Vibrational and Electromagnetic properties of Granite

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • With these small demonstrations, what I propose is that several ancient civilizations could easily transport any monolithic size rocks that had crystalline properties, and they could do so quite easily. I further propose that they also capitalized on both the electromagnetic and electrical properties of crystalline rock for several uses. However, I even further propose a somewhat controversial theory that they did not “make” electricity - rather they merely tapped into what was readily available. Today we do not have the same celestial situation that the ancients experienced. In ancient times Gravity was much weaker, and there was a constant and powerful static electric presence in their everyday lives. Back in those times this was a “normal” part of life. Eventually the situation turned ugly and there were times of global cataclysms from the changing of the celestial situation - and the solar system settled down into what we have today. But I propose that it is still "evolving" - somewhat slower - but never the less - still evolving!

Комментарии • 582

  • @mykulpierce
    @mykulpierce 5 лет назад +86

    Note that not all granite has magnetic material in it. It can vary between where granite is quarried. Many of the vibration properties will arise from its Piezoelectric properties as it contains quartz. Typical granite is quartz, mica, and feldspar . I see a few online reports from granite top salesman that Black Granite seems to be the most susceptible to being magnetic. The rose and white granite I have on hand don't seem to react to neodymium magnets.
    Edit: Double checked on all the granite I have. white ganite does not appear to be magnetic, rose granite is slightly magnetic, while black granite is the most susceptible!

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  5 лет назад +20

      Yea - I have experimented with several flavors of granite - and from my experience the black displays the strongest magnetic and electromagnetic properties.
      I - like you - am working on the electrical properties as well as electromagnetic and vibratory.
      Those darn megalithic builders must have had easy access to electric currents and vibration - because - consider this - if the pyramids were actually generators - to assist with the manipulation of stone - how did they manipulate the stones for the first pyramid? (Unless a mud brick pyramid with minimal quartz rock allowed them the power to build the more monolithic ones...) The dating of all the pyramids seems to be a sham or a confused babel by mainstream "Egyptology".
      However, I stand firm in my theory that the ancients had abundant and available electricity and natural vibration by which they "naturally" corersed to manipulate the stone. We just don't have the same situation readily available without a seriously powered laboratory...

    • @mykulpierce
      @mykulpierce 5 лет назад +16

      @@TheGoodVibrations I'm definitely convinced that they understood some principles a physics dealing with electromagnetism. It's very silly to see egyptologist try to explain how to move several tons of stone with a ramp and claimed that a single bend in rope was a force multiplier. These people don't even understand basic mechanics. I'm fairly certain that they had a very Advanced knowledge of electrostatics that we do not use very often today in the application of work. Although I can make a Van de Graaff I'm still investigating how they would have done it and what I'm finding is several promising leads across different cultures. On paper it looks good but of course I need to get the materials to experiment.

    • @NorthernGate777
      @NorthernGate777 3 года назад +8

      @@TheGoodVibrations Its interesting that many obelisks were made from red granite and white.. at least I think that is true. I am thinking why ? Could it be they wanted to dampen the effects of something? Both Michael and your comments are interesting. The North pulls a compass needle to it. There must be something very powerful like magnetite to pull the needle towards it don't you think? Has anyone ever thought that the pyramids of Giza might actually be obelisks themselves and if we were to dig down far deeper, we would find out? That would be wild wouldn't it? I guess it would be forbidden so nobody could prove it right or wrong. I'm just thinking out loud, thoughts that would be forbidden in secondary school. Even if I am wrong, a lot of things do not seem to add up around us on things we learned at school and in the media and I appreciate people showing practical truths i.e. real science. Take care !

    • @miltonreid6740
      @miltonreid6740 2 года назад +7

      Yes, I tested this myself. Some granite has iron Oxide so ferromagnetic.

    • @Rambofpv513
      @Rambofpv513 Год назад +2

      In my opinion the pyramids where cast in
      Geo polymer blocks

  • @thelonewrangler1008
    @thelonewrangler1008 Год назад +37

    You have a new subscriber after I watched this vid. I'm just a basic residential electrician with average scientific understanding but I bought a house a few years back and had suspected there was an underground spring in the driveway when I half buried a skidsteer tearing up the old asphault. I came across the concept of dowsing rods while researching how to tell if I had underground water. Long story short I made some crude dowsing rods out of scrap 6ga copper and belive it or not they worked so well I felt like I saw a ghost. Long story short I understand it has something to do with the piezo electric properties of water running over bedrock and it creating an electrical field that the rods react with but I wish I knew more. Over the years since then I've stumbled upon some wild theories that I wouldn't have payed any attention to prior to having my mind blown with the dowsing rods. The pyramid power plant theory is one of them and as mechanical thinker it's obvious they're more engineered machine than monument. Thanks for posting these vids

    • @hOurworld11
      @hOurworld11 Год назад +1

      Thankyou for that insight.

    • @beingblack
      @beingblack Год назад +6

      Put this in your toolbox of knowledge. The Great Pyramid used to have running water under it. The tunnels are still there although most are either dry or just have some stagnant groundwater that has seeped in.

    • @utube271258
      @utube271258 Год назад +3

      It maybe also useful to consider that when dowsing where you have two water channels crossing each other it creates a vortex of energy rising through and up from the ground sometimes some feet/metres into the air.

    • @humbuccaneer84
      @humbuccaneer84 Год назад +1

      Kelvins thunderstorm.... where grondwater comes up it creates a split cousing inbalance in the outer shell of the water atoms. The slight inbalance the spring creates potential or voltage.... there are videos showing this with running water thru a straw to a Y split and put an led in between the prongs. as for the video even just a coil without a core creates magnetic force. A core simply directs it so it makes it more efficient.
      Resonance. Get stone resonating tone.
      Then counter north and south pole. At 180 of shumann resonance. this is usaully called subtle energy. We like to build electrostatic motors to run on this natural static force we still live in. No change of invironment. This simply does not work with 50/60 hz Megawatt power consumption.

