report was intercepted by Italian agents and
|
|
deciphered at SID (Italian Counter-Intelligence) Headquarters at
|
|
Castiglione della Stiviere. The message was later captured by a
|
|
military intelligence team operating for the eighth Army in Italy.
|
|
|
|
The contents of the message was no novelty to the Allies.
|
|
Already, some time ago, shortly after the bombing of Dresden,
|
|
British and American intelligence had obtained a brief account
|
|
concerning the use of some such weapon used against a group of
|
|
twelve American bombers.
|
|
|
|
That message, which came from an agent in Switzerland
|
|
attached to Allen Dulle's team, also stated the attacker had been
|
|
|
|
"a strange hemispherical object which flew at fantastic speeds
|
|
and destroyed the bombers without using firearms.'
|
|
|
|
Then, after the German surrender in May, 1945, a team of
|
|
British agents, investigating the files of some of the underground
|
|
factories in the Black Forest, discovered that a large number of
|
|
documents concerned 'important experiments made with LIQUID OXYGEN
|
|
for new turbine engines capable of developing extraordinary
|
|
power.'
|
|
|
|
Other documents described the use of 'gaseous explosives'
|
|
which had been originally tested in Austria in 1936. Their
|
|
existence was later confirmed by the ALSOS Mission and by Dr. Hans
|
|
Friedrich Gold, of the Laboratory for Aeronautical Research at
|
|
Volkenrode. The ejection of gas explosives had been part of the
|
|
program tackled by researchers on Lake Garda and later tested with
|
|
success by the circular flying object against Allied bombers. This
|
|
object, in German military files, already had an operational name:
|
|
'Round Lightning' (Kugelblitz).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long and close observation between the special Air Research
|
|
Corps of the SS, Austrian research centers in Vienna, the Hermann
|
|
Goering Works and the vast complex of underground G-Works had
|
|
previously produced amazing improvement on the fireball or foo-
|
|
fighter which, despite it's anti-radar effectiveness, remained
|
|
comparatively harmless. But by combining the principle of the
|
|
aircraft with a round, symmetrical plane with direct gyroscopic
|
|
stabilization, employing an ejector-gun using grisou and a
|
|
gelatinous organic/mettalic fuel for a total reaction turbine,
|
|
adding remote control, vehicle take off, infrared seeking
|
|
equipment and electrostatic firing systems, the harmless fireball
|
|
became the lethal Kugelblitz!
|
|
|
|
Believe me, I can prove what I say (Vesco). The Kugelblitz,
|
|
to be on the safe side, employed, in addition to it's
|
|
electrostatic firing system, a similar system based on short waves
|
|
and built by the Patent Verwertungs Gesselschaft of Salzburg,
|
|
Austria. The whole thing formed one compact, round mass which had
|
|
absolutely nothing in common with any flying object ever produced
|
|
before.
|
|
|
|
In documents found by British Intelligence teams and
|
|
submitted to the British Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee -
|
|
documents which I have been able to study - these and many other
|
|
details are known. They can be found in the Sub-Committee's
|
|
Final Report Number 61 on the 'Weapons Section of the L.F.A.,
|
|
Volkenrode.'
|
|
|
|
Kugelblitz, together with it's "younger brothers of the
|
|
fireball, lens-shaped bomb and other weapons, began the real
|
|
history of the UFO's. In itself, it was a second generation
|
|
fireball.
|
|
|
|
The 'round lightning' weapon, the incredibly fast and
|
|
mysterious disk-shaped craft that had been rumored and sighted in
|
|
action, was used only once. As the Allied forces crossed the
|
|
Rhine, the only craft of it's type was destroyed by the SS on
|
|
instructions from Berlin, to prevent it's capture. But ever
|
|
since, due to the severe censorship imposed by 'T' force of the
|
|
British Army in Germany, and later, thanks to the complete
|
|
blackout imposed by London, nothing more was heard of "Round
|
|
Lightning."
