SS Brotherhood of the Bell: The Nazis’ Incredible Secret Technology (30 page)

BOOK: SS Brotherhood of the Bell: The Nazis’ Incredible Secret Technology
5.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Mercury, this time already in pure form, was also present inside the spinning cylinders. Before the start of each experiment, and perhaps also for its duration, the mercury was intensively cooled.
Since
information appeared about the use of large quantities of liquid gas – nitrogen and oxygen, it appeared that it was precisely these that were the cooling medium. The entire device, i.e., the cylinders and core was covered with the aforementioned ceramic housing, of a bell-like shape– a cylinder rounded at the top crowned with some kind of hook, or fastening. The entire device was about 1.5 m in diameter and about 2.5 m high….

The person in conversation with me had in any case emphasized that
not once had the term “weapon” been uttered in relation to the described device.
53

At this juncture, it is necessary to pause and consider the details, since they differ somewhat from Nick Cook’s summary of them in
Hunt for Zero Point
and my own earlier descriptions in
The Giza Death Star Deployed
and
Reich of the Black Sun.

Igor Witkowski’s Sketch of the Bell
(From
The Truth About the Wunderwaffe)

1. The Bell consisted of

a. Two counterrotating cylinders on a common axis, which cylinders were apparently filled with or coated with pure mercury;

b. The axis itself consisted of a heavy metal core, presumably hollow, since it was the receptacle for the mysterious thorium-beryllium-mercury compound known as Xerum-525;
54

c. The outer casing was made of a ceramic material.

2. The mercury, and presumably the interior of the Bell, was tremendously cooled by (presumably liquid) nitrogen and oxygen;

3. The Bell was approximately (according to this latest research of Witkowski) 2.5 meters high (about eight to nine feet high) and about 1.5 meters in diameter (or about four to five feet), smaller in size than initially reported by Cook.

This last detail is perhaps significant, since I drew comparisons between the Bell and the UFO recovered at Kecksburg in my previous book,
Reich of the Black Sun.
There, relying on Nick Cook’s dimensions of 12-15 feet high and 9-12 feet wide, and similar dimensions for the object that crashed at Kecksburg, I drew the speculative conclusion that they were perhaps one and the same object. While the new dimensions tend to weaken this connection, I nevertheless maintain my speculations advanced in that book: that it may have been the Bell or some such similar device that crashed at Kecksburg.
55

In any case, the above list raises certain important questions:

1. What was the
purpose
of the counterrotating cylinders?

2. Were these cylinders arranged one inside the other, or one on top of the other?

3. What was the purpose of using mercury in these cylinders?

4. What was the purpose of using the obviously radioactive compound of Xerum 525? Was Xerum 525 some isotope of mercury, or an isotope of mercury in compound with other elements?

5. What was the purpose of the ceramic housing?

As will be seen, Witkowski has his own very plausible explanations for some of these questions. We will examine these in due course, and tender our own speculations as well.

But Witkowski’s meetings with his informant revealed much more information not only regarding the device itself, but its experimental operation:

Each such experiment was carried out in a specially prepared chamber– a pool. In most cases it was located underground. Its surface was
covered with ceramic tiles and the floor also with heavy rubber mats. The mats were destroyed after each test (!), while the tiles were washed
– deactivated with a pink liquid resembling brine. In the case of tests conducted inside the chamber of an inactive mine, in 1945,
such a chamber was always destroyed (blown up) after two-three tests…
.

First of all “the Bell” itself was prepared along with the considerable power supply installation accompanying it. A whole set of cameras, movie cameras and probably also some measuring devices were placed on a special rack in the research chamber itself.
Then a series of samples or objects were placed nearby, on which the effect of the emitted energy was tested. These were animal organisms (live lizards, rats, frogs, insects, snails and in all probability also….people –
prisoners from KL Gross-Rosen)
56
plants (mosses, ferns, horsetails, fungi, moulds) as well as a whole series of substances of organic origin such as: White of an egg, blood, meat, milk and liquid fats. These preparations were of course carried out by scientists and technicians…as well as by a commando of prisoners from Gross-Rosen concentration camp, specially assigned to this work. It numbered up to 100 people….
Just before the experiment the entire personnel was removed to a distance of 150-200 m, at the same time employing individual, rubber protective suits and helmets or hard hats distinguished by large red visors
.
57

Thus, we may add to our previous list the following points:

5. The experiments were conducted in an underground chamber, part of which consisted of a pool;

6. The chamber was insulated with rubber mats covering ceramic bricks;

7. The effects of the Bell during its operation extended some 650-700 feet beyond the device;

8. The chambers had to be destroyed after only a few tests, due apparently to the strong residual effects of its operation;

9. The effects of the device on living organisms and organic material was apparently a crucial area of inquiry;

10. Even at some distance from the object, its technicians had to be in rubber suits (which suggests that they could not be electrically
grounded
while the Bell was in operation); and,

