Further to my recent post of a long documentary about the Hutchison effect from the early nineties; while watching it I was reminded of this quote from "Esoteric Info on Electromagnetic Weapons"
" Based on advanced Soviet studies in electromagnetism that were leaked to the West in the latter half of the 1970s, Japanese physicists were opening the doors to new applications of electromagnetic (EM) energy.
(The Japanese interest is obvious—vastly more efficient uses of energy, with superconductivity, EM levitation and even untested cold fusion—could help energy-poor Japan weather future shocks like the oil boycott of the early 1970s.)
One Soviet industrial application of EM energy is “cold molding” of steel. Cold molding because hot molten steel is problematic. When casting very large objects, the metal tends to crack when cooling—these cracks are not necessarily visible, but can be microscopic crazing of crystalline structures. Welding is a good example of how microcracks lead to megadamage— ruptured pipelines in Arctic regions are nearly all due to such cracking.
Submarine hulls are another example of crack-vulnerable steel—which make the work of sinking subs all the more easier for depth charges. Molten steel is also difficult to handle in very small (nanostructures) objects, for microrobots. Hot molds leave rough edges that need to be ground—a task nearly impossible for complicated parts the size of a pinhead.
How is cold molding done? When two or more beams of intense microwave energy are focused on metal, they create a second wavelength due to interference. This secondary energy can cause a resonant vibration in the chemical-electrical bonds which the iron molecules in a crystalline structure.
(This is exactly what Hutchison was doing for years)
The rupture of these bonds and the collapse of the crystalline structure will turn the metal into a cold liquid state. After a short period of time, new bonds are formed and the metal hardens into its new shape."
Often in his experiments throughout the 80's, John Hutchison observed a phenomenon he referred to as "jelly metals". This phenomenon would appear to be the early stage of this "cold-molding" process. Video of this process is very hard to find, especially the original quality upload - but thankfully in the second part of the re-uploaded documentary there is extended footage of the effect (watch the first 15 minutes or so):
My opinion that there really is something to scalar longitudinal E/M waves, and they can have startling effects.
One way to cold mold metals would be to temporarily change the interatomic binding from the level that makes solids hold together to a less energetic 'plastic' state where the atoms can be rearranged. After that is released, things go back to normal and the atoms bind normally as a solid.
I believe this is not impossible, but is not at all understood in quantum physics and certainly not conventional physics. It would be a quantum phenomenon, not because it involves quantized energy levels (which it might), but because it operates either on electron bindings and physical states, or maybe scalar waves 'messing up' properties of the nucleus.
It may not be beyond the realm of possibility that the fabled 'Philadelphia experiment' actually happened but has been major deeply classified. Both the US and Russia have some weird technologies that probably would not be unleashed except in case of a really major war (not the toy ones for oil).
Tom Bearden, who sadly recently died, seemed to some to be a crackpot, but he championed some alternate physics that is a third path beside classic physics and quantum physics. I've been coming to see there is more than just the conventional models, and some of what Bearden said is probably true. As for people like Hutchenson, they may not be fools or charlatans but instead, fringe explorers. However, Hutchenson's dealings with toy UFOs closely match a 1960s Analog SF magazine story, which makes me suspicious.
Penetration levels is one area where this could be difficult. For smaller pieces, definitely possible but larger objects it would depend on how far you can get the waves in to rearrange the structure. Interesting none the less, never heard of jelly metals!
This more or less explained mud flood theory