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boston745

09/12/23 10:45 PM

#81549 RE: Scumbag Fraudsters #81548

Do you know the temperature the steel would have to be to become soft enough for the bible to fuse with it so?

Steel is a mixture of iron and carbon that can melt between 2500-2800°F or 1371-1540°C.



If that steel was over 2000 F, are you arguing that the pages wouldn't catch fire (paper combustion point is about 450F) upon being exposed to that sort of temperature? If the bible should have caught fire after being exposed to that temperature, then why is the bible undamaged by fire? I have the answer, Hutchison Effect can cause the fusion of dissimilar materials without heating the metal.

How do you manufacture steel just so that it breaks after only 3 days of use yet so few Teslas experience this problem that quickly?


https://redice.tv/a/i/n/15/343741.jpg


Hutchison Effect & Teslas Whompy Wheel Issue



https://web.archive.org/web/20221219051803/https://www.businessinsider.com/aladdin-stars-problem-with-tesla-known-as-whompy-wheels-2019-6?amp


Collection of 200+ images of Tesla cars that suffered a severe suspension malfunction, i.e. one of their wheels became dislodged due to manufacturing defects.


I doubt this is the result of manufacturing defect as this person thinks. My theory is the Hutchison Effect (the fracturing of metal due to multiple sources of EM radiation) is causing the severe suspension issues. I believe that Teslas motors are a significant source of the EM radiation contributing to this phenomenon. However, the Hutchison Effect requires multiple sources of EM radiation to combine, one of which is comes from surface EMF during enhanced geomagnetic activity, to cause metal fracturing like what's being seen in Teslas.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/136377865@N05/albums/72157658490111523/


Scientific paper on the Hutchison Effect out of University of Texas, El Paso location.

Materials characterisation of bizarre and catastrophic 'burst' failure in metal by 'Hutchison Effect'
https://web.archive.org/web/20220714010044/https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1179/143289109X12494867167242?journalCode=ymri20&;;;


Material analysis of Hutchhison Effect:





Proof that science behind the Hutchison Effect is classified in at least Canada:

My work has been classified as a matter of National Security by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service


the spontaneous fracturing of metals;

changes in the crystalline structure and physical properties of metals;

fusion of dissimilar materials such as metal and wood, while lacking any displacement;

the anomalous heating of metals without burning adjacent material;


https://www.drjudywood.com/pdf/AffJHutchison4.pdf

boston745

09/12/23 11:27 PM

#81553 RE: Scumbag Fraudsters #81548

Scumbag, the parts of the bible that fused with the steel column should have caught fire upon touching the steel column in a liquified state (over 2000F). So even if the top part of the bible protected the lower part from catching fire from something else, it wouldnt have stopped the lower section from combusting once it was exposed to a temperature over 450F. Snopes article mentions 1 page, but if you look at the lower left portion of the bible you can see theres many pages fused.

Hutchison, in an affidavit, clearly said that fusion of dissimilar materials is part of the effect hes known for. Also thanks for bringing up the snopes article as it led me to the source of the image, an old NY times article.


Proof that science behind the Hutchison Effect is classified in at least Canada:

My work has been classified as a matter of National Security by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service


the spontaneous fracturing of metals;
changes in the crystalline structure and physical properties of metals;
fusion of dissimilar materials such as metal and wood, while lacking any displacement;
the anomalous heating of metals without burning adjacent material;


https://www.drjudywood.com/pdf/AffJHutchison4.pdf


https://static01.nyt.com/images/2015/09/25/us/25pope-bible/25pope-bible-superJumbo.jpg

https://web.archive.org/web/20230715010113/https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/live/pope-visit-2015/an-enduring-message-of-forgiveness/