11. The eyes had to be protected with red visors.

The effects of the Bell when in operation lived up to this odd list of extreme precautions, giving off both “short-term and long-term effects – and perhaps also those about which we do not know.”
58
With respect to the short-term effects, these

became immediately perceptible after the power had been switched on. These were:
a characteristic sound,
which could be described as something extremely similar to
the humming of bees
sealed in a bottle (hence the unofficial name “The Hive” – “Bienenstock” was also used in relation to “the Bell”) as well as a series of electromagnetic effects. These consisted of the following:
surges in surrounding 220 V electrical installations (bulbs “blowing
”) observed in the case of ground tests at distances exceeding 100 m,
a bluish phosphorescence (blue glow) around “the Bell” – obviously a result of the emission of ionizing radiation
, as well as a very strong magnetic field mentioned in the statements. In addition participants of the experiments felt
disturbances of the nervous system’s operation, such as formication
(“pins and needles”), headaches and a metallic taste in the mouths
.
59

Clearly, the Bell’s operation induced some very odd, and very extreme effects, and as many readers will recognize, the “metallic taste” in the mouths of participants is one characteristic associated with those who come into close proximity to UFOs.
52

The long term effects were equally peculiar. Participants would suffer sleep loss, problems with their balance and equilibrium, memory problems, muscle cramps and ulceration. The Germans apparently later “succeeded in radically limiting these unfavourable effects.”
60

But it was the effect of its operation on organic materials that was the most peculiar, and deadly. The various plants, animals, and presumably hapless concentration camp victims suffered “various types” of damage, the most dominant form being “the disintegration of tissue structures, gelation and the stratification of liquids (among others blood) into distinctly divided fractions and others.”
61
In fact, during the first series of tests, apparently conducted from May to June of 1944, “these kinds of side-effects caused the death of five out of seven scientists engaged in them. As a result, the whole first research team was dissolved,” and it became a high priority for the project to limit these effects.
62
In other words, the deadly effects of the Bell were
not
, at least initially, what the Germans were apparently after. Its purpose was something different. As we shall see subsequently though, such results and its potential for a deadly new type of weapon could not have been lost on the Germans. Indeed, while Witkowski tends toward the view that the Bell represented a secret project in
propulsion
of some sort, its classification as
Kriegsentscheidend
and its clear claim to the title of
“Wunderwaffe”
would seem to call for more speculation in this direction, based on Witkowski’s disclosures. We will return to this subject momentarily.

The oddest changes in organic materials “were observed in the case of green plants.”

During the first phase, spanning about five hours after the test had been completed, the plants paled or became grey, suggesting chemical decomposition or the decay of chlorophyll. Extraordinary is that despite this, such a plant lived normally, by all appearances, for a further period – the order of a week. This was followed by immediate, almost rapid or cascade (8-14 hours) decomposition to a greasy substance, “with the consistency of rancid fat,...enveloping the entire plant. This decomposition was devoid of all features characteristic of bacterial decomposition – among other things of smell. Besides, it was too rapid, giving the impression that all structure had decayed.

At the same time the formation of undefined crystalline structures was observed in the liquid organic substances….
63

From this one can surmise what had happened when the device was first used, causing the deaths of five of the scientists and technicians that ran it. Unwary, they were exposed to its unusual effects, and the cellular structure of their bodies and fluids broke down completely. As we shall see, such effects are one clear signature of a “scalar” device.

But these were not the only strange effects associated with the Bell. In the region of Lower Silesia around Ludwigsdorf (modern day Ludwikowice) where the project was based, survivors from the project, or inhabitants of the area during the war, contacted Witkowski, and reporting seeing “objects vertically landing and taking off,” objects that some described as “flying barrels”.
64

5. Witkowski’s Reconstruction of its Possible Physics

Obviously, the above list of the device’s construction, its operation, and effects, paints a very unusual picture. What sort of
physics
lies behind all of it? What were the Germans attempting to accomplish with this bizarre device? Obviously, to have such a complex device in operation by the end of the war would have required some initial testing, planning and designing, taking years of research in its own right. So what were they looking for? What might have been the inspiration? And finally, why would such a device, beyond all the other exotic weapons in the Third Reich’s arsenal - an arsenal that included fuel-air bombs, guided missiles, deadly chemical and nerve gases, and possibly even the atomic bomb – be
uniquely
classified as
Kriegsentscheidend
, as “decisive for the war”?

Witkowski set out to answer these questions, and in the process learned that two phrases stood out in the reports concerning the device. These were “vortex compression” and “separation of magnetic fields.”
65
Clearly they meant
something
, and something rather exotic, since the mysterious Dr. Elizabeth Adler from the University of Königsberg had to be consulted on the arcane matter of “a simulation of damping of vibrations towards the centre of spherical objects.”
66
But the Bell, obviously, was
not
a sphere, nor were its high-speed rotating drums “vibrating.”

The mystery deepens…

As Witkowski puts it, the Bell “possessed so many characteristic features that finding some kind of unequivocal explanation seemed to be attainable.”
67
According to him, these are:

 

• The employment of very high voltages.

• An emphasis of the phenomenon of “magnetic fields separation”.

Other books

The Devil's in the Details by Mary Jane Maffini
Chasing Aubrey by Tate, Sennah
One and the Same by Abigail Pogrebin
Cat Country by Lao She
All That Glitters by Thomas Tryon
The Wolf Within by M.J. Scott
A Regency Christmas Pact Collection by Ava Stone, Jerrica Knight-Catania, Jane Charles, Catherine Gayle, Julie Johnstone, Aileen Fish
Last Chance by A. L. Wood
The Charming Way by Grayson, Kristine
Looking for Laura by Judith Arnold