Time to turn myself in!

I guess this fits in the Dodgy Technology section, albeit one that does work.
I read about lifters a good few years back and though: 'that's either complete fabrication or really intriguing', either way, I had to give it a try!
My model was triangular, about 150mm per side. Basically just a Balsa frame, with a thin foil skirt as one electrode and an isolated fine wire stretched about 15mm above it as the other electrode. I powered it with about 25kV from a CRT anode PSU. The lifter was restrained by three lengths of thin cotton to keep it stable
I've attached a photo and a zip file containing a video of a test run (sorry, I'm no good at video uploads, YouTube etc). By the time I got round to videoing it, the lifter was getting a bit battered - the uprights had been snapped and glued so the upper wire was getting a bit slack, causing the flashovers and crashes.
As can be seen, there was plenty of lifting force available to tension the restraining threads. You should be able to make out the fine wires running to the two electrodes. You can also see that no conducting surfaces were involved, its direction of thrust was independent of its surroundings. The other thing that really intrigued me was that it worked almost equally well when connected with reversed polarity (same thrust direction)! Lots of Ozone generation both ways.
There are all sorts of discussions on power efficiency, operation in a vacuum etc. which I won't get into, but it was a really fun experiment and demonstration for the kids. I have to admit that I was stunned when it actually lifted off for the first time!

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A couple of references:
http://jnaudin.free.fr/lifters/main.htmhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IonocraftLooking back at the photo dates, this was way back in 2006. The lifter is in tatters by now but I though it would be a good weekend topic.