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Inventor Says He's Found Free Energy
IOL ^ | 1-22-2002 | Kevin Smith

Posted on 01/22/2002 5:43:47 AM PST by blam

Inventor says he's found free energy

January 22 2002 at 07:07AM
By Kevin Smith

Dublin - It has been a pipe-dream of inventors since Leonardo da Vinci, but has the secret of free energy now been found in Ireland?

A cold stone outhouse on a windswept Irish hillside may seem an unlikely setting for the birthplace of such an epoch-making discovery, but it is here that an Irish inventor says he has developed a machine that will do no less than change the world.

The 58-year-old electrical engineer, who lives in the Irish republic and intends - for "security and publicity-avoidance reasons" - to keep his identity a secret, has spent 23 years perfecting the Jasker Power System.

It can be built to scale using off-the-shelf components It is an electro-mechanical device he says is capable of nothing less than replenishing its own energy source.

The Irishman is not alone in making such assertions. The Internet is awash with speculation about free or "zero point" energy, with many claiming to have cracked the problem using magnets, coils, and even crystals.

"These claims come along every 10 years or so and nothing ever comes of them. They're all cases of 'voodoo science'," said Robert Park, professor of physics at the University of Maryland in the United States. The makers of the Jasker - a name derived from family abbreviations - say it can be built to scale using off-the-shelf components and can power anything that requires a motor

. "The Jasker produces emission-free energy at no cost apart from the installation. It is quite possibly the most significant invention since the wheel," said Tom Hedrick, the only person involved with the machine willing to give his name.

There is mounting urgency in the quest for alternatives Hedrick, chief executive of a company set up with a view to licensing the device in the United States, said the technology shattered preconceived laws of science.

"It's a giant leap forward. The uses of this are almost beyond imagination."

Not surprisingly, this topic is red hot with controversy - sharply dividing a world scientific community still on its guard after the "Cold Fusion" fiasco of 1989 when a group of Utah researchers scandalised the scientific world with claims - quickly found to be unsupported - that the long-sought answer to the problem of Cold Fusion had been discovered.

Experts contacted by Reuters were wary, citing the first law of thermodynamics which, in layman's terms, states that you can't get more energy out than you put in.

"I don't believe this. It goes against fundamentals which have not yet been disproved," said William Beattie, senior lecturer in electrical engineering at Queen's University in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

"These people (Jasker) are either Nobel prize-winners or they don't know what they're dealing with. The energy has to come from somewhere."

Undaunted, the inventor says that once powered-up, his device can run indefinitely - or at least until the parts wear out, adding that he has supplied all his own domestic power needs free for 17 months.

But he is keen to head off the notion that he has tapped into the age-old myth of perpetual motion.

"Perpetual motion is impossible. This is a self-sustaining unit which at the same time provides surplus electrical energy."

In a demonstration for Reuters, a prototype - roughly the size of a dish-washer - was run for about 10 minutes using four 12-volt car batteries as an initial power source.

Emitting a steady motorised hum, the machine powered three 100-watt light bulbs for the duration.

A multimeter reading of the batteries' voltage before the device started up showed a total of 48.9 volts. When it was switched off, a second reading showed 51.2 volts, indicating that, somehow, they had been reimbursed.

The machine went on to run for around two hours while photographs were taken, with no diminution in the brightness of the light bulbs, which remained lit during a short power cut.

"The draw on the batteries was estimated at more than 4.5 kilowatts. With any existing technology the batteries would have been drained flat in one and a half minutes," sai the inventor.

Modern theories of zero point energy have their roots in quantum physics and encompass the fraught areas of "anti-gravity machines" and "advanced propulsion" research.

Contributors to the debate range from serious exponents of quantum science to those who insist free energy secrets have been imparted to them by aliens.
Still others seem convinced that the US government is conspiring to suppress such discoveries.

Nick Cook, aerospace consultant to Janes Defence Weekly and author of The Hunt For Zero Point is not as quick as some to dismiss the possibilities.

