User Controls
US Navy futuretek patents thread
-
2019-10-20 at 11:07 PM UTCThis has to be a fucking psyop.
But the inventor even had a patent filed under Northrop Grumman that is similarly sick as fuck for a laser combustion jet booster. His creds are legit. -
2019-10-20 at 11:16 PM UTCAnd that was published in 2004. This guy exists, I don't think he is an Alan Smithee case. This guy is either a crank or one of the greatest visionaries of our times.
-
2019-10-20 at 11:21 PM UTCHe's actually employed in naval research; he's not a crank. It seems more likely to me that these technologies are known to be flawed or otherwise infeasible and that releasing them publicly is a move designed to cause foreign competitors to sink money into research into projects that will go nowhere. The fact that he has patented viable technologies in the past make these red herrings all the more enticing.
-
2019-10-20 at 11:27 PM UTC
Originally posted by Big League jedi Nah. I have been looking into Bob a LOT in recent weeks actually. Watched all his JREs and went down the rabbit hole of all his other media.
1. If you actually review his claims of the specifics, these patents are actually not like that at all. For example he claims they use proton capture to create 116, which decays instantly releasing "antimatter"… this would go contrary to QED. These patents are, as far as I can tell (although this shit is ridiculously over my head), referring to real scientific principles and techniques but just don't give any specifics. Also what Bob described would have been significantly smaller than what is proposed here, where you need massive resonance chambers, plus they need to counter spin.
2. Guy claims he stole some of the superstable moscovium. If that was true, it would be ridiculously easy to take it to any university ot research lab, test the neutron count and vindicate him, and change the fuckin world.
3. He couldn't name a single one of his professors at Caltech or MIT and accidentally said the name of some professor at a junior college.
As far as I'm concerned, Bob is a liar.
I hear you, but that third invention, the gravity wave generator, that does sound just like how he described the UFO. Strange. -
2019-10-20 at 11:34 PM UTC
Originally posted by aldra He's actually employed in naval research; he's not a crank. It seems more likely to me that these technologies are known to be flawed or otherwise infeasible and that releasing them publicly is a move designed to cause foreign competitors to sink money into research into projects that will go nowhere. The fact that he has patented viable technologies in the past make these red herrings all the more enticing.
It's not impossible that this guy just has his kooky theories about next gen engineering and the command has bought into it. You can be a perfectly good scientist but still want to pursue phoney fantasy projects on teh government dime because that's basically the scientist's playground. But I doubt it, I really doubt the absolute top man of NAWCAD would appeal for the patent in that case.
I'm also thinking psyop but in that case... Wouldn't there be 10000000x better ways to do that? Like by shopping it around as a leak in intelligence circles. Releasing it as a public patent and explicitly not checking the "do not publish" box... Doesn't that seen like a bit of a childish move if they really wanted to mislead other states? -
2019-10-20 at 11:39 PM UTC
Originally posted by Obbe I hear you, but that third invention, the gravity wave generator, that does sound just like how he described the UFO. Strange.
It really does, I had the same thought, I was actually looking into Bob since the David Fravor JRE, then I stumbled upon this shit fairly recently. I went back and compared designs and everything. -
2019-10-22 at 10:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by Big League jedi This is either bullshit or the most significant set of inventions in the history of man. This would turn us into virtual gods, capable of travelling at arbitrarily high speeds with no physical interaction with anything else. The fusion drive would be more than sufficient to fuel the enormous amounts of energy needed create these electromagnetic (and supposedly gravitational) effects. And the HFGW generator would basically… I mean shit… I literally can't even put into words how world changing that would be. We would be able to manipulate the fabric of space and time at will. There is seriously no way I could overstate it. This asteroid over here heading at us? Oh look it's now 100000000 miles away and on a different course. Or… Oh this country I don't like? Enjoy Jupiter faggots. This could save the world and bring man to the stars. Or kill billions. Or both. It's as terrifying now that I think about it as it is exciting. I do not think we are remotely prepared for anyone to possess this power. Not even close. We have like 400 years of societal development to do before we would be anywhere near being able to handle this technology responsible my.
Or come into contact with a much more advanced species and piss it off so it then enslaves everyone.
Originally posted by aldra He's actually employed in naval research; he's not a crank. It seems more likely to me that these technologies are known to be flawed or otherwise infeasible and that releasing them publicly is a move designed to cause foreign competitors to sink money into research into projects that will go nowhere. The fact that he has patented viable technologies in the past make these red herrings all the more enticing.