    • @reynalindstrom2496
      @reynalindstrom2496 Год назад

      Hi,do you know about the Swedish doctor Jarl and his friend Henry Kjellson (Oxford university student) studier and films about acoustic levitation made in 1939,Dr.Jarl wrote a book about Tibetans munks levitation of big stones and Kjällson made drawings and descriptions about how this works.if you google Dr.Jarl acoustic levitation in Nepal then you are going to find the films and the drawings. Love from Sweden 💛💙

  • @magnitudematrix2653
    @magnitudematrix2653 3 года назад +20

    Try F sharp on red granite. Vibrating pizo electric effect from the quarts. When you hit quarts with a hammer it produces an ark but instead you vibrate the quarts carbon molecules in effect creating a electric field. Also the silicon acts as a capacitor. Try soaking the stone for 30min then vibrate it you should get better results for the field strength.

  • @jessewilliams6459
    @jessewilliams6459 Год назад +55

    You're paying attention to variables that are a bit removed from the phenomenon. Similar mass between the objects doesn't mean much. Geometry and the speed of sound (which is determined by bulk modulus and density) through an object is much more important when it comes to resonant frequencies, as you will learn in an AS physics program. You can find frequencies specific to each material that will result in this same thing, but it depends on the geometry, mostly height or length, of an object. The water acts as a dampener and makes it a bit more complicated, but not by much. You can calculate resonant frequency with f (resonant frequency) = Velocity of sound through the object / (2 * length of the object). The velocity of sound through the object can be calculated with Velocity of sound = square root of (Bulk modulus / density). In part two you're creating an inductor, which is a coil of wires with a time-dependent changing current (AC) running through it creating a magnetic field, and if you place a permanent magnet inside of the coil it can store a bit more energy. These are used in modern electronics everywhere. I hope this helps your exploration.

    • @sirave6017
      @sirave6017 Год назад +1

      Most accurate explanation I've read or heard so far...hmmm..interesting that the host does not want to comment...pseudo-science folks or those that don't understand all of the related concepts enough love cherry picking science to suite their needs and ignoring other related science (or are simply ignorant/unaware of it).

    • @youKnowWho3311
      @youKnowWho3311 Год назад

      Wrt wave density, didn't he comment that the activity was found regardless of frequency emitting from/through the speaker?

    • @jessewilliams6459
      @jessewilliams6459 Год назад +1

      @@youKnowWho3311 What is wrt wave density? The frequency matters.

    • @youKnowWho3311
      @youKnowWho3311 Год назад +1

      @@jessewilliams6459 WRT, means with respect to. He states freq modulation in his parameters of the test.

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon Год назад

      Do you think this channel is interested in ACTUAL science? lol, no

  • @MrAJScotty
    @MrAJScotty 2 года назад +6

    It's just basic induction, only difference here is that you used granite for your core which has about 3% iron content. In modern times we use iron, cobalt or nickel in the core as they are ferromagnetic,we laminate cores to reduce iron losses and hysteresis losses which are given off as heat. You've just made a very inefficient transformer. You would get the same effect if you used air in the core but just at lesser levels,you would need more sensitive equipment to detect it like a galvanometer

  • @maxford7451
    @maxford7451 Год назад +6

    Very interesting .However, dimensions are far more important than weight when dealing with wavelengths and vibrations. Try repeating this experiment with 1in cubes of material. Or, more specifically tune your dimensions of the material in accordance with the wavelength that you are bombarding them with. For example, 11,802.85 MHz should give you a wavelength of approximately 1 in.

  • @TheKickBeck
    @TheKickBeck 4 года назад +90

    That must have been how the Egyptians moved the granite blocks. The question is, how did they make sound frequency vibrations

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад +55

      Two things. I believe the megalithic structures in Egypt are far older than the "Egyptians". I believe there were huge humanoids (Nephilims) moving the huge stones - but I also believe in the Saturn myth - which made gravity, the electrical ambiance and the vibration situation of the Earth was much different thousands of years before the Egyptians.

    • @flippinswazzy7115
      @flippinswazzy7115 4 года назад +12

      Akin Aydemir I believe if you run a electric current threw crystal it creates sonar. Which essentially is the same thing as sound waves.

    • @beverlymiller8808
      @beverlymiller8808 3 года назад +20

      They have found thousands of bowls that are capable of creating different frequencies

    • @oninjadolegume
      @oninjadolegume 3 года назад +11

      They also had giant instruments like the didgeridoo.

    • @trax9987
      @trax9987 3 года назад +10

      @Akin There is already substantial evidence that ancient civilizations had huge (room sized) musical instruments -- drums, horns etc. You can easily find them in Bhutan and Tibet today. There are many ways to tune sound to get it to a higher frequency similar to how we tune electricity to get higher voltage. You can get a higher frequency with simple tuning forks.

  • @illumencouk
    @illumencouk Год назад +1

    Researchers have demonstrated how low level electrical current increases waters, surface tension properties considerably. The push / pull forces of a magnet, its mechanical attraction and repulsion.

  • @nancyl5804
    @nancyl5804 4 года назад +5

    You can get a cylindrical piece of granite from a local counter top installer. They cut them out in that shape for the plumbing. I see them laying around all the time on jobsites.

  • @projectmagnet
    @projectmagnet Год назад +2

    Granite has quartz [ silica ] and aluminum in it, try a quartz crystal.
    Also the speaker puts out both the vibration motion, but also the changing magnetic field, and the diamagnetic elements respond to that also.
    Hold a neo magnet in your hand and move it around the speaker to see the effect, when it is being vibrated. The magnet also will vibrate in your hand.
    So you are seeing the sum of two different effects, magnetic AC, and speaker cone motion or Tempic field vibration.
    Water is a diamagnetic response, and seems to reverse the force on the objects from a gravity [ pulling to the center of mass point ] and antigravity [ pushing away from the center of mass. ]

  • @sk8pkl
    @sk8pkl Год назад +6

    I think the hardness of the material is what makes it glide along better in your vibrating can. Soft material would absorb the vibration alot more and move less... I think. Super interresting!

