Windhexe: Difference between revisions

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Windhexe is a vortex device discussed in LENR-related comparisons involving turbulence and structured flow.
Windhexe is a vortex device discussed in LENR-related comparisons involving turbulence and structured flow.


==LENR context==
==Vortex-flow comparisons==
The device is mentioned as part of a broader pattern of systems where turbulence, vorticity, and flow organization are considered relevant to unusual energetic or material effects. In LENR discussions, it is grouped with vortex systems such as GEET, plasma vortex devices, and cavitation-related apparatus.


This topic appears in 1 currently indexed observation connected to LENR-related experiments, devices, materials, or theoretical interpretations.
This page should grow by documenting the device design, its ordinary industrial context, and why it is being compared with LENR systems.
 
Representative context includes:
* Turbulence and vorticity are key phenomena observed in various experiments and devices, including tornadoes, the Windhexe, MFMP ULTR experiments, and Anatoly Klimov's inflow plasma vortex, which is similar to a system reported by a group in Portugal called ENG8 with a coefficient of performance (COP) between 2 and 10 w...


==Related topics==
==Related topics==


* [[GEET]]
* [[Plasma vortex]]
* [[Plasma vortex]]
* [[GEET]]
* [[Cavitation system]]
* [[LENR]]


==Source==
==Source==


* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gW0JPZedjXM
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gW0JPZedjXM

Latest revision as of 02:59, 4 June 2026

Windhexe is a vortex device discussed in LENR-related comparisons involving turbulence and structured flow.

Vortex-flow comparisons

The device is mentioned as part of a broader pattern of systems where turbulence, vorticity, and flow organization are considered relevant to unusual energetic or material effects. In LENR discussions, it is grouped with vortex systems such as GEET, plasma vortex devices, and cavitation-related apparatus.

This page should grow by documenting the device design, its ordinary industrial context, and why it is being compared with LENR systems.

Related topics

Source