"Zero point energy has been proven to exist, the question is whether it can be tapped to provide usable energy. And to that end, I think it's possible, yes. There are a lot of eminent scientists now involved in this field and they wouldn't be if there wasn't anything to it," he said.

"In my experience opinion in this field is extremely polarised... people either go with this area of investigation in their minds or they don't, and if they don't they tend to pooh-pooh it vehemently. It's very difficult to get an objective assessment," he said.

"Basically, no one wants to be the first to stick his head above the parapet."

Impervious to scepticism, Jasker's makers see the first practical application of their technology as a stand-alone generator for home use, although the automotive industry could also be a near-term target given the huge investment in developing substitutes for petrol-fuelled engines.

With world oil reserves running down, there is mounting urgency in the quest for alternatives.

If the Jasker men really are onto something, it could be the most important Irish invention since Guinness.

- Reuters


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To: FreePaul
A likely source for "free" energy in Ireland.

Ahhh, the truth comes out at last. The Templars tried to keep it a secret, but this outhouse is built directly upon one of the earth's natural power grids. This outhouse has always been a source of power. The Egyptians knew about this Irish source of power. People who poop there, do so with greater facility, yet only those "in-the-know" know the real reason why. The Druids knew about it. The Merovingians and now the Masons and Skull and Bones know about it, as well as the Jekyl Island group and two members from MJ-12.

I wouldn't want to be the company insuring this inventor because the Illuminati have hims down as a marked man.

41 posted on 01/22/2002 6:29:33 AM PST by Wm Bach
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To: blam
"imparted to them by aliens."

In this case, it's more likely after a discussion with leprechauns after a more than a few pints of Guinness.

42 posted on 01/22/2002 6:30:31 AM PST by spunkets
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To: Izzy Dunne
How many watts does it take to light up three 100-watt bulbs? .... Depends on how bright you want 'em...

Amps times volts still equals watts..

43 posted on 01/22/2002 6:31:29 AM PST by Brewer
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To: blam
I'm a patent attorney, and we run into this one ALL THE TIME. I have several great stories. One is about a guy who had hooked up an electric drill to drive one wheel of a go-cart with an alternator hooked up to another wheel to charge the batteries driving the drill. The go cart would go about 100 feet and then the batteries would die. But he had it figured out - he just needed a "bigger pulley on the alternator" (of course!). This guy had obtained $5000 from ten of his friends as investors, and they did not want to hear me question whether or not it would really work. However, it got real quiet when I disconnected the alternator belt and the thing went 50% further.

Another good one was the guy who had found a way to get "free energy" by using AC out of the wall to separate water from his well (it HAD to be from his well or "it wouldn't work") via electrolysis. When we got into his basement and saw two HUGE tanks, one each of pure hydrogen and oxygen, we promptly got the f*&k out of there not wanting to "get blowed up real good". We never got around to asking him how he got that free energy.

44 posted on 01/22/2002 6:33:19 AM PST by freedomlover
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To: GodBlessRonaldReagan
it could be the most important Irish invention since Guinness.

What about Harp???

And don't forget about the Pogues!

45 posted on 01/22/2002 6:33:37 AM PST by VoiceOfBruck
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To: blam
interesting bump
46 posted on 01/22/2002 6:34:11 AM PST by Centurion2000
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To: Wm Bach
Lodge 26 is meeting now under the Vatican to decide what to do about this guy. UFO abduction seems the likely solution.
47 posted on 01/22/2002 6:34:47 AM PST by ZeitgeistSurfer
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To: blam
Sounds like a magician, not an inventor.
48 posted on 01/22/2002 6:37:36 AM PST by 1Old Pro
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To: blam
Ah, the bifield/Brown effect.

Anything like the Norwood/Dingell Phenomenon?

49 posted on 01/22/2002 6:38:43 AM PST by 1Old Pro
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Comment #50 Removed by Moderator

To: GodBlessRonaldReagan
What about Harp???

