Alright, I have some reports.
I used a 12 Volt battery, car battery, and connected a lamp as a
resistor and a amp-meter for measurement.
The amp meter read 6 amps so that is 72 watts, and is 2 ohms
resistance.
The point of the experiment was to see if I can influence the current
via a magnet and find
a Meissner Effect. And the answer is no.
No matter what I did with the magnet it did not affect the current of
6 amps. And most important of
all I could not levitate iron shavings that had been magnetized, or
the Meissner effect.
Now I have to set up a AC current experiment to see if I can influence
the amperage with a magnet,
and see if I can get a Meissner effect.
So in these experiments I have been testing three different types of
currents, Capacitor current,
DC current and eventually AC current.
So far I have achieved a Meissner Effect of magnetized iron shavings
on a Wimshurst Generator which
is a Capacitor current.
Archimedes Plutonium
www.iw.net/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies