Jerry Decker - KN
Mon, 14 Nov 2005 22:01:40 -0800
Hola Al et al!Yes, about the Clem engine, I have been on it ever since. Thank you for clueing me in that first time, late night in a restaurant, your napkin drawing and story I wrote and drew up the next day to post on KeelyNet.
I have posted all the info I have since collected and have met Clems' daughter and spoken with other relatives.
The Clem relatives tell me there are some errors in your story and I hope one day she will write up a corrected or original version from her personal history with her father and the motor.
No question in my mind he was a natural genius. Whether it was his curiosity on wondering WHY that pump KEPT WORKING after it was turned off, or perhaps he discovered it on his own. Doesn't matter, only that he did something with it to show it could be used as a self-running engine.
A pity it won't ever come out unless someone or some group spends the money to study the matter. As you can see, we have I think the best understanding at this point and everything has been shared with Clems daughter. This one discovery and replication could completely change physics and the energy future of the world.
You can check out all the Clem files (and photos) at; http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clemindex.htm http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clem1.htm http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clem2.htm http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clem3.htm http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clemcar.htm http://www.keelynet.com/energy/clemcone.htm http://www.rexresearch.com/clemengn/clemengn.htm (personal stuff deleted from this discussion list post) AH wrote:
Jerry: JV forwarded me an email from you about Siptrott, Clem, and Schauberger. Since the subject included comments about Clem and fluid flow creating centrifugal force with the idea of over unity, I began remembering conversations from years ago with an automechanic friend.This friend told me a story about a friend of his by the name of Richard Clem. Richard Clem lived in Dallas, and was working with some sort of high pressure water pump. I think he was with, or working with a fire department. The pump had a rotary mechanism in it to enhance the power of the water stream. He noticed that on several occasions the pump would remain spinning for some time after he turned it off. Naturally, this got his curiosity ramped up several notches, so he started analyzing and tinkering with what it was that wasnt supposed to be. Richard Clem proceeded to develop the Clem Engine. It was completely a fluid motion mechanism. My friend described the engine as being about 2 to 2-1/2 feet long and about a foot in diameter and weighing, perhaps, 150-200 lbs. The rotating shaft inside the case was a hollow tube, running from one end to the other. On one end was a hydraulic pump that pumped fluid out of the sump and into and down the tube/shaft. At the other end of the tube/shaft was a wheel. Upon reaching the wheel, the fluid turned 90 degrees and flowed radially out to the edge of the wheel through channels in the wheel. Of course, energy was imparted to the fluid by the acceleration of centrifugal force. At the edge or rim of the wheel, the fluid channel turned to point in the direction from which the wheel was rotating, and, thus, the fluid was redirected to be expelled tangentially to the rotation of the wheel, like the rocket-like emissions of a fireworks pinwheel, thus creating thrust to drive the rotation of the wheel. The fluid was squirted out and against the housing, from where it flowed by gravity back down into the sump, to flow into the pump again, thus completing the circuit of the flow. According to my friend, he saw and felt the engine, though he never saw it running. It required vegetable oil as the operating temperature of the fluid got too hot for petroleum oil. Bendix tested the engine for a continuous run of seven days on a dynamometer. During the whole time it produced a steady 200 hp. Of course, the Bendix engineers knew there was some trick to it, even if they couldnt find it in seven days of kicking and poking, so they wrote it off as a clever fraud. I dont think Clem allowed them to open the engine and see its mechanism. Clem set up a company in Dallas to manufacture the engine, farmed out parts to other companies, and was getting ready for production, until...need I go on? After the Feds began barging in, he took one copy of his engine to his lake property east of Dallas, hooked it up to a generator, mounted the whole system in a concrete pit, spun it up to optimal rpm, then poured concrete over the whole thing, thus burying the whole running, generating mechanism in solid concrete, where it has been providing power for his lake home ever since. When the FBI came out to confiscate it, he showed them where it was, and they said, Okay, go ahead and use it. But dont ever try to take it out ofthat concrete block.As I remember, Richard Clem had a home over in the west part of Dallas, somewhere along or near Royal Lane. These things were told to me in the late 70s or early 80s, as I remember. Another friend who rented from the first friend told me about the machine as well. As I remember, he had either seen it running or had seen it disassembled. The first friend cheated me over a car deal several years ago, so I havent spoken to him since, and the other friend moved from his home in Arkansas and I havent found him again yet. If you look at the wheel on the end of the tube/shaft as a spinning disk, there must be some configuration of flow path from the center of the wheel radially out to the edge of the disk that is important in accomplishing the impartation of energy into the oil, yielding over-unity. Both of these people knew Clem, saw the engine, and knew the story, as I have repeated it here. I may have forgotten a small point or two, but I dont think so! If I track down the second friend, I will try for more information. This second friend is also an auto/aircraft mechanic and sheet metal wizard. I believe the engine development episode took place in the 60s. Thanks for keeping keelynet.com going. We miss you here in Dallas, the conflabs, the meetings, etc. Take care, Jerry, and send advanced notice when you arecoming to Dallas.Your friend, Albert
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Jerry Decker - http://www.keelynet.com
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