    • @integratedalchemist
      @integratedalchemist Год назад +3

      I was thinking that too, metals are much more maliable and softer whereas granite has a less flexible crystalline structure, vibrations would just sort of bounce through and back off structure. I imagine other stone would be quite similar

  • @ronniet71
    @ronniet71 Год назад +2

    Thank you sir for this!!! The giant megalithic ancient granite rock moved into place perfectly . The pyramids…
    Your the man! I Love what your doing, presenting and proving.

  • @savagedragon1047
    @savagedragon1047 3 года назад +23

    I'd love to see this experiment on a much larger scale 🤯

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  3 года назад +5

      Me Too!

    • @hili467
      @hili467 2 года назад

      @@TheGoodVibrations the vibration demonstration was really cool ❤️ just for the sake of thoroughness, is there a way to do the experiment again without the container being over the solenoid of the speaker? Also, any ideas why the granite prefers to shift to that upper corner over the other corners?

    • @hili467
      @hili467 2 года назад

      @@TheGoodVibrations would also love to see this vibration experiment repeated with limestone, please, if you have some handy

    • @harrowgateguy
      @harrowgateguy 2 года назад +3

      I would like to see how the granite would move in deeper water and if it’s buoyancy would be affected. Very heavy granite blocks were transported down the Nile hundreds of miles to construct the great pyramid which is built over a body of water that can be accessed through a small tunnel that goes under it. The builders knew a lot about the size and dimensions of the planet and knew things that have not been passed down to us today or if it is, is kept secret.

    • @geometricart7851
      @geometricart7851 Год назад +3

      yeah maybe this is how the pyramids were made

  • @dogziggidydogziggidy7621
    @dogziggidydogziggidy7621 3 года назад +4

    Fascinating! This provides a theory of how the huge megalithic blocks of granite weighing many many tons could have been moved. Genius! Granite possesses amazing properties.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  3 года назад +3

      But - how did the ancients shape / cut the blocks - was the rock soft - or could vibration also be used as a shaping tool????

    • @thetruthwillsetusfree650
      @thetruthwillsetusfree650 2 года назад +1

      @@TheGoodVibrations very interesting, tesla already said " the moment science will stop focusing on the material science they will make more progress in 10 years than they evver made together"
      He aslo used electromagnetic waves, and Sound to create electricity

    • @leehotspur9679
      @leehotspur9679 Год назад

      @@TheGoodVibrations Steel or bronze pegs hammered in a line will split stone

  • @mr.x2093
    @mr.x2093 Год назад +10

    Apparently the cairo museum has LOTS of staffs locked up in storage. Like the ones the pharoes are depicted holding in the artwork on walls. 2 pronged staffs....like a giant tuning fork.
    Heard the story somewhere that they binded the 2 prongs with string and, like a violin...strumming the string.
    Be interesting to see how a block of granite reacts when just pressing one of those staffs against it and strumming away.

    • @12345NOU54321
      @12345NOU54321 Год назад +2

      Probably the way any rock would if you held a gently vibrating stick to it. Nothing groundbreaking.

    • @lastofthebest5102
      @lastofthebest5102 Год назад +1

      Think Shazam, wizard slammed a similar staff against the ground and the crystal atop glowed and did magical things. Induction of vibrations into the staff created things happening. Wonder what vibrations were introduced when an Egyptian Pharaoh held a staff of a particular metal or substance in the sun or moon. Wouldn't those go directly into the hand and literally impart vibrational energy into the weilder? Rays your hands.

  • @sideeggunnecessary
    @sideeggunnecessary 2 года назад +1

    So it seems like no one but me knows how the rose granite coffins of ancient Egypt worked. So I will explain it. The coffins did not house sacred corpses, instead the coffins contained just common biological waste material. A dead cow leg or whatever. The coffin has a lid that is cut from the bottom of the coffin, this part is absolutely pivotal. The lid must be cut from the same block. The lid will weigh some 17 tons or whatever size the particular coffin is. However the weight of the lid isnt enough, and even more weight was stacked ontop of the lid. So what happens is that when the cow leg breaks down the pressure of the gas is exerted on the coffin, the Egyptians then converted that energy into electricity. The Egyptian civilization may have been 80,000 years old, and they may have had their electrical equipment all annihilated by a solar flare.

  • @ciaranmcmahon1991
    @ciaranmcmahon1991 3 года назад +3

    The copper coil wrapped around the granite creates a magnetic field.
    To get electricity from granite you need it wet and you need it under some sort of fprce

  • @chuckfarley5415
    @chuckfarley5415 Год назад +1

    I know Im late to the party and I haven’t read all the comments but.
    Just thought I would add that the objects want to flow certain directions because a speaker is actually working in a circular fashion. You would assume that they are only acting in a reciprocal fashion but they are not. They are following the frequency motion from a round voice coil.
    If you watch the taller aluminum piece, it wants to vibrate in a circle. Not really sure what this info offers to the experiment but it’s worth noting.
    I’d guess that if the vibrations were more linear, you'd see something very different depending on where your positive and negative poles were. I’d love to see this on a linear plane, something like you did with the transformer.
    🤙

  • @MichaelTheoret
    @MichaelTheoret Год назад +2

    So imagine how revolutionary it would be to find out that the Ancient Builders of Stonehenge and many other Structures used vibrational or electromagnetic properties of stone of various composition to move those huge blocks weighing many tons into position to build those Structures ? In many of these Ancient Structures the stone in which They are built does possess magnetic properties.

