Friday, April 11, 2014

Free Energy?





I want to address the rapidly developing topic of so called free energy.  The adjective free is terribly misleading and crowds an army of serious researchers in with that mythical back yard mechanic who attempts to produce perpetual motion.   It is too easily made into a slander.


A better analogy is the water wheel stuck into a fast flowing river.  A pole by itself would generate little power.  Add vanes of some sort and it will turn a large grind stone.  That energy is free by the present by the above paradigm.


What is needed is a gradient of potential energy that can be tapped in some manner as the waster wheel taps the local geographic gradient.  We clearly have this is the surrounding ocean of almost free electrons, the surrounding ocean of the Earth’s Magnetic field and even gravity.  Right here we have identified three potential sources of unlimited potential energy.  The problem challenging both professional and so called amateur Physicists because they are all doing experimental physics has been to find a way to convert that potential into brake horsepower or high voltage to provide torque with minimal wastage as well.




We have now seen evidence that this has been achieved for converting ambient electromagnetic potential into high voltage power.


The theoretical limitation on this work has been our inability to properly understand the fields we generate in complex structures.  It has been no help at all.  However my work on higher order cyclic functions does open that door and better yet it shows us the way forward.  The best take home I have is that spiraling magnetic fields can be generated that are able to vacuum up electrons and nudge them into a center where they may be redirected to produce power.  That may even be good enough.


The following link provides a handy reference to the ongoing work that this field has attracted.  It is around forty pagers in length and includes dozens of links to sources and researchers.

Practical Guide to Free-Energy Devices

          by Patrick J. Kelly
 


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