January 28, 2002: Hutchison Effect - John Hutchison
January 28, 2002: Hutchison Effect - John Hutchison  
Podcast: The Art Bell Archive
Published On: Fri Feb 21 2025
Description: Art Bell speaks with Canadian inventor John Hutchison about the Hutchison Effect, a collection of anomalous phenomena discovered in 1979 while experimenting with Nikola Tesla's longitudinal wave technology. Using Tesla coils, Van de Graaff generators producing up to two million volts, and RF generators at 455 kilohertz, Hutchison produced effects including the levitation of objects up to 1,500 pounds, metals turning transparent or jelly-like, and the spontaneous fracturing of steel from the inside out.Video footage on Art's website shows wrenches rocketing off tables, water being pulled upward from dishes, and a knife fused partway into a solid metal slab. Hutchison explains that the combined electromagnetic fields appear to open an interdimensional gateway disrupting gravity and possibly time. The effects were documented by Boeing scientists, analyzed at Los Alamos National Laboratory where the footage was confirmed authentic, and studied by Germany's Max Planck Institute. Background radiation reportedly dropped to near zero during active experiments.Hutchison recounts how the Canadian government seized his equipment under the pretense of PCB contamination when he attempted to ship it to European researchers. Colonel John Alexander confirmed the phenomena on television, and Jane's Defence Weekly aviation editor Nick Cook revealed in his book on black budget programs that Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works had obtained Hutchison Effect documentation.