The only competitors are already putting tons of money into stuff that sounds impractical to lay people. -
2019-10-22 at 10:46 PM UTCA lot of this is just revised Nikola Tesla technology. They won't admit this but it started around 4 years ago that they really started getting interested in this stuff.
-
2019-10-23 at 7:12 PM UTC
Originally posted by Kuntzschutz Or come into contact with a much more advanced species and piss it off so it then enslaves everyone.
Honestly, I don't think an advanced species would be interested in that. It is likely that if they are so much more advanced than us, they have already mastered automation, nanotechnology and artificial intelligence so there will be no scarcity of labour, and since they have already mastered these technologies and beyond, they would literally face no scarcity of resources.The only competitors are already putting tons of money into stuff that sounds impractical to lay people.
Well that's the first step to making it practical. Every technology starts out impractical. Accomplishing it in a practical way itself leads to the development of many necessary technologies. -
2019-10-23 at 7:14 PM UTC
-
2019-10-23 at 7:56 PM UTC
-
2019-10-23 at 7:59 PM UTC
-
2019-10-23 at 8:10 PM UTC
Originally posted by Big League jedi Please elaborate.
Look up "Occult ether physics"
Inertial control in all these newer patents was based on his work. Nobody really started seeing flying saucer shaped crafts until after Tesla's work.
https://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/tesla/occultether/occultether.htm
TT Brown also did similar experiments and his were immediately classified by the US government. Look up Otis T Carr also
EDIT: Otis T Carr was friends with Tesla at some point. Walter Russel is another person to look into. Him and Tesla had both witnessed something that made them look into the truth about physics and gravity. Probably UFOs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1561_celestial_phenomenon_over_Nuremberg
People had been seeing them for a long time but until people like Russel and Tesla looked into it, nobody really knew much about inertial control.
Schauberger's work was important as well, but somewhat different. -
2019-10-23 at 8:46 PM UTChttps://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/28729/docs-show-navy-got-ufo-patent-granted-by-warning-of-similar-chinese-tech-advances
Says it in the URL. Just found that. -
2019-10-23 at 9:49 PM UTC
Pais is named as the inventor on four separate patents for which the U.S. Navy is the assignee: a curiously-shaped “High Frequency Gravitational Wave Generator;” a room temperature superconductor; an electromagnetic ‘force field’ generator that could deflect asteroids; and, perhaps the strangest of all, one titled “Craft Using An Inertial Mass Reduction Device.” While all are pretty outlandish-sounding, the latter is the one that the Chief Technical Officer of the Naval Aviation Enterprise personally vouched for in a letter to the USPTO, claiming the Chinese are already developing similar capabilities.
He personally vouched for that one because it's closer to Tesla's tech than any of the other stuff.3. The craft of claim 1, wherein the outer resonant cavity wall is electrically charged.
Electrically charged you don't say. Sounds a lot like Tesla's "ideal flying machine"4. The craft of claim 1, wherein the resonant cavity is axially rotated in an accelerated mode.
Sounds an awful lot like Otis T Carr's idea. Both Tesla and Carr had similar ideas for "inertial mass reduction" or in other words inertial control. Carr used an electrically conductive material (mercury) axially rotated in a toroid around the inner compartment of the craft. The old Vimana technology was said to use mercury as well. Mercury is one of a few metals that when spun/rotated fast enough has random 'magnetic moments'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VimanaPhysicists have found that some liquid metals which appear to be non-magnetic – such as mercury, aluminium, gallium and lead – actually contain magnetic moments that appear and disappear on extremely short time scales
Gallium is an interesting one because it melts at 85F and it's mostly non toxic. If the crew compartment is safe for humans then you would also have enough warmth to melt the gallium and keep it melted. It has to be contained carefully though as it expands when it cools. So glass and certain metals cannot contain it. It attacks most metals, eating into the crystal lattice.
If you control inertia, you control pretty much everything. So this makes sense. In Carr's design it was said, as with Tesla's, that the crew did not experience "G force" when accelerating at extremely high speeds.2. The craft of claim 1, wherein the resonant cavity is filled with a noble gas.
I don't recall Tesla mentioning the use of a noble gas in his craft, but other people have hypothesized that a noble gas could be used in his technology in some way for many years. Tesla learned to leave a lot of things out of his patents after getting ripped off so many times.causing the outer resonant cavity wall to vibrate in an accelerated mode and create a local polarized vacuum outside the outer resonant cavity wall.
That's what would happen when you'd electrically charge a metallic object with a high enough voltage. The air around it becomes polarized and creates a vacuum around the craft, so it actually travels inside the vacuum bubble rather than actually touching the air itself. This often creates a dim glow around the craft.