    • @terryjross1184
      @terryjross1184 Год назад

      The standing stones were moved a long way from wales to the west region
      In the NW of UK
      granite stones were transported from N Spain to a hilltop in Cumbria
      The stones are still standing but we dont know how to use them
      Be like a piano to future generations who do not know how to play one
      It would just look interesting
      Modern man is quite limited in its belief systems all caused by religions and universities controlling thought
      Pity

  • @nathansire6623
    @nathansire6623 3 года назад +9

    I did not know this either. The crystals in the Granite must be interacting with the magnetic direction. It also makes me wonder if large granite fields are responsible for messing up navigation systems during storms.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  3 года назад +3

      The iron content in particular types of Granite will align with a secondary magnetic field causing the Granite to be somewhat temporarily magnetized - only when in the presence of the secondary magnetic field. This very well could affect navigation systems.

    • @blueboywill
      @blueboywill Год назад +1

      ​@Styx 🤯 I think you may have a really good point about sympathetic resonance powering vibrational tools. I wonder if there is any hieroglyphic mention of builders and engineers having hearing problems or wearing hearing protection. An ancient megalithic jobsite must have been a painfully loud environment, if vibrations on this scale were what powered the tools.

    • @AClarke2007
      @AClarke2007 Год назад +1

      @Styx Sound could shift a lot of Sand too for Counterweights, looks like we`re getting somewhere with our combined hypothesis?

    • @edjordan7527
      @edjordan7527 Год назад

      I live on a granite ridge. We have a terrible time in my area making phone calls and using nternet data.

  • @horus2779
    @horus2779 4 года назад +5

    Granite absorbs water, metal does not.
    Try soaking the granite in water for a few days ,
    maybe even in hot water to expand it and allow more water in.

  • @mikegaustad477
    @mikegaustad477 Год назад +1

    Hello , I am a Audiophile. The best speakers I have heard were constructed from granite boxes. Any idea why the granite is so good with the speaker drivers ? They say the less inert the cabinet the better for speakers.

  • @bernielomax3635
    @bernielomax3635 Год назад +1

    I hate to be "that guy", but if you have studied the Missing 411 series, a lot of the cases happened around granite boulders, or areas with lots of granite.
    Quite often, they happen near water as well. Is it possible some magnetic / paramagnetic / diamagnetic effect is happening here on a grand scale (ie. magnetic portals)????

  • @bluebukkitdev8069
    @bluebukkitdev8069 2 года назад +1

    Not all granite has magnetic properties, though some does.
    The pan has as much an effect on the experiment as the materials placed in the pan.
    The granite was not the electromagnet, the coil was. The granite acted exactly as the steel in that it had magnetic properties and the magnetic (not electromagnetic) field was focused in the granite as well as the steel.
    All in all, this video showed that granite has small amounts of magnetic elements in it, such as iron, cobalt, or nickel (most likely iron). I do not see that the rest of the tests showed anything else.

  • @EUCitizenFedUpWithAllThisCrap
    @EUCitizenFedUpWithAllThisCrap Год назад +4

    Wow, keep up the great work. Vibrational technology must have been how prehistory civilizations moved all these megaliths.

    • @STEVEYREY
      @STEVEYREY Год назад

      That's just part of how they made those structures in their day
      Parts of history

  • @stevenmoomey2115
    @stevenmoomey2115 Год назад +1

    We have Black Granite with Grey Splotches in both our Bathrooms. Over a few years, the Granite has become Magnetic.

  • @brentdobson5264
    @brentdobson5264 Год назад +1

    Might as well throw this in . Years back a Canadian ( C.B.C.) radio interview with or about Marshall Mcluhan put forth his opinion the " Bent " pyramid's bend may have been in aid of resonance with a second frequency .

  • @johnruckman2320
    @johnruckman2320 Год назад +1

    So how would you demonstrate the effects of static electricity on black granite?
    If ancient steles and other structures were used in some form of electromagnetic storage/transmission, how did they prevent it from grounding out (insulation)? But then there's that research on ground effect electrical production.
    Lightening is very powerful. How is it produced naturally? If tornadoes produce lightning from spinning air, how would the ancients have produced spinning air fast enough to produce a charge? How would they have produced a charge differential to produce an electrostatic charge?
    There also appears to be a correlation between the properties of granite and water to transport the enormous blocks. Even Machu Picchu was built upon fault lines with water channels in them.
    The big question though is how did they produce the sound frequencies to change the properties of the granite to make them lighter?

    • @chuckspencer8540
      @chuckspencer8540 Год назад +1

      Tuning forks,which are depicted in hieroglyphs in Egypt

  • @gamble254
    @gamble254 2 года назад +4

    Granite like quartz has a lattice molecular structure when you put it under pressure that's structure changes and makes Piezo electricity. Also if you found the resonant frequency of each different metal you could destroy them effortlessly

  • @omegafile
    @omegafile 3 года назад +2

    If you put a microphone between the speaker and the granite and have at least 2000 watts... when you put the microphone near the granite and get the vibrations from the granite feeding back.. it should levitate. You feedback it's own vibrations.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  3 года назад

      Possibly

    • @omegafile
      @omegafile 3 года назад +1

      @@TheGoodVibrations Yes it levitates. They cover it up a long time. Put a good amp and speaker behind the granite.. and crank it up.. and give the granite an interview.. put the microphone close to the granite. It vibrates itself apart from resonance. If you do it with piece of lead you will vibrate the protons off of it and it turns to gold.... but radioactive for a few days because the vibrating of it apart releases so much energy you will be running. ruclips.net/video/NGeGPt0qJtk/видео.html
      Keep in mind that some granite has a small amount of uranium in it... so this can be dangerous. The frequencies of levitation are 100 khz to 480 khz.... the same frequencies that kill cancer..... vibrates them apart. you can create energy with 3 silver dollars and 2 granite pucks... dollar .. puck/// dollar.. puck .. dollar.. now you have the sandwich.. the center dollar is positive and the 2 outer are negative.... wire it up and vibrate it with a pressure wave... or hit it with a rubber hammer.... Piezoelecric....... and you can keep it vibrating non stop with a tuning fork.. a capacitor and a transducer.. feeding back into itself. You will be surprised how all the secrets of the universe are so simple... a high school student can do it.. they already know how to build musical instruments and find the nodes... the rest of the knowledge is not told to them.. but it's common sense.. simple as hell. The only reason nobody could replicate Stan Myers work was because they built the capacitor pipes and hung them in a circle but were too stupid to mount the pipes at the nodes like a wind chime.... this is so simple.. but the whole world missed it. It can't vibrate if not hung at the nodes.
      Silver is the most conductive metal.... hoard it. So cheap right now.. if the world only knew it's value in free energy devices... it would become priceless. ruclips.net/video/WGyMy9QgkLs/видео.html

    • @meredithgrubb7027
      @meredithgrubb7027 2 года назад +1

      @@TheGoodVibrations i saw a video a while back and it was from a museum, im pretty sure, and they were levitating big slabs of granite with vibration. It blew my mind.

