Доста време съм прекарал пред компютъра си да разглеждам снимки и филмчета за тестатика . Това е невероятна машина и тя наистина съществува . Ако се поровите в нета ще видите че има българин който я е виждал от близо , дори Пол Бауман му е дал един от малките модели тези които са с един диск при гостуването му в Линден , за сажаление този човек не е между живите като самата му смърт също е малка мистерия . Човека се казва Стефан Маринов и единственият нашенец които е виждал и иследвал тестатиката отблизо. В един форум е описана конструкци на лайденовите банки по думите на Маринов нямало нищо необикновенно в тях нито пък имало някави магнити както други хора твардели .Просто два палсмасови цилиндара а за среден електрод дебел проводник навит на спирала ще побликувам видяното от Маринов по надолу . Ако този невероятен физик беше жив може би щтяхме да научим повече за теста-дистатика .
ето и думите на Маринов :
"Some years ago I met Stefan Marinov in London and took the
opportunity to question him about the Testatika. As is well known
Marinov was a member of the "inner circle" of I think twelve members
who ran the Methernitha group in Linden. Marinov was the only one not
in on the secret of how the testatika worked. However, Baumann
unexpectedly gave Marinov one of the small machines to play with.
Marinov said that the two Leyden jars contained no magnets. The
central electrode was a helix of a few turns of thick wire. The
concentric mesh were simple cylinders insulated from each other by
clear plastic cylinders.
The machine had a single revolving disk with iron wire for sectors.
The wire was threaded from one side to the other radially on the disk
face as can be clearly seen in the photos of the small machines.
The machine would only start with the disk axis pointing east-west.
When operating, if the disk was stopped with the finger there was a
steady torque on the disk. If a sheet of metal was held behind the
machine the rotation stopped and the rest torque stopped.
There are no rubber contacts or brushes on the disk. A few spins with
the fingers would start the machine. The wheel of the machine
delivered less than 100mw according to Marinov's estimates. Marinov
had an electrostatic motor, and said that the torque on the testatika
disk at rest was greater than from his electrostatic motor. The
testatika disk revolved 30-40 times slower than that of the
electrostatic motor.
During his tests he estimated that the power output was about 100
watts as judged by the heating effect in a power resistor.. Marinov
had no test equipment available to do quantitative tests since all
these observations were made at Linden, and Marinov did not expect to
be shown anything when he visited.@