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For those who don't know, the Scole Experiments were conducted in Scole, Norfolk, England, from 1993 to 1998. The group (Robin and Sandra Foy, Diana and Alan Bennett) began holding weekly spiritualist / medium sessions in a farmhouse cellar in 1993.
They had some help from the ethereal visitors, and created different devices that were an attempt to improve communications.
One of these devices was the germanium receptor, which is basically a piece of germanium positioned between two magnetic coils, and put under pressure with a screw. The device is supposed to help combine energy from the Earth, from the spiritualists / mediums, and from the 'other side' into a portal between here and there.
I looked at it, how it was built, and didn't give it much thought until a recent article was published about germanium becoming a superconductor when put under pressure. So, what we have is a mini-superconductor positioned at the intersection of two magnetic fields.
The Scole Report can be easily found and downloaded from Archives, in case you want to read it.
They had some help from the ethereal visitors, and created different devices that were an attempt to improve communications.
One of these devices was the germanium receptor, which is basically a piece of germanium positioned between two magnetic coils, and put under pressure with a screw. The device is supposed to help combine energy from the Earth, from the spiritualists / mediums, and from the 'other side' into a portal between here and there.
I looked at it, how it was built, and didn't give it much thought until a recent article was published about germanium becoming a superconductor when put under pressure. So, what we have is a mini-superconductor positioned at the intersection of two magnetic fields.
The Scole Report can be easily found and downloaded from Archives, in case you want to read it.
Does anyone have an opinion, positive or otherwise, concerning this form of portal and contact?At another session, a Communicator (who was not a scientist) explained in simple terms, how it has been possible (and still is sometimes) for us to receive messages on computers, faxes, telephones and tape recorders. In fact, any type of electronic equipment, he told us, is open to possible interaction, even television and video recorders! He went on to describe to us (in a very simplified manner) the basic principles of the silicon chip, which uses a semi-conductor (silicon in this case but the theory is the same), and talked to us about something referred to as the 'cut-off’ point. This cut-off point is very interesting, especially in relation to our other experiments. As I understand it, this cut-off point is reached, after changes in temperature/pressure (remember the germanium is under a certain amount of pressure), The changes in temperature/pressure cause the semi-conductor to become ‘unstable’. This instability is then followed by the 'cut-off’, which is in effect a ‘shut down’. It is, he explained, this instability, or fluctuation, in direction that provides a 'point of entry'.