APEC 6/6: UAP Anomalous Transit, SEG, Gyroscopes, Repulsine & QG Engineering
Greg Cathcart will provide a detailed hypothesis on Anomalous Transit in the Informational Lattice, Isaiah Ritchey will provide updates & insights on the Searl Effect Generator, Eric Biggio on Gyroscopic Thrust Experiments, Denny Okudinani will discuss his replication of Viktor Schauberger’s Repulsine, and Todd Desiato will show a pre-recorded presentation discussing quantum gravity for engineers. We’ll also hear updates from our lab partners, then close with an open discussion and Q&A with attendees.
12:00pm PT – Greg Cathcart – IR in Anomalous Transit and Adjacency Compression Theory (ACT)
Greg will discuss IR technology and its use in detection, tracking, and targeting in military and space applications and it’s relevance in anomalous transit scenarios. In addition, Greg will discuss his current work in Adjacency Compression Theory (ACT). ACT is a proposed framework in which spacetime, fields, and gravitational behavior emerge from compression dynamics over a deeper discrete adjacency structure and could provide clues regarding some aspects of anomalous transit.
1:00pm PT – Isaiah Ritchey – Searl Effect Generator Engineering
Isaiah will be providing detailed updates on his replication of the legendary Searl Effect Generator, including work on an upcoming 2-ring system, as well as his research on roller magnetization aligned with John Searl’s original process. Isaiah is currently one of the foremost builders in the SEG space, and is working to follow Searl’s descriptions as precisely as possible. In his research, he claims to have found evidence of anomalous effects from Delfin and others, along with notable new insights into the work of Godin & Roschin, Murad & Brandenburg, and others.
2:00pm PT – Eric Biggio – Gyroscopic Thrust Experiments
Eric has described recently achieving 1.5 inches of propellentless lift on a 20Lb. prototype. The patented concept he’s based on work by Eric Laithwaite. Biggio did a deep dive scientific exploration of the “gyroscopic” effect, leading him to conclude that you can’t get a gyroscopic flywheel to “pull” you upward (IE: Sandy Kidd), but you can, in fact, get it to “push” upwards on a supporting structure. His experiments have led him to conclude that the gyroscopic force is created by an imbalance in the nuclear electromagnetic structure of a solid substance.
3:00pm PT – Denny Okudinani – Replication of Viktor Schauberger’s Repulsine
Denny will be discussing the design & construction of a replication of Viktor Schauberger’s Repulsine, a 1940s experimental turbine based on implosion technology, designed to generate lifting power and energy through high-speed vortex motion, mirroring natural flows. The Repulsine is truly legendary in the Alt Propulsion community, with nearly a century of lore associated with it, and Denny’s replication brings Schauberger’s work into the 21st century, using CAD design and 3D printing techniques.
4:00pm PT – Todd Desiato – Operational Quantum Gravity For Engineers
In this pre-recorded presentation, Todd Desiato will discuss a model published in a new ResearchGate paper on Operational Quantum Gravity For Engineers, which describes a revised damping, vacuum-polarizability, and uncertainty-based interpretation of gravitational scaling. His paper does not present itself as a replacement for general relativity in the weak/static regime. Its central claim is interpretive: the same observed weak-field gravitational relations can be read operationally as changes in clocks, rulers, frequencies, energies, and matter-scale equilibrium, rather than as proof that spacetime geometry is the unique fundamental ontology.
5:00pm PT – Lab Partners – Experimental Research Updates
Learn about hands-on engineering & technical research on advanced propulsion experiments by our lab partners. Mark Sokol’s team at Falcon Space is full engaged in Dynamic Nuclear Polarization research & testing; Drew Aurigema continues testing and refinement on the Exodus effect propulsion device, and Curtis Horn is focused on Mach effect propulsion on the MEGA-Drive team.
6:00pm PT – Open Discussion & Ad-Hoc Presentations
Conference guests interested in presenting experimental info to the group are invited to participate at this time, and our presenters will be available to take questions & discuss experiments.