Eric Laithwaite is one of the heroes of science both in conventional history and the unconventional. He is one of the most successful and acclaimed
engineers of the 20th century, and he was also an eccentric maverick like
Nikola Tesla, and Wilhelm Reich. He always seemed to feel more at home in the
company of amateur inventors than with academic "experts" and this
led him into dangerous waters; his ideas eventually ruined him. Like many of
his nonconformist peers, Laithwaite has an acceptable face that he is
acknowledged and admired for. He was a highly experienced and talented electrical
engineer and in 1964 he invented the linear induction motor. This is like a
normal electric motor except that it has its moving parts arranged in a line so
that it produces forward motion, as opposed to the more familiar torque which
turns a shaft. This led to the development of the magnetic levitation railway-
the "maglev", which is in common use around the world, especially in Japan .
The producers of the James Bond movie The
Spy who Loved Me also wrote in a linear induction motor weapon that is seen
in the film being tested in Q's laboratory. Laithwaite was also a media
personality who appeared on many TV shows to communicate these ideas to the
general public. Like many other pop scientists he was invited to host the Royal
Institution Christmas Lectures; this is an annual event aimed at young people
which has been running for almost two hundred years and Laithwaite hosted the
very first one to be televised in 1966. It was entitled The Engineer in Wonderland and it was a great success. However when
returned to do the same again in 1974 everything had changed.
Because of his open-mindedness and lack of due reverence for
the establishment, Eric Laithwaite had spent a lot of time investigating the
work of lay inventors "tinkerers" as they are sometimes known,
although this is a very condescending term. He became fascinated with
gyroscopes, devices with a flywheel spun very fast to make the wheel stable in
relation to outside forces. They have a large number of applications, for
instance in navigation systems and gauges of various kinds. However Laithwaite
discovered something highly unusual about them- the wheel lost weight and
inertia while spinning. He found this out when an amateur inventor friend let
him observe an experiment in which this property could be extracted from a
gyroscope mounted on a swinging pendulum. Laithwaite understood that this was
in effect a form of perpetual motion; it violated Newtonian Mechanics.
Nevertheless he reported what he had honestly observed and when he turned up to
present his second Royal Institution Christmas Lecture in 1974 this is the
subject he decided to talk about, this time he called his event The Engineer Through the Looking Glass.
During the lecture he demonstrated to the wide-eyed young audience a very
simple machine he'd designed to illustrate this heretical effect. It was simply
a long metal shaft with a solid wheel attached to the end. The entire apparatus
was very heavy, over 40 lb, and a man would have trouble lifting it even to
waist height. But then Laithwaite brought out a motor which he used to rotate
the wheel until it was spinning at 2500 revolutions per minute and an
incredible transformation occurred. The device became light enough for a man to
pick up with one hand and even wave around in the air as if it were just a
small stick. The rapid rotation of the wheel appeared to reduce the effects of
gravity and mass; this is supposed to be impossible, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHlAJ7vySC8.
The reaction from the academics was scorn and outrage. Over its entire history
the Royal Institution has never declined from publishing any lecture that has
been given inside its walls, before or since... except this once. Laithwaite
was effectively banned from the RI and he was disgraced by his fellow
scientists. He attempted to continue his research independently through Gyron
Ltd, a company he set up himself, but sadly he died in 1997 without achieving
his dream, a dream of building a machine that would provide "reactionless
propulsion", free energy and anti-gravity, for all the world to enjoy. Why
is that? Well, I've discussed that subject numerous times before.
See here for more details:
http://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/ben-emlyn-jones-live-at-bufog.html.
Eric Laithwaite and the "Abominable Knowmen"
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Thanks. Nice one, Andrew. I searched for the video and never found it.
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