Greetings,
As one of the resident smart people in my group of friends, one of them asked me about this ebay auction, featuring a shrunken Kennedy half dollar. Looking at his other auctions, you'll see that he offers a variety of different coins shrunk to different sizes. There's also a link to his Teslamania website, which offers information on how he does it.
After poking around the website for a while, I came to the conclusion that this was probably legitimate, but I wanted to bring it up here to see what people had to say about it, and see whether this is something that has come up before. Here are some of my observations:
#1) Hickman notes that the mass and density don't change -- the coins get thicker as they get smaller in radius. This isn't mentioned prominently, but I wanted to point it out.
#2) I don't understand where the force is coming from that would act on the metal to squish it radially.
#3) The slight rearrangements of the surface features is sometimes odd, as when lettering runs into the portrait. Otherwise, the images seem to genuinely correspond to the originals in fine details like eagle feather placement and hairlines.
#4) He seems to have done too many different types of coins for this to be a hoax. If he were only selling Franklin halves shrunk to a uniform size, I would suspect trickery, but that's not the case.
#5) Despite my initial skepticism, especially when Tesla's name shows up, the site did not trip any BS alarms in my brain. The process hasn't been explained to my satisfaction, but nothing seemed obviously ludicrous to me. He's doesn't rant about free energy and anti-gravity, he just seems to have an unhealthy (?) fixation on running huge amounts of current through bits of metal.
Thanks for any help you can offer,
--Azathoth
As one of the resident smart people in my group of friends, one of them asked me about this ebay auction, featuring a shrunken Kennedy half dollar. Looking at his other auctions, you'll see that he offers a variety of different coins shrunk to different sizes. There's also a link to his Teslamania website, which offers information on how he does it.
After poking around the website for a while, I came to the conclusion that this was probably legitimate, but I wanted to bring it up here to see what people had to say about it, and see whether this is something that has come up before. Here are some of my observations:
#1) Hickman notes that the mass and density don't change -- the coins get thicker as they get smaller in radius. This isn't mentioned prominently, but I wanted to point it out.
#2) I don't understand where the force is coming from that would act on the metal to squish it radially.
#3) The slight rearrangements of the surface features is sometimes odd, as when lettering runs into the portrait. Otherwise, the images seem to genuinely correspond to the originals in fine details like eagle feather placement and hairlines.
#4) He seems to have done too many different types of coins for this to be a hoax. If he were only selling Franklin halves shrunk to a uniform size, I would suspect trickery, but that's not the case.
#5) Despite my initial skepticism, especially when Tesla's name shows up, the site did not trip any BS alarms in my brain. The process hasn't been explained to my satisfaction, but nothing seemed obviously ludicrous to me. He's doesn't rant about free energy and anti-gravity, he just seems to have an unhealthy (?) fixation on running huge amounts of current through bits of metal.
Thanks for any help you can offer,
--Azathoth