|
|
|
|
I know that agents of the 'T' force camp at Bad Gandersheim
|
|
closely examined the documents found in the G-Works, documents
|
|
which had been elaborated by the technical general staff of the SS
|
|
and by technical control of the Henshel and Zeppelin works. These
|
|
documents concern the propulsion unit of the Kugelblitz prototype
|
|
built by the Kreislaufbetrieb Motor D.W. in 1943 for the F.F.K.F.
|
|
(Forschungsinstitut for Kraftfhart and Fahzeugmotoren) at
|
|
Stuttgart-Untertuerkheim and perfected by Professors Kamm and
|
|
Ernst.
|
|
|
|
The British called this motor an 'oxygen recycle system.' It
|
|
was later abandoned in favor of the Walter turbine, powered by
|
|
hydrogen peroxide. The documents found discussed the possibility
|
|
of using both systems in a compound-type propulsion unit.
|
|
|
|
To these basic facts, I must add: A mass of documents and
|
|
equipment were taken by British 'T' teams to Bedford and then to
|
|
Canada and Australia.
|
|
Page 4
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In a certain sense, the British were more intelligent than
|
|
the Americans, for they permitted German scientists to complete
|
|
their work in Germany on the sight where they had worked all
|
|
through the war - only, of course, under close supervision. This
|
|
happened at Darmstadt and Goettingen.
|
|
|
|
Later on, these installations were dismantled and shipped to
|
|
Britain. The Transport Service of the British Ministry of
|
|
Aviation discreetly shipped the scientists and documents to
|
|
Britain, Canada and Australia, in successive phases. Lists of
|
|
the scientists to be sent overseas had been compiled in the spring
|
|
of 1944 by the B.I.O.S. and formed separate and specialized
|
|
teams.
|
|
|
|
One such team, composed of Proffessor Ben Lockspeiser and
|
|
W.J. Richards, Dr. S.H . Hollingdale and C aptain A.D. Green,
|
|
handled 'advanced projects, missles, jet and turbine craft.'
|
|
Another, including T.A. Taylor and M.A. Wheeler, investigated
|
|
German advances in the field of Thermo-refraction. Another team,
|
|
which obtained the services of Dr. Ernst Westermann, former
|
|
director of the F.D.R.P. Institutes of Speyer and Saarbrucken,
|
|
concentrated on the fireball projects.
|
|
|
|
The then Ministry of Aircraft Production, similar to the
|
|
German wartime Jaegerstab, ceased to exist officially on March 31,
|
|
1946, and became part of the Ministry of Supply.
|
|
|
|
In the years that followed, these teams, and especially the
|
|
experts headed by Professor Lockspeiser, worked on a multitude of
|
|
German projects, adapting these to their own experiments in the
|
|
field of 'suction' wings and on the work of two German scientists
|
|
during the war, Professors Prandtl and Busemann, to develop a high
|
|
speed fighter in which the air intake along the wings was
|
|
discharged through a half-moon-shaped crescent along the fuselage
|
|
in order to both drive and support the vehicle at high speeds.
|
|
|
|
This research comes to mind when one remembers the incident
|
|
of January 3, 1956. A Cessna, employed on a job of aerial
|
|
photography near Pasadena, encountered three circular flying
|
|
objects which circled it at a speed of 1600 mph and at a distance
|
|
of two miles. One of these objects, in suddenly breaking away
|
|
from the formation, gave off a long, vaporous trail as it sped
|
|
through a cumulous cloud, cutting the cloud in two. 'Exactly as
|
|
if it had sucked up the cloud., ' the Cessna pilot exclaimed
|
|
later.
|
|
|
|
Back in 1946, the British Broadcasting Corporation announced
|
|
that Britain 'would soon have aircraft capable of speeds well over
|
|
1000 mph, that, according to some experts, such craft had already
|
|
been built and that, in the near future, they could circumnavigate
|
|
the globe several times because they needed only fuel for take off
|
|
and landing..'
|
|
|
|
Other British sources mentioned aircraft capable of speeds of
|
|
several thousand miles an hour.