How about Bailey's Irish Cream?

51 posted on 01/22/2002 6:39:22 AM PST by Tennessee_Bob
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To: blam
Certainly a peat based product, with a large makeup of blarney. Can easily be run by uneducated dullard reporters...
52 posted on 01/22/2002 6:40:10 AM PST by chilepepper
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To: js1138, SCSwampfox
I get .6 kwh, roughly. If a storage battery can produce 60 amp hours at 12 volts, that's roughly .72 kwh. Four batterise and you have enough tp run the light bulbs and the dishwasher. A little circuit trickery and you boost the voltage for the final reading.

Chances are, the fool arrived at 4.5kW from the amount of power required to accelerate the flywheel, charge the capacitors, or power whatever energy-storage device he's got hidden in the dishwasher. Otherwise, requiring a constant 4.5kW input to get 300W output is a pretty inefficient and poor first step on the road to free energy. Most modern internal combustion engines are more efficient than 6.7%.

53 posted on 01/22/2002 6:41:37 AM PST by Palmetto
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To: blam
I am reminded of the "Infinite Improbability Drive" and something about "a cup of really hot tea".
Perhaps these Irish gents have applied the same principles.
Quick, where's my check book!


54 posted on 01/22/2002 6:41:44 AM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts
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To: Dan4175
There Ain't No Such Thing As Free Energy

Step outside and feel the warmth of the sun, then come back in and make the claim again.

A conductor breaking a magnetic field generates current - the earth has a magnetic field. Can such a conductor generate enough energy to keep itself in motion?

55 posted on 01/22/2002 6:43:01 AM PST by The Duke
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To: blam
What a century the 21st is shaping up to be!

The 20th century brought us inventions like the airplane, nuclear power, the superhighway, and penicillin. But watch out! So far in the 21st we have that powered scooter-thingy, and outhouse energy.

56 posted on 01/22/2002 6:45:07 AM PST by Snuffington
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To: The Duke
There Ain't No Such Thing As Free Energy

Step outside and feel the warmth of the sun, then come back in and make the claim again.

I think that depends on your definition of "free".

57 posted on 01/22/2002 6:45:51 AM PST by freedomlover
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To: Sabertooth
>Inventor Says He's Found Free Energy

>>What, a new type of gasoline siphon?

A siphon is -- in a way -- a "free" energy machine. (Not _really_, but in a way.)

The siphon takes a tiny amount of input energy -- sometimes called the suck -- and uses that to induce a gradient into a "system" where that gradient hadn't existed. Once the gradient is in place, the siphon can "generate" power so long as an imbalance exists across the gradient. (Well, a siphon could generate power if a turbine were inserted within the siphon, or if the outflow ran across a waterwheel...)

This is worth posting about because it's entirely possible that so-called "free energy" machines may be built around similar principles.

That is, rather than "generating free energy," such machines may use a small amount of energy to tap into some pre-existing imbalance in potential either in the atmosphere or space-time itself or zero-point quantum flux or shazbot fosdex (i.e., whatever), and then then the "magic machine" just serves the same purpose as a siphon -- it induces a gradient, and then acts as a way to harness the flow across the gradient...

I'd bet that "siphon" is a very good metaphor to keep in mind when evaluating these "free" energy claims. (I bet such machines really exist, but they're not creating free energy, just tapping into naturally occurring imbalances of potential which exist as the quantum equivalent of, say, mountain springs and rivers. )

Mark W.

58 posted on 01/22/2002 6:46:46 AM PST by MarkWar
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To: steve50
I think the Irish drink too much.

Oh, I don't think that's the problem. The problem usually comes when folks pay too much attention to what drunks have to say.

59 posted on 01/22/2002 6:47:36 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: freedomlover
Will the patent office redirect all claims involving perpetual motion machines to the trashbin?
60 posted on 01/22/2002 6:47:48 AM PST by lelio
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