EDIT: I'm working on something that uses both gallium and gadolinium due to their unique properties. Will not try to patent it, because it'll fall under the "invention secrecy act" and others, making it a national security secret. Too similar to existing technology. Plus, I just want to be able to use the craft itself, not make money on it. If you have this technology, it's like winning the lottery, even if you make no money from it.
EDIT:Moreover, the coupling of hyper-frequency gyrational (axial rotation) and hyper-frequency vibrational electrodynamics is conducive to a possible physical breakthrough in the utilization of the macroscopic quantum fluctuations vacuum plasma field (quantum vacuum plasma) as an energy source (or sink), which is an induced physical phenomenon.
Everything he's saying is true, it's a good patent, but like I said, based on old technology. I've already researched all this shit years ago.
The quantum vacuum plasma (QVP) is the electric glue of our plasma universe. The Casimir Effect, the Lamb Shift, and Spontaneous Emission, are specific confirmations of the existence of QVP.
It is important to note that in region(s) where the electromagnetic fields are strongest, the more potent the interactions with the QVP, therefore, the higher the induced energy density of the QVP particles which spring into existence (the Dirac Sea of electrons and positrons). These QVP particles may augment the obtained energy levels of the HEEMFG system, in that energy flux amplification may be induced. -
2019-10-23 at 10:25 PM UTC
Historic fact - 1911, A US ship the USS Supply , in the Atlantic Ocean, observed very fast moving Brightly lights in a ' triangle ' configuration. At high altitude. What ever they where stuck around long enough for detailed logs to be created . This being the year before the Wright Brothers took to the skies . Furthermore the crew determined the altitude at about 30,000 feet and over 500mph . That would rule out a Blimp.
https://archive.org/stream/magnetism1small/magnetism1small_djvu.txt
"Scientists today think deeply rather than clearly. One must be sane to think clearly, but one can think deeply and be quite insane.
Todays scientists have substituted mathematics for experiments, and they wander thru equation after equation, and eventually build a
structure which has no basis in reality. " - Nikola Tesla
"You can always recognize a relativist, they will either ask you for your credentials, or offer their credentials without you asking for
or about them. "
"Nothing is more fantastical and a travesty of how nature works than is quantum theory. Its very basis has no relationship to reality. "
- W. Russell
I've heard about this shit literally years before these patents existed. I can't remember what got me interested in this subject but I became obsessed with it, and the government started spying on me as a result. The rumor was, oddly enough, that it was the US Navy in particular, supposedly because they wanted a new type of electrical energy generator. -
2019-10-23 at 10:26 PM UTCMy man, you are mentally defective.
Tesla is literally never mentioned and has absolutely zero pertinence to these patents.
Tesla didn't know shit about Quantum Mechanics and was primarily an engineer. And none of these patents have any relationship to his work other than the fact that they use electricity.
The inertial mass reduction device based on microwave resonance to achieve an accelerated vibrational mode. Tesla did not know jack dick about microwaves as nobody built a magnetron till WW2 even though they were known to exist, let alone generating a quantum vacuum. Tesla did not know jack dick about superconductivity. Tesla did not know jack dick about gravitational waves, which we only even confirmed s couple of years ago. Tesla did not know jack dick about nuclear anything let alone plasma fusion.
Basically the only relationship is that you are a retard and think tic tacs look like flying saucers. -
2019-10-23 at 10:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by Big League jedi My man, you are mentally defective.
Tesla is literally never mentioned and has absolutely zero pertinence to these patents.
Tesla didn't know shit about Quantum Mechanics and was primarily an engineer. And none of these patents have any relationship to his work other than the fact that they use electricity.
The inertial mass reduction device based on microwave resonance to achieve an accelerated vibrational mode. Tesla did not know jack dick about microwaves as nobody built a magnetron till WW2 even though they were known to exist, let alone generating a quantum vacuum. Tesla did not know jack dick about superconductivity. Tesla did not know jack dick about gravitational waves, which we only even confirmed s couple of years ago. Tesla did not know jack dick about nuclear anything let alone plasma fusion.
Basically the only relationship is that you are a retard and think tic tacs look like flying saucers.
Again, you're an idiot. Not my fault you can't read before opening your yapper -
2019-10-23 at 11:01 PM UTC
-
2019-10-24 at 4:15 PM UTCAnyway, ignoring the low IQ notorious ADHD ridden troll idiot Captain Faggot, this thread can still serve a purpose. If nothing else, than at least for me to say again, this is all just rehashed Tesla technology. Credit should be given though where credit is due, but you can't expect the US government to do that.