|
|
|
|
More than twenty years have passed since the otherwise so-
|
|
eminently-careful BBC boasted of 'Britain's planes of the future,'
|
|
and officially these aircraft still remain little more than a
|
|
dream. And yet, did not Ben Lockspeiser, the man who was in
|
|
|
|
Page 5
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
charge of the most responsible 'T' teams, declare that 'such craft
|
|
would need no fuel?' Did he not imply that such craft would gain
|
|
their own propellant from the atmosphere by suction and expulsion?
|
|
|
|
On June 26, 1953, an intensely luminous flying object
|
|
majestically crossed the night sky of Albacete, Spain, at an
|
|
altitude of 60 miles.
|
|
|
|
In Britain, scientific papers produced by members of the 'T'
|
|
teams showed suggestive titles such as 'Boundary Layer Flow Over a
|
|
Permeable Surface Through Which Suction is Applied' (J.H.
|
|
Preston), 'The Aerodynamics of Porous Sheets' by G.J. Taylor, and
|
|
Pankhurst's Aerofoil Catalogue.
|
|
|
|
In 1959, aeronautical engineer N.S. Currey wrote: 'Canada
|
|
today must be counted among the most advanced aeronautical powers
|
|
in the world', and added cautiously, 'This refers above all to the
|
|
field of jet propulsion.'
|
|
|
|
The Canadian Department of Mines and the Technical Surveys
|
|
Mapping Branch reserved a vast area - 125,000 square miles - for
|
|
production of experimental aircraft. This was one of the
|
|
decisions reached by the committees of the Commonwealth Conference
|
|
on Aeronautical Research. This desolate, heavily woooded and
|
|
mountainous region between British Columbia and Alberta, with the
|
|
Peace River district as it's Northern frontier and Washington
|
|
State to the South, was an ideal location - few and easily
|
|
controlled roads, few settlements, few railroads, but good
|
|
communications in the north and the south via the trunk line from
|
|
Prince George to Edmonton and that from Vancouver to the United
|
|
States border, and only one major highway, to Alaska.
|
|
|
|
Britain already had considerable wartime experiance in this
|
|
sort of enterprise. In 1942, at the height of the German raids,
|
|
the RAF had set up five secret airports in the very heart of the
|
|
New Forest, in Hampshire.
|
|
|
|
The big thing about these installations was the fact that
|
|
they included complete industrial plants, decentralizing major
|
|
groups essential for war production. They were called 'shade
|
|
workshops.' The Germans, too, had much experience in this field.
|
|
One of their major plants at Volkenrode resisted all attempts at
|
|
aerial identification throughout the war.
|
|
|
|
Neither the British nor the Americans, on an official level,
|
|
saw eye to eye in scientific matters at the close of the war
|
|
against Germany and afterward.
|
|
|
|
The United States' refusal to share atomic secrets with
|
|
Britain was never quite forgotten in Whitehall, and Britain set
|
|
out to prove, with Canada, that she was well able to produce her
|
|
own fission bomb. If Congress steadfastly accused the British of
|
|
giving little or nothing in return for information, the British
|
|
felt they had been mistrusted and severely neglected. They
|
|
preferred to go ahead with their plans in Canada.
|
|
|
|
The fact that the area has been photographed again and again
|
|
by high altitude reconnaissance planes, both U.S. and Russian,
|
|
does not perturb the Canadian or British authorities. The plants
|
|
and saucer ports are underground, hidden in primeval forests of
|
|
Columbia.
|
|
Page 6
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The question immediately arises: Why have not Britain and
|
|
Canada made such craft available to their other partners in the
|
|
North Atlantic Treaty Organization?
|
|
|
|
I (Vesco) believe there may be many answers to such a
|
|
question, but one of the main points is this: Lack of confidence
|
|
and fear of being exploited remain rife among the nations, as they
|
|
are among people. And why should not Britain and her Commonwealth
|
|
partner retain one major trump card which, one day, may become
|
|
invaluable? The pooling of scientific secrets is rarely entirely
|
|
sincere.