  • @Roonnam
    @Roonnam 4 года назад +3

    Unfortunatly the granite has a complete different shape, non cilinder... thus making that an aspect that could maybe explain the different behaviour...due to a different balance when hit from below less fraction sliding surface etc.. good luck sir .. really interesting..

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад +2

      Possibly! However, every different size and shape piece of Granite I used in the experiment always out maneuvered any other material.

    • @TangoCharlieAlpha
      @TangoCharlieAlpha 3 года назад +3

      @@TheGoodVibrations Perhaps you could obtain or drill out a 1" core sample that would negate the concerns mentioned above?

  • @stevohmelike
    @stevohmelike Год назад

    The thoroughness, shows your pain. Astounding.

  • @r6f09
    @r6f09 Год назад +1

    What if the scale was on top with a wire will how much weight will the vibration remove dry or wet while sound was placed and if their are any changes in weight with varying hertz?

  • @kuzadupa185
    @kuzadupa185 Год назад +1

    There was a father and son research team who discovered small circles in 2d cuts of granite they were viewing under a microscope. They realized these circles, when extrapolated into a 3d world were in fact bubbles! Spheres. What was causing spheres to form in granite? And when? The only time this could happen is when granite is a liquid. Which it was before hardening and cooling. But what caused the bubbles? Imagine this scenario as something you can more easily grasp. You freeze water but inside are alka seltzer bubbles!!!! What must you conclude? Whatever happened to harden the water into a solid had to be fast enough to finish hardening before the bubble popped or reached the surface.... the bubbles on a 2d level were determined to have specific signatures markings. Like a fingerprint. It was a fingerprint of a radioisotope that had a very very short half life... a matter of seconds. The only conclusion these scientists could make were that all the granite on earth had been made at the same moment.... and in a matter of seconds.... gives a new perspective to that "old book" that claims He said "let their be earth/rock, and so it appeared..."

  • @Benny-dv7xm
    @Benny-dv7xm 2 года назад +1

    So did you see the allegement of Ed Leedskalion building coral castle by humming in conjunction with certain technology to levitate huge coral blocks, the one guy talking about the builders of pyramids using technology to levitate the blocks, and the oration about the monks usING certain trumpet-like instrument and chanting to levitate stone to raise a building

  • @peterbird3932
    @peterbird3932 5 лет назад +3

    Is the reason granite moves more freely when in water because it sucks up the water internally whereas the metals do not. Thus the vibrations would be conducted better internally. What about rocks such as limestone or basalt...etc

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад +1

      The granite doesn't seem to have much water absorbed - or retained in it once removed from the pan...???
      I haven't tried other rocks... yet...

  • @johnhamilton4816
    @johnhamilton4816 Год назад

    Try building a tuned radio circuit with an induction coil, place the black quartz next to the coil until you can hear the audio transmission... Then you'll know how the ancients communicated(wirelessly) this is also the technique used to levitate rocks, obelisks, pillars and towers were all used like antenna to store energy into water pools transmitted through the ground... They built them high enough so the wind vibration and pressure increase would create an effect similar to an electric quartz lighter except constant, stable fields were are produced by these structures. This made certain areas of ground live like an amped speaker, any kind of wind instrument would transmit vibrations into rocks on the ground that became live with energy. So the flute/trumpet or horn became synonymous with plugging a guitar jack into an amplifier

  • @MrRybaboy
    @MrRybaboy Год назад +1

    Perspective: *forget physics as we know it*
    1) theory: the same object has different FIXED and UNIQUE vibration in different location. An object's (atom, piece of granite, planet...) vibration dictates it's location in space (not the other way around). By relocating an object in space to a different location, the same object assumes a different vibration. When the object is returned to the original location it will also assume the original vibration.
    2) significance: we can relocate an object by changing it's vibration (an object's unique location in space DICTATES it's unique and fixed vibration)
    3) experiment to prove it: measure vibration of an object (best metalic hollow sphere) in location A. Then move it to location B (at least 15-20feet) or until measuring instrument is sensitive enough to measure vibrational change. Then move the object to location A and induce on it the frequency of the same object measured at the location B (must be low friction surfaces). Watch the object move from location A to the PRECISE location B.
    4) This finding has a potential to change the path of the world as we know it.

  • @TheRotnflesh
    @TheRotnflesh Год назад

    I've said it before: The ancients (we do not name) used granite on one side of the world and andesite on the other side of the world; both of them are piezoelectric, both of them exhibit electromagnetic properties, and both are INCREDIBLY FREAKING HARD.
    We build with walls, and inside those walls are wires; they just built entire buildings out of energy-generating (or energy-resonating on broadcast, and receivable) materials and even processed them somehow we can't figure out.
    Limestone was used seemingly for casing stones, outer layers, or buildings of occupation; limestone is a strong natural insulator. Basalt also exhibits incredible electromagnetic properties, as seen in modern day science ("Electrical and impedance properties of composites: Volcanic basalt rocks" at Science Direct).
    Giza was built from the ground up with basalt, pink and black granite, and limestone. At Baalbek they used pink granite, amorphous quartzite, and other similarly tough materials. All of these are 7.5 or higher on the Moh's scale.

