"In the summer of 1922 the first disk shaped flying machine was built whose drive was based on implosion and was named the "other side flying machine". It had a disk of eight meters across with a second disk of six and a half meters above and a third disk of seven meters diameter below. These three disks had a hole at the center of one meter eighty across in which the drive, that was two meters fourty high, was mounted. At the bottom, the central body was cone shaped, and there a pendulum reaching the cellar was hung that served for stabilization. In the activated state the top and bottom disk revolved in opposing directions to build up an electromagnetic rotating field.
The performance of this first flying disk is not known. But experiments were carried out with it for two years before it was dismantled and probably stored in the Augsburg works of Messerschmidt. In the books of several German industrial companies entries under the codename JFM (for Jenseitsflugmachine) can be found that show payments towards financing this work. Certainly the Vril drive (formally called Schumann SM levitator) emerged from this machine.
In principle, the "other side flying machine" should create an extremely strong field around itself extending somewhat into its surroundings which would render the space thus enclosed including the machine a microcosm absolutely independent of the earthbound space. At maximum strength this field would be independent of all surrounding universal forces, like radiation, electromagnetism, gravitation and matter of any kind and could therefore maneuver within the gravitational or any other field at will, without the acceleration forces being effective or perceptible."
The performance of this first flying disk is not known. But experiments were carried out with it for two years before it was dismantled and probably stored in the Augsburg works of Messerschmidt. In the books of several German industrial companies entries under the codename JFM (for Jenseitsflugmachine) can be found that show payments towards financing this work. Certainly the Vril drive (formally called Schumann SM levitator) emerged from this machine.
In principle, the "other side flying machine" should create an extremely strong field around itself extending somewhat into its surroundings which would render the space thus enclosed including the machine a microcosm absolutely independent of the earthbound space. At maximum strength this field would be independent of all surrounding universal forces, like radiation, electromagnetism, gravitation and matter of any kind and could therefore maneuver within the gravitational or any other field at will, without the acceleration forces being effective or perceptible."
Schumann Jenseitsflugmachine JFM flying disk 1922
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