|
|
|
|
All the evidence, all the knowhow of British scientists
|
|
before and during the last war, combined with the astounding
|
|
progress in propulsion and the discoveries in suction aircraft of
|
|
the Germans, based on 18 years of research into the most secret
|
|
documents of the past war, have convinced me of one thing :
|
|
|
|
The flying saucers do not come from space.
|
|
They come from a few hundred miles outside the United States.
|
|
They mean no harm, and Washington knows this.
|
|
Hence the long standing order to all U.S. Air Force pilots:
|
|
Intercept--but do not fire upon."
|
|
|
|
|
|
This article, which appeared in Argosy Magazine in August,
|
|
1969, is reprinted above in it's entirety. It is important
|
|
because it is one of the few reports that goes into detail about
|
|
the revolutionary technical advancements made by the Nazi's in the
|
|
field of aeronautical research.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, Vesco doesn't offer any real substantiation
|
|
for the existence of the Kugelblitz, which is the crux of his
|
|
subject. However, in his book "Intercept, UFO," he tells us that
|
|
the Kugelblitz was indeed tested some time in February, 1945 over
|
|
the great underground complex at Kahla, in Thuringia. Both the
|
|
Kugelblitz and the Feurball were then destroyed by the retreating
|
|
S.S.
|
|
|
|
So, could this story be considered fact? We have to take into
|
|
consideration a number of issues. First and foremost, there is
|
|
the Nazi's. Could they have been developing craft of such
|
|
advancement?
|
|
|
|
History has it that not only were they at war, which required
|
|
much in the way of manpower, but they took on incredible projects
|
|
such as constructing huge underground complexes at Nordhausen in
|
|
the Harz mountains, Pennemunde and others. They also had their
|
|
Naval Vessals provide support for a very detailed study of the
|
|
Antartic in which they were alleged to have been building
|
|
underground bases there as well.
|
|
|
|
General Heinrich Himmler, the Reichsfuhrer as his S.S. men
|
|
would call him, was quite frankly, a madman. He believed in
|
|
obediance, controlled breeding and vivisection of humans. He
|
|
believed in biological mutation and what could be produced with
|
|
it. He used the slaves for his work force, as well as specimens
|
|
for research.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 7
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Let's discuss this possibility more in the message boards in
|
|
Paranet and the UFO echos. I am starting to get quite tired of
|
|
the theory that UFO's and related matters, are extraterrestrial.
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is being shoved down our throats by figures like "Falcon"
|
|
and "Condor" as well as articles in Paranet like MUGGER.DOC and
|
|
PICNIC2.DOC. As a matter of fact, that is about all I hear
|
|
anymore. It seems that since we want to hear about EBE's, the
|
|
so-called, Intelligence Community, is giving us just what we want
|
|
to hear.
|
|
|
|
I call on each and every person in the UFO community to
|
|
research, in depth, HUMAN history. In particular, great scientists
|
|
such as, Tesla and his experiments; Einstein's theories; Germany's
|
|
secret weapons of the Second World War by R. Lusar; the
|
|
Philadelphia Exp eriment; Admiral Byrd's Project Highjump; books
|
|
and periodicals about Nazi Germany and their interest in
|
|
Antartica; then tell me that the possibility of technology (Earth
|
|
Technology) could not possibly exist that could explain UFO's and
|
|
the reason why it is above top secret.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
This above fascinating document was obtained from Paranet
|
|
and courteously furnished to Vangard by A.J. McDonald.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Vangard Sciences includes the following material to assist
|
|
in further research and understanding of this phenomenon.
|
|
01/26/90
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
There is much available material which can be related
|
|
to the above referrences to the Kugleblitz.
|
|
|
|
Among these, we can include plasma/ion field drive systems as
|
|
developed from the Searle disc, the implosion/impansion effect of
|
|
Viktor Schauberger, the German secret weapon referred to as the
|
|
"whirlwind cannon", Tesla's "Mechanical Oscillator" and additional
|
|
UFO reports over the past two decades.