  • @keenanandrews3692
    @keenanandrews3692 Год назад +1

    my friend .i love what you are doing.Please try doing it with the soffiegio frquencies.I think you will get amzing results. thank you.

  • @rezzer7918
    @rezzer7918 Год назад +3

    Your experiments are interesting, their results, thought provoking 👍

  • @BolognaPONYProduction
    @BolognaPONYProduction Год назад +1

    Man I was hoping there was going to be a break through about the Pyramids. Educational stuff though, good knowledge.

  • @DIOSpeedDemon
    @DIOSpeedDemon 2 года назад +1

    Our team believes that this method or similar method was used to Transport the Huge stones at Baalbek , Lebanon. Great video and Much Respect. Rick

  • @immrnoidall
    @immrnoidall Год назад +1

    Im 60 years old and didn't know a magnet would stick to granite.

  • @AhmedAdly2
    @AhmedAdly2 2 года назад +1

    Hello, thanks for the nice video, I would like to ask you about the Magnetic granite, what type is it, I tried to attach a magnet with Red granite, but so far it was weak magnetic strength

  • @GivingYourselfSpace
    @GivingYourselfSpace 4 года назад +7

    Hey, my curiosity is why is our gravity different today than it was back then ? what was the global cataclysms from the changing of the celestial situation ? What do you mean by the solar system settling down ? This video was great to watch, thanks for making it available !

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад +5

      Thanks!
      You must check out the Electric Universe / Thunderbolts Project and especially their videos on the Saturn Myth / by David Talbott and Wal Thornhill called - Symbols of an Alien Sky.

    • @juniorbeginnerbeginner1790
      @juniorbeginnerbeginner1790 Год назад

      ​@@TheGoodVibrations you cannot change gravityin different parts of the universe gravity might act different butit always stays the same has the same properties anywhere you put it it just acts

  • @flippinswazzy7115
    @flippinswazzy7115 4 года назад +2

    You have opened my eyes to possibilities. Thank you

  • @rikitikirobot
    @rikitikirobot Год назад +1

    What if sand was used as the lubricant?

  • @josezavala5845
    @josezavala5845 Год назад +1

    Note: the shapes , sizes are different and so the contact surface is metal. Your experiment does not prove that the granite has vibrational properties, instead it reflects that the granite has crystals that create a more smooth gliding surface. though again, it does not prove the vibrational characteristics within it.

  • @horus2779
    @horus2779 4 года назад +1

    Granite also melts a much lower temperature in the presence of water..
    The melting temperature of dry granite at ambient pressure is 1215-1260 °C (2219-2300 °F);[5] it is strongly reduced in the presence of water, down to 650 °C at a few kBar pressure.[6]

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад

      I did not know this!

    • @bernielomax3635
      @bernielomax3635 Год назад +1

      So...to possibly answer other 1-2 year old questions in these comments, super-hot steam could have been used to carve and shape the granite, and it would be very accurate and precise, almost like a laser had cut it, or like the rock had been melted (because it had!)
      Maybe the addition of vinegar or some other acid helped increase the "carving" rate and efficiency.

  • @theillitistpro
    @theillitistpro Год назад

    I've been looking for you for years.

  • @writingonthewall3326
    @writingonthewall3326 5 лет назад +4

    This is very interesting. Thanks.

  • @2HighNoon
    @2HighNoon Год назад +1

    You need an olivine plate to do vibrational tests on too. Most conductive parts of our minter crust is olivine. 🏆 just found your video, about to enjoy the next 25 min I’m sure. Over the past 10 years I’ve absorbed nearly all the content online about the subject. 🏆✌️

  • @scottyboy703
    @scottyboy703 Год назад +2

    Do u think the overhang from the 1" pedestal u made on the granite bottom, could be "riding the waves" of the water vibrations at the surface of the water? Even so this is very interesting.

  • @bernielomax3635
    @bernielomax3635 Год назад +1

    I see the comments....giants? Musical instruments? What about giants with GIANT musical instruments? Those monks playing those long horns, imagine a giant and how big its horn would be.....and how incredibly LOUD.

  • @Pernicuz
    @Pernicuz 3 года назад +2

    I just saw a picture from ontop of the great pyramid, in the centre there is a big black stone block. I had a thought. Considering the top of the pyramid was covered in gold. And below the pyramid there is or atleast was a water source. Water travels up through granite. Wet granite is a conductor. And i believe some of the structures in the pyramid is made from granite. No? I cant see how the pyramid didnt have any electrical purpose. Wasnt there even some sort of copper plugs or wiring found in the narrow shafts? And traces of fluid compounds? Either way, this topic is so interesting to me. And thanks for a great video :)

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  3 года назад +1

      I believe all of the ancient megalithic structures (especially stone with crystalline content) were functional for electrical and vibration purposes.

  • @DIOSpeedDemon
    @DIOSpeedDemon 2 года назад +1

    That is a Fascinating Demonstration. The Mother stones at Baalbek were moved this way or a similar way. Absolutely great video. R

  • @mrsocialexperiment01
    @mrsocialexperiment01 Год назад +1

    Love to see that granite on 528HZ
    Is this how they built the pyramids by vibrating the 100ton granite blocks enough for levitation ?

  • @GG-od2tr
    @GG-od2tr Год назад +1

    More surface area = more ability for the deformation of the tin to ripple the objects maybe get the same surface area for all objects then repeat. Really nice share though. Thank you.

  • @offgridhandyman
    @offgridhandyman Год назад +4

    You ought try some experiments with limestone, particularly tufa limestone and maybe check out the frequencies of it. Definitely a quartz infused mineral with piezoelectric properties. It reminds me of Ed leedskalinin and his 24 pole mono polar generator.

  • @climatebabes
    @climatebabes 10 месяцев назад

    The metals have a hole in the middle where the water can exit. This allows the layer underneath to be thinner. Have you tried this with granit with a hole or metals without?

