2008 - Practical Guide to Free Energy Devices maintained by Patrick J. Kelly
Submitted by esaruoho on June 19, 2008 - 12:27including, but not limited to:
List of Stanley Meyer patents
Submitted by esaruoho on May 10, 2007 - 10:30Dean Warwick
Submitted by cybe on October 14, 2006 - 22:02Murder By Remote-Control?
News Brief – October 9, 2006
Further indications have come to light that Dean Warwick, alternative energy pioneer and intelligence insider did not die of natural causes.
Dean Warwick collapsed and died whilst addressing a packed auditorium in Blackpool last weekend. Significantly however, he said he felt a “beam†or “burning†at the side of his head shortly before beginning his talk.
According to those who last spoke to him before he began his talk, Dean said: “I think I’m going to be bumped offâ€.
Originally from New Zealand but now resident in Scotland, Dean had promised to make some momentous announcements at the conference.
In the weeks prior to speaking at Probe International’s conference, Dean had given Dave Starbuck a foretaste of what was coming in an interview.
Among other things, Dean promised that he would name who was behind the murder of Bobby Kennedy. ....
Discussion:
http://www.nineeleven.co.uk/board/viewtopic.php?t=4772
Warwick's website - ampliflaire.co.uk
Practical Guide to Free-Energy Devices - Patents and Scientific Papers
Submitted by cybe on April 26, 2006 - 10:36Â This is a mirror of http://www.web-space.tv/free-energy/patents.html
Patents and Scientific Papers (in the form presented here, these documents are very informative and should be considered instructional rather than just patents):
Patents Part 1: Re-worded excerpt from Howard Johnson's magnet motor patent 4,151,431. This patent describes a powerful motor which it claims can power an electrical generator.
Practical Guide to Free-Energy Devices
Submitted by cybe on April 26, 2006 - 09:13This is a mirror of http://www.web-space.tv/free-energy/
What's that you say - perpetual motion is impossible? My, you're a difficult one to please. The electrons in the molecules of rock formations have been orbiting steadily for millions of years without stopping - at what point will you agree that they are in perpetual motion?
Stanley Meyer's Gas Voltage Control Circuit - Patents
Submitted by cybe on December 12, 2005 - 00:28This message is from the www.waterfuelcell.org Forum, here
An Introduction to Vortices and Vorticity - vortex.pdf
Submitted by cybe on September 30, 2005 - 11:16Prof. A.H. Techet
Department of Ocean Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA 02139
To better understand the fluid forcing produced by fish when they are swimming it is necessary to first discuss the basic concept of a vortex and vorticity. A vortex arises when flow encircles a central point. Examples of where vortices occur in nature include: whirlpools, tornados, ocean eddies, blood flow through heart valves, and flow swirling behind rocks in a river current. Vortices appear in engineering fluid applications as well: flow around offshore platforms, tip-vortices from aircraft wings, helical vortices in propeller wakes and helicopter rotors. In general, vortices can form when flow passes any object with a non-streamlined shape or a sharp corner, and separates from the body.
Fish Exploiting Vortices Decrease Muscle Activity - forelvortex.pdf
Submitted by cybe on September 30, 2005 - 10:52James C. Liao, David N. Beal, George V. Lauder, Michael S. Triantafyllou
Fishes moving through turbulent flows or in formation are regularly exposed to vortices. Although animals living in fluid environments commonly capture energy from vortices, experimental data on the hydrodynamics and neural control of interactions between fish and vortices are lacking. We used quantitative flow visualization and electromyography to show that trout will adopt a novel mode of locomotion to slalom in between experimentally generated vortices by activating only their anterior axial muscles. Reduced muscle activity during vortex exploitation compared with the activity of fishes engaged in undulatory swimming suggests a decrease in the cost of locomotion and provides a mechanism to understand the patterns of fish distributions in schools and riverine environments.....
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Part 1B Engineering: Biological and Medical Engineering, Fish Swimming, Lecture 1 -2 - Trout_propulsion.pdf
Submitted by cybe on September 30, 2005 - 10:39- Login to post comments