|
|
|
|
We will deal with these individually in order to delineate a
|
|
specific relationship for those who might not be familiar with
|
|
such topics.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Plasm/ion field drive systems
|
|
|
|
Many sightings, especially those at night, report glowing or
|
|
lighted objects which move at high speed. The Searle effect was
|
|
produced by the spinning of a metal disc at very high speed which
|
|
levitated momentarily, then took off under its' own power. The
|
|
principle is directly related to the Biefeld/Brown effect and
|
|
electrostatic replusion. Voltages beginning at 50 KV and up when
|
|
applied to two plates acting as capacitors will produce a thrust
|
|
away from the planet. This thrust is due to an attractive force
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
from the positive plate and a repellent force from the negative.
|
|
If the force is of sufficient electrical potential, a plasma
|
|
(cloud of ionized gases) will be formed.
|
|
|
|
In the Searle case, it was believed that "free electrons"
|
|
were centrifugally thrown towards the outside rim to accumulate
|
|
the necessary potential for the lift.
|
|
|
|
The mention of the klystron in the early "Foo fighters" is
|
|
again interesting in that it provides a clue to a superior means
|
|
of creating the plasma levitation field locally. Klystrons and
|
|
magnetrons are used in microwave ovens to generate the intense,
|
|
focussed local microwave field for cooking. This indicates that
|
|
application to an appropriate surface at a specific frequency,
|
|
might excite the surrounding air sufficiently to generate the
|
|
plasma.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Implosion/Impansion
|
|
|
|
Viktor Schauberger discovered that all Nature operates with a
|
|
dual principle, centripetence and centrifugence. Centripetence
|
|
was called by Schauberger "Implosion or Impansion" to indicate a
|
|
vortex action which condensed and cooled in the process.
|
|
Experiments carried out by Schauberger included a levitating
|
|
effect which could be acheived with the use of water or air.
|
|
There are reports that during WWII, Schauberger actually assisted
|
|
in the construction of a levitation craft under orders of the
|
|
German military.
|
|
|
|
From "German Weapons and Secret Weapons of the 2nd WW and their
|
|
Further Development" by Rudolf Lusar :
|
|
|
|
"The development, (relating to flying saucers) which had cost
|
|
millions, was almost complete by the end of the war. No
|
|
doubt the existing models were destroyed, although the plant
|
|
in Breslau, where Miethe worked, fell into the hands of the
|
|
Russians, who removed all the material and technical
|
|
personnel to Siberia, where further work on these "flying
|
|
saucers" has been carried on with much success. Schriever
|
|
just managed to get out of Prague in time, Habermohl, on the
|
|
other hand, must be in the Soviet Union.
|
|
|
|
The former German designer Miethe is in the USA and, as far
|
|
as can be determined, is designing "flying saucers" for A.V.
|
|
Roe & Co. The machines, which have been observed to date,
|
|
have diameters in the order of 16, 42, 45 and 75 metres and
|
|
they are supposed to develop a speed of up to 7,000 km/hour.
|
|
|
|
Already in 1952 "flying saucers" had been indisputably
|
|
recognised over Korea and according to press reports, were
|
|
also observed and reported during NATO manoeuvres in Alsace
|
|
in the spring of 1954."
|
|
|
|
In a letter written by Schauberger to a friend, he gives further
|
|
information from his direct experience with the German military :
|
|
|
|
"The "flying saucer" which was flight-tested on the 19th
|
|
February 1945 near Prague and which attained a height of
|
|
|
|
Page 9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15,000 metres in 3 minutes and a horizontal speed of 2,200
|
|
km/hours, was constructed according to a Model 1 built at
|
|
Mauthausen concentration camp in collaboration with the
|
|
first-class engineers and stress-analysts ASSIGNED TO ME from
|
|
the prisoners there.
|
|
|
|
It was only after the end of the war that I came to hear,
|
|
through one of the workers UNDER MY DIRECTION, a Czech, THAT
|
|
FURTHER INTENSIVE DEVELOPMENT WAS IN PROGRESS: however, there
|
|
was no answer to my enquiry.