  • @haolejohn
    @haolejohn Год назад

    So I laid this granite tile on some back steps leading to the double doors which had a metal casing around them between the brick and doors. When I was done grouting I dampened sponge how I usually do and began wiping. As I go I add a little more water for final rinsing. When I hit the metal jamb with wet sponge I got shocked and it felt like a wire was hooked to the metal jamb. I touched the jamb with my bare fingers and nothing. Then I proceeded to wipe to the other side and hit that jamb and got shocked. When I wiped the damp sponge across the granite to the metal it charged the sponge or something. Very wild. I will have to experiment with this later.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  Год назад +1

      That is very interesting in deed - let us know if you find out more!

  • @harrowgateguy
    @harrowgateguy 2 года назад +1

    I can’t help but think this has a lot to do with the mystery of how ancient megalithic construction was accomplished. Ed Leedskalnin claimed to know the secret of how the great pyramid in Egypt was built he also wrote a couple of books about magnetism and single handedly built the Coral Castle in Florida which involved moving and lifting multi ton blocks. How he accomplished it is a mystery to this day.

  • @mobyhunr
    @mobyhunr 4 года назад +6

    Granite has piezoelectric resonance properties
    In your #1 sound experiment the Granite generated a field by way of exciting the crystalline with the motion of sound. Then the Granite cancel that out cohesion, gravity. It creates its own low level space time envelope.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад +3

      I can understand that!

    • @rccar354
      @rccar354 2 года назад

      HELLO GUYS AND GALS ... I LIKE IT WHEN PEOPLE THINK OUTSIDE THE SQUARE.
      I DON'T THINK THE FIRST PART OF THE EXPERIMENT HAD ANYTHING MUCH TO DO WITH SOUND VIBRATION EXCEPT TO ACT AS A
      A LUBRICANT.
      THE REASON FOR THE 'STRANGENESS' IN MOTION FOR THE DIFFERENT OBJECTS WAS THE DIFFERENT ABILITY OF THE MATERIAL/S TO ACT AS BOTH ELECTRICAL AND MAGNETIC INDUCTORS IN THE OSCILLATING MAGNETIC FIELD OF THE SPEAKER.

    • @bernielomax3635
      @bernielomax3635 Год назад

      It's no surprise that most of the Missing 411 cases happen near outcrops of granite boulders, or places with lots of granite. That's why I came here, actually.

    • @bryanst.martin7134
      @bryanst.martin7134 Год назад

      That is why it is believed by some that the Great Pyramid was a power station. The differing strata of materials act like layers of generation of Piezo electric charge. Add that it sits along a Lay line would cause near continuous vibration and therefore power generation. Whether the power was atmospheric akin to Tesla's wireless power experiments, or illuminated a crystal set on top like a giant street light, or some other method remains to be determined.
      Your BBQ igniter is a tiny crystal, 1500 volts. How many tons of it in the Great Pyramid? The lamps in the pictures could be wirelessly energized providing a modern day level of life.

  • @levelingup5d603
    @levelingup5d603 Год назад +1

    Cathedral power ... granite cavity magnetron + rebar + Organ(accoustic resonator) .. Domed resonaTOR ..

  • @darmoncamere4074
    @darmoncamere4074 Год назад +1

    I had a 5000 w subwoofer it really only did about 2,000 w but using subsonic frequencies messing around I almost took our apartment building down

  • @bender6394
    @bender6394 Год назад

    Electromagnets 101 from a sparky....
    A DC current is required to make an electromagnet. This is what pulls in relays and contractors etc. If you pump AC into a winding, it's main use is for transformer action I.e. converting one voltage/ current to another voltage in a secondary winding. It will not generate a significant magnetic field as the constant alternation of the polarity collapses the electromagnetic waveform.
    The steel wasn't attracted to the granite when you used ac because granite has a very weak ferromagnetic force compared to steel. Yes a strong neodymium magnet was attracted to it because it only needed a small amount of electromagnetic force to attract it.
    The vibration experiment was intriguing though. You found a resonant frequency that affected the different metal rods and granite in slightly different ways due to the density of the materials.
    Speakers are also dc electromagnets but the frequency the frequency generator puts out is a square wave biased from 0 volts dc to an upper positive voltage depending on the volume level. This is why the steel rod went to the middle of the speaker (magnetic equilibrium point) and the aluminium and brass wet to the outside...they followed the waves of the vibration which oscillated outwards at that frequency. A change of frequency either higher or lower will move these two rods in different ways

  • @AydaWalsh
    @AydaWalsh 4 года назад +2

    Very cool demonstration! Love your gadgets and passion! Keep it up! Love it!

  • @coreycoffell6219
    @coreycoffell6219 7 месяцев назад

    Cool experiments, I couldn't help but go find more data. I thought the use of 100mm×100mm×100mm cubic of granite data might be of interest so I brought it back

  • @DjTatty
    @DjTatty Год назад

    I was unsure about the point you were trying to make about all this until i read the description, & then thought " do I put him out of his misery" by telling you that poured concrete was used to build the blocks & poured granite, which was achieved using point source energy from the sun. you simply mix water & silt then dig a hole in the sand & pour in the mixture & let it set, which leaves you with what you could call a magnifying glass that can focus the sun to a point that will melt granite to a liquid.
    Given the abundance of sandstone, silt, limestone, sand & water, it would make more sense to mix up & pour everything than to try & carry everything, given we can not carry these even today, as it is easier to pour concrete, this is where the hole idea come from In the first place.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  Год назад

      I believe that several geologists and professional masons all agree that the Egyptian granite (pyramids and etc.) is natural stone and could not be "man made". The limestone is questionable, except for the high concentration of sea shells which the "experts" agree is also not man made.
      So I don't know - but the granite would be difficult to "make" from scratch - unless back then - it was in a more "liquid" state and could be manipulated like clay.

  • @project-unifiedfreepeoples
    @project-unifiedfreepeoples Год назад +1

    Wish you would try 7.83 hz or Schumman resonace, Earth's heartbeat.

  • @bigrollinghome2091
    @bigrollinghome2091 Год назад

    will the steel DC electromagnet attract/repel a piece of granite that has magnetic properties?

