Posted on 08/28/2006 2:26:14 PM PDT by batmast
Our Technology and the Laws of Physics
Steorns technology produces free, clean and constant energy. This provides a significant range of benefits, from the convenience of never having to refuel your car or recharge your mobile phone, to a genuine solution to the need for zero emission energy production. It also provides a secure supply of energy, since the components of the technology are readily available.
The technology is in a constant state of development. The company has focused for the past three years on increasing power output and the development of test systems that allow detailed analysis to be performed.
Steorns technology appears to violate the Principle of the Conservation of Energy, considered by many to be the most fundamental principle in our current understanding of the universe. This principle is stated simply as energy can neither be created nor destroyed, it can only change form.
Steorn is making three claims for its technology:
The technology has a coefficient of performance greater than 100%. The operation of the technology (i.e. the creation of energy) is not derived from the degradation of its component parts. There is no identifiable environmental source of the energy (as might be witnessed by a cooling of ambient air temperature). The sum of these claims is that our technology creates free energy.
This represents a significant challenge to our current understanding of the universe and clearly such claims require independent validation from credible third parties. During 2005 Steorn embarked on a process of independent validation and approached a wide selection of academic institutions. The vast majority of these institutions refused to even look at the technology, however several did. Those who were prepared to complete testing have all confirmed our claims; however none will publicly go on record.
In early 2006 Steorn decided to seek validation from the scientific community in a more public forum, and as a result have published the challenge in The Economist. The company is seeking a jury of twelve qualified experimental physicists to define the tests required, the test centres to be used, monitor the analysis and then publish the results.
Steorn has decided to publish its challenge in The Economist because of the breadth of its readership. "We chose it over a purely scientific magazine simply because we want to make the general public aware that this process is about to commence and to generate public support, awareness, interest etc for what we are doing."
In my present position in the world I would publish right here on FR and let everybody have the tech for free. I would also wander up to the EE Dept on campus and talk to a couple profs. They would probably head straight to the lab or the supercomputer and somebody would show up from the media and then I would take a hotel room in a distant city and become a man in disguise on the run shunning publicity.
And when was the last time the patent office accepted applications for "Free Energy" or perhaps, "perpetual motion" machines?
If they won't accpet the application, you can't patent it. No patent, no royalties. Go ahead and make it and sell it without one, and GE, GM, hell even Micro$oft, will patent it and slap you down and you end up in the poor house with legal fee's and judgments. Or at the very least out sell you because the have the resources to go into full worldwide production a hell of a lot faster than you can.
BTW: I'm always willing to complain about wasteful government spending, but on something like this; do you honestly think they would invest time and resources in it if they didn't think it could be viable? And of course there's always the possibility that the government would buy it and burry it and use it in the black budget, while you and I are paying through the teeth for gas, oil, LNG and electricity.
That's what the Carribean Island is for! :-)
Cool, I'm glad you're in a comfortable position. Me, I think I'd want a little something for my trouble. I'm not greedy: 1% maybe?
On the patenting aspect: patent those parts of the machinery that are patentable such as magnet design. There will be a lot of little pieces and some will be new, or novel as they like to say. Don't even bother to try to patent an overall free energy machine.
They've done it more than once. The requirement now is a working model.
The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has granted a few patents for motors that are claimed to run without net energy input. These patents were issued because, skeptics claim, it was not obvious from the patent that a perpetual motion machine was being claimed.
Some of these are:
Johnson, Howard R., U.S. Patent 4151431 "Permanent magnet motor", April 24, 1979
Baker, Daniel, U.S. Patent 4074153 "Magnetic propulsion device", February 14, 1978
Hartman; Emil T., U.S. Patent 4215330 "Permanent magnet propulsion system", December 20, 1977 (this device is related to the Simple Magnetic Overunity Toy (SMOT)),
Flynn; Charles J., U.S. Patent 6246561 "Methods for controlling the path of magnetic flux from a permanent magnet and devices incorporating the same", July 31, 1998
Patrick, et al., U.S. Patent 6362718 "Motionless electromagnetic generator" , March 26, 2002
I have an idea there could be plenty of remuneration in the form of books and movies.
With enough public outcry from the uninformed? You bet Congress would. Physics, facts and economics come far behind election issues. Why do you think we haven't drilled in ANWR?
So you would need scientific validation 1st, before proceeding to the patent office.
It's a logical process in light of previous scams, and all the naysayers.
If they're scammers, it will be revealed. If not, they're taking steps to legitimize it and make some dough. As a capitalist myself, I can't fault them for that.
(at the time $1 = 2,700 pesos.)
I'll settle for a life of obscurity on some remote island somewhere, FReep from my hammock swaying in the breeze, cold frosty one nearby (a parrot to open the bottle), Claim a 5 mile defensive perimeter and MINE IT! LOL
That's okay. I already have some contact of a low impact kind, both with academia and the arts. I have a plan. Just as I have a plan for each of a large number of very unlikely events.
The Lutec folks have been at this longer.
http://www.lutec.com.au/
I've been watching those guys for over 4 years now. Mostly just to watch them when someone comes with the silver bracelets, but hey, if they pull it off, I'll buy one :)
I doubt if they are little chips and they are not seen except by mistake and then are considered to be UFO's.
Diggity
LOL. I'm not as gullible as you might think. I'm rooting for the guy but I'm not about to put any of my money into his venture. Hope he's on to something, though.
Once you create electric energy with this process, where does the WASTE HEAT go?
Money for nothin' and your E for free
Because you eat your own cat food, and, man, this is cat food that would put you above five Bill Gates in six months if it worked... Waiting to license it is tons of money lost each *second*.
Ahhh...but here we have the classic "apples to oranges" analogy.
On the one hand we have the laws of probability. On the other hand we have the laws of physics.
Ignore the laws of probability at your leisure.
Ignore the laws of physics at your peril.
But I digress. Indeed, it is only semantics as you say.
But when someone makes the claim to be able to create energy they had best be prepared to be scoffed at.
Some may asked to be convinced and will then observe. Most will say "First Law of Thermodynamics!" and move on.
I am intrigued to be sure but the inventors of this "new technology" would have been better served if they'd simply stated "We have a device that is 100% efficient."
When they use the language that they did, many will not even stop to ask for proof. Foolish? Perhaps.
In any event, I sent them an email address so I can be informed when the evaluation is complete. I read the whole website and as I said...I am intrigued.
P.S. The math behind the whole dark matter 'discovery' is a little daunting, neh? I think I read the article here on FR somewhere...
And I prefer chocolate with my beer but its a moot point since I don't have any of either. Poop. =;^(
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.