The Jeff
Cook Effect
What it really
is. If you have read elsewhere on
the Internet that the Jeff Cook Effect
is a gravity beam, that's a bit of an
overstatement. If you have read that it
is the effect of bending a flame in front
of a certain coil configuration, that's
a bit of an understatement. If you have
read that it is the ability to spin magnets
on their axis, that's just plain getting
ahead of oneself. Most simply, the
Jeff Cook Effect is the discovery of diamagnetic
qualities from a ferromagnetic wire coil.
Can one create a "gravity beam"
with these qualities coupled with certain
arrangements? Well, that is one
of the claims. Can one both attract and
repel an ordinary flame with these qualities
in certain arrangements? Yes, that's another
claim. And can such qualities spin magnets
on their axis? Of course; and there's
many more abilities such a coil has been
shown to accomplish.
If you take a moment to
glance to the top of the page and look
at the green waveform glowing in the header,
you will see the basis of the effect.
What is this waveform? It's called an
"X-wave," but in linear format.
You may have read on the Internet that
the Jeff Cook Effect is a pulsed coil
configuration with the above waveform.
While, many observable effects have been
studied by pulsing a ferromagnetic wire
coil, the complete study involves not
only a waveform in time, but also magnetic
and electogravitic forces in distance,
both having a similar rise-drop-reverse-fall
property. However, before we get to this
waveform, which is mainly dealt with outside
of the Jeff Cook Effect section of this
site (in the Physics Pages), I will give
the basics of a ferromagnetic wire coil
in the following pages and try to describe
everything there is to know about a ferromagnetic
wire coil.