  • @bamcr1218
    @bamcr1218 Год назад

    8:54 low key thought the granite continuously tipping over was the phenomenon being depicted for a moment😏

  • @tedwalker1370
    @tedwalker1370 Год назад +1

    I think your granite has some steel content in it. That is possible isn't it?

  • @thenarrowgate3063
    @thenarrowgate3063 Год назад

    Thanks for the cool demo, i was unaware of granite's properties now that i know i will perform some HV DC experiments with granite!

  • @RicoMoneybags
    @RicoMoneybags Год назад +1

    nice work keep working on what ever comes to your mind

  • @smithjohn3080
    @smithjohn3080 Год назад

    "The granite doesn't want to tip" proceeds to immedialy tip it over

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  Год назад +1

      Yea, I'm guilty...

    • @smithjohn3080
      @smithjohn3080 Год назад

      @The Good Vibrations look towards geopolymers for your answers aa to how they built the "megaliths"

  • @horus2779
    @horus2779 4 года назад +1

    would the granite contain magnetite,
    I think it would being that the granite would cool slowly creating
    the conditions to form crystals of magnetite

  • @user-ou3kh2ld1j
    @user-ou3kh2ld1j Год назад

    Would have been nice if that granite piece was cylinder shaped. Hard to tell if it would tip or not being it's wider at the bottom.

  • @project-unifiedfreepeoples
    @project-unifiedfreepeoples Год назад +1

    Also granite has a small radioactive property. Its the arrangement of molecules.

  • @beephead2
    @beephead2 Год назад

    Where can we read, watch or listen to your theory?

  • @craigadam
    @craigadam Год назад

    Is it possible to repeat the experiment without using an electromagnetic actuator close to the magnet? Namely the voice coil . It would be interesting to take that variable out and us just a device that can create mechanical vibration. I am not sure how much the tin tray shields the granite also.

  • @theRhinsRanger
    @theRhinsRanger Год назад

    Maybe its due to the nature of granites crystalline structure. Empty, the other metals looked like they were migrating to the edge of the toroidal magnetic field?

  • @AmazingArnoldVoice
    @AmazingArnoldVoice Год назад

    What did you use for your opening music? I really like it

  • @ajmainhossain7066
    @ajmainhossain7066 Год назад

    What if u induce frequency into granite with a resonance speaker. See how large of a piece on granite will move

  • @MaxVax-dh7rh
    @MaxVax-dh7rh 2 года назад

    I will give you some credit on my Site. Great stuff.

  • @IndigoCrow9.13
    @IndigoCrow9.13 4 года назад +2

    Here is a peculiar fact for you. Unexplainable disappearances (Missing 411 cases) often occur near areas rich in granite, boulders, quartz.. & are usually or always near bodies of water. Check out David Paulides RUclips channel if you like. He has a book & a few documentaries out as well. I recommend “Missing 411 The Hunted”

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  4 года назад +2

      I have checked out that site. Interesting, especially the disappearances near large granite outcrops???

    • @meredithgrubb7027
      @meredithgrubb7027 2 года назад +1

      That is exactly why i am watching this video. Ive been following Dave from the beginning and i am convinced that the granite, water, electricity, and sound/ vibration have everything to do with many cases. The thing i have always found interesting about Yosemite cases is that the native Americans from that area refused to live there despite it being the perfect place with an abundance of everything they wouldve needed because they said the rocks would eat/ swallow people. People have tried to say that they meant it this way or that way but i think they were being very straight forward and that the rocks would eat/ swallow people.

  • @Stephen_Strange
    @Stephen_Strange Год назад

    Great teaching, and practicing.

  • @ryderdeyn
    @ryderdeyn Год назад

    Maybe granit is a product and formed in moulds like concrete. It appears (to me) that our 'rock formations' are man made or fossilised trees etc.

  • @TheFoxygrandpa69
    @TheFoxygrandpa69 4 года назад +6

    Great video!!!!!! I had been thinking abt this for a few days and what do ya know you already got it goin. I've been wanting to start doing my own experiments like this with garnet and other materials using magnetic fields. Definitely will be watching and commenting. Keep it up partner!

  • @darkcontrast8470
    @darkcontrast8470 Год назад +1

    The gyptians would have had DC current correct

  • @davidwilson2266
    @davidwilson2266 Год назад

    the difference you see is one of leverage... the rock has more fulcrum due to it's mass distribution (most likely).

  • @jonnyblurt
    @jonnyblurt Год назад

    Its because the steel is magnetic the others are diamagnetic so the magnetism of the speaker coil in the middle pulls on it.

  • @Caldoric
    @Caldoric Год назад

    Do you have anything like this for Andesite and Diorite? Serious question here.

    • @TheGoodVibrations
      @TheGoodVibrations  Год назад

      Sorry, no I do not.

    • @Caldoric
      @Caldoric Год назад

      @@TheGoodVibrations well, I feel it'd be a good bundle of information to know.

  • @charliebognar5276
    @charliebognar5276 Год назад

    ...so limestone has magnetic features if above 500degrees, so thats how they build it? vibration, heat, magnets?

  • @davidsouthward4581
    @davidsouthward4581 Год назад

    resonant frequency of granite is 6900 Hz. Try setting your speaker frequency to 6900 Hz, and see what happens.

  • @albertmagician8613
    @albertmagician8613 Год назад

    The same weight is probably not important. It vibrates so the dimensions matter. The granite is irregular. Is the can bottom iron? I don't see much conclusions drawn from these experiments.

  • @stevilkenevil9960
    @stevilkenevil9960 3 года назад +1

    So.... Nikola tesla was right then about resonance and vibration?

  • @veylothteiyaanthealien3195
    @veylothteiyaanthealien3195 Год назад +1

    You should get some Lemurian quartz crystals and limestone

  • @cptrikester2671
    @cptrikester2671 Год назад

    FYI
    At 17:30, AC does not make an electromagnet.