YouTube - Hutchison Effect playlist
In this video I show a rare 2006 Hutchison Effect experiment involving a steel and rubber composite slowly melting without heat, which I have sped up by up to 60 times speed. This material was brought by Mr. Chan whom visited John Hutchison from China for filming. The composite was cut using a hacksaw before the test started, and John says it is made of a hard rubber material (similar to car tires) with a steel frame and other steel parts. Mr. Chan states this is a shock mount, and is possibly used in Navy ships or in other heavy electrical equipment. Note that during my earlier livestream, John says the rubber material is called "Bakelite".
The composite gradually melts, while not burning the plastic Styrofoam placed underneath - which John points out as he says there is no heat involved in this process. Also captured in the experiment is brief periods where one of the composite blocks starts turning and moving towards the bigger block, as well as short periods of the block oscillating rapidly. Absolutely fascinating stuff!
I will upload a shorter and faster timelapse of this experiment soon so stay tuned!
Links to videos used:
Full video: https://youtu.be/EfpksOSPmaw
Hutchison Effect hard drive cloud storage: https://mes.fm/hutchison
Uncompressed full version inside path: 2000s Hutchison / 2006 / 2006 china tv tape 2.mov
John Hutchison says this composite material was a Steel frame with plastic Bakelite filling: https://youtu.be/WbvO8BbKIP0
Bakelite wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakelite
Timestamps:
Samples are placed on plastic Styrofoam: 0:00
John Hutchison says it's a rubber composite: 0:36
John says the radio frequency (RF) fields are interfering with the camera: 0:54
Steel rubber composite cold melting on unburnt plastic (60X Speed): 1:02
John is using George Hathaway's camera as he talks about his guests Mr. Chan and Rene: 1:24
John says no heat is involved in this melting, and an earlier pair of scissors disintegrated as well: 1:55
Date is April 30 or May 1, 2006: 2:28
John is watching the experiment via a TV set connected to the camera: 2:56
John mentions prior experiments caused complaints, with fire alarms going off and elevator systems malfunctioning during National Geographic TV filming: 3:11
Smaller block moves towards the bigger block: 3:41
Mr. Chan tells John that the composite is a steel and rubber "shock mount": 4:19 - Composite melting timelapse (60X speed): 6:26
John hacked sawed the composite before the test: 7:06
Composite melting timelapse (60X speed): 9:12
Composite starts vibrating: 9:34
John says the outer casing and other parts are steel filled with rubber: 11:19
John says it is 11:00 PM on Sunday: 13:15
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