|
|
|
|
From what I understand, just before the end of the war, the
|
|
machine is SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN DESTROYED on Keitel's
|
|
orders. That's the last I heard of it.
|
|
|
|
In this affair, several armament specialists were also
|
|
involved who appeared at the works in Prague, shortly before
|
|
my return to Vienna, and asked that I DEMONSTRATE the
|
|
fundamental basis of it: The CREATION OF AN ATOMIC LOW-
|
|
PRESSURE ZONE, which DEVELOPS IN SECONDS when either AIR or
|
|
WATER IS CAUSED TO MOVE RADIALLY AND AXIALLY under conditions
|
|
of a FALLING TEMPERATURE GRADIENT."
|
|
|
|
This principle is without doubt to my mind, the "suction
|
|
craft" referred in the previous Vesco article.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The "Whirlwind Cannon"
|
|
|
|
There are reports of another fantastic secret weapon which
|
|
was constructed and used during WWII. This weapon was said to use
|
|
air as its "bullet" and could knock down a brick wall at a range
|
|
of several miles. On the KeelyNet board (214) 324-3501, there is
|
|
a file VORTXGUN.ZIP (or .ASC if using a non-IBM system) which
|
|
gives a short description of work done in the US on vortex
|
|
principles. Personal discussions I have had with various informed
|
|
researchers indicates that a plasma weapon using vortex principles
|
|
is currently in research if not already here.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Tesla's Mechanical Oscillator
|
|
|
|
Another device invented by Tesla was the Mechanical
|
|
Oscillator which compressed air until the oxygen became a liquid.
|
|
It was built in the form of an air cylinder and contained several
|
|
chambers, each of which successively cools the air until it
|
|
becomes liquid. Tesla stated that the device was highly efficient
|
|
and could be used as a power generating system if magnets were
|
|
attached to the oscillating pistons.
|
|
|
|
Refer to the above comments about "oxygen recycle system" and
|
|
'important experiments made with LIQUID OXYGEN for new turbine
|
|
engines capable of developing extraordinary power.'
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 10
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
UFO Reports
|
|
|
|
Speed measurements of UFO's made with the use of radar have
|
|
been reported up to 5,000 MPH. Others move so fast that speeds
|
|
can only be calculated by using time over distance between related
|
|
sightings indicates speeds up to 12,000 MPH.
|
|
|
|
Glowing spheres, cylinders and lens-shaped objects (most
|
|
frequent) are the forms which UFO's tend to take. The use of
|
|
Plasma as a propulsion method would obviates aerodynamic
|
|
requirements up to certain speeds since the plasma would cut
|
|
through the atmosphere like a hot knife through butter.
|
|
|
|
However, above certain critical speeds, dependent on the
|
|
shape of the craft, the plasma would not fully protect against
|
|
wind resistance. This would justify the use of the "frisbee" lens
|
|
shape most commonly seen. In addition, gyroscopic stabilization
|
|
would further assist navigation.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
As you can see, the Vesco article opens many cans of worms.
|
|
|
|
If the Germans combined the Schauberger Implosion principle
|
|
(vortex "whirlwind") with the grisou (fire damp gas) and added the
|
|
Klystron exciter for the plasma drive system, then the Kugleblitz
|
|
is indeed possible.
|
|
|
|
In addition, another type of drive could be achieved by using
|
|
Tesla principles (available years before WWII) for such Tesla
|
|
turbines driven by liquid oxygen produced by Tesla Mechanical
|
|
Oscillators.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
We of Vangard Sciences (214) 324-8741 and KeelyNet wish to thank
|
|
Mr. Al Pinto and Mr. A.J. McDonald for bringing this information
|
|
to our attention that we may contribute and pass it along.
|
|
|
|
If we can be of service, please contact at the above address,
|
|
phone or BBS number. Thank you.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FINIS
|
|
|
|
Page 11
|
|
|
|
|