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The "Hutchison Effect" Does Not Exist -was: Reprehensor Hit Pieceon Judy Wood
Mark S. Bilk
The phenomena in all of the "Hutchison Effect" videos that I've seen can easily be created by conventional means.
The ones with objects flying upwards can be created by hiding pieces of iron inside the objects, placing them in a wooden box that has the video camera attached rigidly to it and an electromagnet (or several of them) attached under the bottom of the box. The electromagnets are switched on, the camera is started, and the box is rotated 180 degrees so that the objects are now hanging upside down, held up by the electromagnets. But since the camera rotated with the box the video does not show the rotation. The electromagnets, which are holding the objects to what is now the top of the box, but appears in the video as still the bottom, are switched off. The objects fall down, but in the fraudulently inverted video, they appear to rise up.
Videos that show little objects jumping up and down can be made with the use of an ordinary high-voltage generator (e.g. Van de Graaff). The objects come into contact with a high-voltage electrode, receive a charge, are then repelled by the electrode (since it has the same polarity charge) and jump into the air, lose their charge, fall back onto the electrode, and the cycle repeats. I think it can even be done by rubbing an insulating rod with a piece of fur to charge the rod, and using small bits of paper.
Objects can be made to rotate by creating a rotating magnetic field around them, as is done in every induction motor on the planet.
Metal bars with gnarly ends can be molded, in particular in molds made from plants with short stubby roots.
Note also that Hutchison claims that his "Effect" results when high-voltage DC and RF fields are simultaneously present in the same space. But this occurs all the time in high-power vacuum tube radio, TV, and radar transmitters, and RF generators for particle accelerators. The dual fields are of extremely high intensity inside the vacuum tubes themselves. This has been going on for 80 years, but there have never been any reports of antigravity or of objects losing their cohesion in these environments. This proves that the "Hutchison Effect" cannot possibly exist.
Finally, unless one is using as a computer terminal an ancient teletype machine that lacks lower-case, it's not advisable to type in all-caps. It comes across as screaming or insanity, not emphasis.
Mark