nik282000 23 hours ago

Hey! This is Bill Beaty's website! 100% worth every minute spent there!

gervwyk 18 hours ago

This is a very exciting field, more specifically in combination with asymmetric capacitors. Exodus Propulsion [0] under NASA’s lead scientist of electrostatics, Dr Charles Buhler and his team have been observing some very puzzling and exciting results. Would recommend anyone interested in this to check this out. [0] - https://www.exoduspropulsion.space As far as I know they are still trying to piece together the underlying physics, but they are 10 years in and 1000s of experiments later, some of which has been reproduced.

  • stratos123 14 hours ago

    I didn't realise there was a second EMDrive. Much like with the latter, though, I'm overwhelmingly betting on it being really hard to accurately measure small thrusts on the ground, rather than the drive being genuine.

    • Rodeoclash 13 hours ago

      These come around like clockwork. Even prior to the EmDrive something similar was being spruiked in the early 2000s

MisterTea 19 hours ago

High voltage is a weird and fun area of electronics that a lot of geeks get into via building Tesla coils. Ive built a few HV things including a few tesla coils (pro-tip: a caulk tube makes a great baby secondary) and a can crusher with a 14uF 40kV pulse capacitor. I also briefly built a small 10x Cockcroft–Walton generator using the neon sign transformer from my Tesla coil but the caps failed rather quickly from abuse.

jzemeocala 13 hours ago

THIS is the 90s internet at it's finest. I spent way too much time on this site as a kid....No surprise that now, in my 30s, I'm an electronics technician for a music store.