Do Ghosts Still HAUNT THIS Battlefield?

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  • Опубліковано 18 вер 2024
  • #paranormal #spiritualawakening #ghost
    This Battlefield is home to Fort Necessity, a structure erected by George Washington during the French / Indian War.
    For those curious to research the raw audio from the ultrasonic device, the link to the audio is here: drive.google.c...
    Past videos show how to pull out the voices using your audio software.
    Saving Ghosts is dedicated to understanding how and why consciousness exists after the body has died. Speaking to spirits has long been debated, however, I feel that consciousness is energy, and thermodynamics (the study of energy) states that energy doesn't die, it simply moves on.
    This channel consists of spirit communication using modern scientific devices, science experiments, and investigations.
    I know what you may be asking, “Could this possibly be real?”, and the answer to that is absolute.
    I have experienced spirits ever since I was young and had always needed to know how the dead can speak. Here on my channel, you can hear spirits come through and speak about anything and everything. I conduct Ghostbox sessions with random spirits that wander by, and even celebrities if I feel there is a connection. So If you’re interested in the paranormal, I think you should subscribe to this channel.
    Thank you
    Phil
    Visit me @ www.savingghosts.com
    Join us at www.Facebook.com/savingghosts
    Want some cool SG Merch? teespring.com/...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 14

  • @SAK59
    @SAK59 Рік тому +1

    Incredibly interesting! It's amazing watch you hone your craft. The fact that you are so open as you try different things and let us be part of the process really places you in a completely different class from everyone else. Thank you for these fantastic videos, Phil!

    • @SavingGhosts
      @SavingGhosts  Рік тому

      Thank you so much!!!!! I truly appreciate you.

  • @melanieiwasko6010
    @melanieiwasko6010 Рік тому +2

    Thank you Philip! I look forward to your videos. You impress me! Thanks for your hard work and dedication! 💟

    • @SavingGhosts
      @SavingGhosts  Рік тому +1

      Awwwww....thank you Melanie. Perhaps a live should happen soon?

  • @martijmen
    @martijmen Рік тому

    Hey Philip thanks so much for your video! The telephone was interfering indeed. Looking forward to your next video! 😀

  • @dawnprochilo8084
    @dawnprochilo8084 Рік тому +1

    Hi Phil, that piece of equipment fascinates me. There was interference but I think the idea you mentioned may help tone it down or eliminate it. The responses I thought were clear enough to make out. Another thing I want to say that I forgot to tell you in your last video is a big Congrats to you for getting your paper published! I'm so happy for you, that is such a accomplishment that you worked so hard on. Take care, I'll catch you on your next video. Enjoy your day.

    • @SavingGhosts
      @SavingGhosts  Рік тому

      Dawn!!!!!! Thank you thank you! It's always great to hear from you!

    • @dawnprochilo8084
      @dawnprochilo8084 Рік тому

      @@SavingGhosts You're quite welcome.

  • @paulmicheldenverco1
    @paulmicheldenverco1 Місяць тому

    I have that machine, too, but mine on my ipad.

  • @FabioManganiello
    @FabioManganiello 11 місяців тому

    I have a scientific background and I'm very skeptical of paranormal in general. But I'm not sure if you realized what's the piercing, repetitive sound in the background that starts from 12:16. That's the sound of a bugle in C. It was a very commonly used signaling trumpet on battlefields in the 18th and early 19th century. Unlike modern trumpets, it has no valves, so the only way to control the pitch was through the player's embouchure - and thus it was limited to the natural harmonic series. Of course, most of the soldiers who were given a bugle on the battlefield weren't exactly skilled concerto players who bothered about their embouchure while a bayonette was heading for their throat, so in the frantic moments of the battle they would just repeatedly blow the same note (C in this case) inside of the trumpet, resulting in the same frantic rhythmic pattern repeated over and over.
    Plus, the reference pitch for brass instruments has slightly gone up over time - the standard 440 Hz tuning is actually a relatively recent invention (around the end of the 19th century), while earlier instruments were tuned around slightly lower versions of the A (at the end of the 18th century the standard A would generally sit in a ~420/430 Hz range). And, indeed, the sound I'm hearing in this video isn't exactly a C5 note (like I would expect from a modern bugle in C), but somewhat closer to B4. Which would fit *perfectly* with the tuning I'd expect the British and French would use around the period of this battle.
    In other words, what you've captured there is basically a live recording of that battle, which literally ticks all the boxes of what I would label as scientific evidence. The probability that that sound was artificially added later to the video implies that you or somebody from your team had managed to put your hands on an original bugle from that period (there are only a few of them left around, mostly stored in museums) and knew how to blow into it. Had you put so much effort, you'd have probably put at least a caption like "bugle/trumpet sound" to draw the listener's attention to it, but you seem to have barely noticed that sound and focused on the dog bark sound instead.
    For the first time, I've bumped into a case where the probability of this thing being genuinely paranormal is higher than the probability of this being made up. That has sent shivers down the spine of an iron-clad boring science guy like me.

    • @SavingGhosts
      @SavingGhosts  10 місяців тому

      Fabio thank you so much. I am responding to your comment publicly on my next video because of the way you approached this. Bravo sir. Bravo.

    • @LordSesshaku
      @LordSesshaku 14 днів тому

      You're no skeptic if you heard a buggle in C at 12:16. Also, from a historic point of view, the bugle wouldn't make sense either. It was a german instrument that appear a couple years later than the battle at this fort, and wasn't adopted by british troops until a decade later. At this point in history it was mostly drums and fife to keep the march.

  • @stephengaren2219
    @stephengaren2219 Рік тому

    TC Electronic has mini versions of their delay and reverb pedals. They come stock with one setting only. In order to get different sounds from them, a signal from a cell phone is transmitted through an electric guitar pickup, from an online library, to the pedal. What I'm hearing from your cell phone is similar to that sound being transmitted through a guitar pickup. It's an awful noise. Essentially I think this is what's happening here in your video. While it does work, I'm in agreement that a cell phone isn't going to be the clearest in sound. Running the cell recording through an amplifier is very similar to how sounds from the TC Electronic library is sent to their mini pedals. I can provide UA-cam links of the loading of new sounds into the pedals if interested. Anyway, that's what I'm hearing and/or comparing it to.

    • @SavingGhosts
      @SavingGhosts  Рік тому

      Yeah the cell phone was a cheap test to see if it would record. I'm hoping this new digital recorder will work better. I need to install another amplifier. I thought about installing a noise gate but not sure if I should.