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Re: As I See It post# 48747

Friday, 09/13/2019 3:15:29 PM

Friday, September 13, 2019 3:15:29 PM

Post# of 57076



There have been an awful lot of opinions given about the AOT and its prospects without any real knowledge of physics. I would suggest that those that are interested in how much power (not much) is required to operate the AOT that they study Ohm's Law. While the AOT requires a very high voltage field, the amperage used to create that field is extremely low. Using Ohm's Law it tells us that power in watts is equal to amps x voltage. A while back we were told that it required only 500 to 800 nano amps to create a test voltage of 15,000. That would consume very very little power. Increases that are needed in a new more robust power supply unit are likely to still consume very very little power.



Indeed and 21 years of pseudoscientific claims have been masquerading as a legitimate untapped industry. Now everyone wants to dive into the details of why AOT didn't ring the bell and swallow whole the theory that something was amiss with the power supply. Its doesn't matter. Its the responsibility of management not Glassman who as pointed out is a commercially viable company with equipment used throughout the harshest industries. Heres are the Glassman specs on power supplies used for the TCPL and KM rigs.

https://www.xppower.com/Portals/0/pdfs/SF_LH.pdf

These are "off the shelf", configurable and able to control output in volts and current from 0 to the full rated amount. The specs are well published and I'm sure one of these many variants are suited for the task and if QSEP needed a custom unit then I'm sure Glassman could expedite any request in a matter of days not months. Nope...Qsep has other technical issues well beyond Ohm's Law smile . C-Ohm-mon Sense Law!


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