vortex-l  

Re: [Vo]:The Bendini Motor

Terry Blanton
Sun, 11 May 2008 08:01:46 -0700

$24M market cap.  Wrought with nepotism.  :-)

http://www.pinksheets.com/pink/quote/quote.jsp?symbol=eenx#getQuote

It looks like the pulse charger has some value.  If you look under
research, you'll see what appears to be some pulsed motor/gensets.

Terry



On Sun, May 11, 2008 at 7:01 AM, Esa Ruoho <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> why call him bendini - what possible use is it to mispell Bedini?
> why call the company energetics when its called Energenx?
> http://www.energenx.com ?
>
> did you know r-charge+energenx went public lately, even as far as to
> reuters?
>  <
> http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS193314+08-Apr-2008+PRN20080408
> >
>
> also, have you seen energy from the vacuum part 2?
> also, maybe you want to look a bit into jim watson's replication of the
> bedini device, from the 1980s..
>
>
> 2008/5/11 thomas malloy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>
> > Vortexians;
> > As a part of my investigation of the Valone Matter, I mentioned the
> subject of FE machines to my friend Bible Code Roy. He mentioned the Bendini
> patent, and pointed out that the Bendini Motor appears to be OU. This led me
> to contact the author, Rick Friedrich, of www.r-charge.com . Energetics is a
> publicly traded corporation, so they have to distance themselves from
> anything flaky (OU machines). However Rick, sent me to
> http://www.rpmgt.org/SSG.html on which he has posted the plans which will
> enable me to build a working OU motor.
> >
> > The Energetics chargers are supposed to reverse Pb sulfate (?) formation,
> so I can pick up some batteries at the scrap yard and this machine will
> rejuvenate them. One battery bank will run the machine, which recharges the
> other battery bank. Periodically the operator can partially discharge one of
> the battery banks, yielding some useful energy.
> > Assuming that the test machine preforms as advertised, I could build a
> larger version which would charge a bank of batteries. If they were wired
> through a multi pole contactor, the batteries could be switched from
> parallel to series, producing 250 volts. This would allow it to power a flow
> water heater, or a space heater. The question is, will the cost of the
> energy released by the battery be competitive with natural gas, or
> electricity? According to Rick, the price of fuel would have to double, and
> then some, before such a system would be practical. It has occurred to me
> that it would be just the toy for the nerd who has everything, also it
> appears to be just a matter of time before the price of fuel doubles, eh?
> The price of a machine that I could build out of a scrap pile would be a
> fraction of what a commercially produced machine would be.
> >
> > It will also be of interest to some of you that my friend Daryl, who  is a
> EE and is in the solar power business. He confirmed Rick's statement that
> battery degeneration is a big problem, for the solar energy business. The
> Energetics charger was designed to address this matter. So I assume that he
> will investigate that end of the matter.
> >
> > I'm wondering about the reversal of the sulfating process by the pulse
> displayed on the r-charge website. I'm assuming that this will be of
> interest to some of you. Rick also mentioned Li ion batteries. He said that
> Energetics will never produce a charger for them. Apparently they tend to
> catch fire, or explode. Either event is not conducive to getting a UL seal
> of approval. Rick also mentioned military applications, this being grounds
> for getting kicked off of his discussion group. I mentioned LENR's as a
> possible explanation for anomalous energy release in Li ion batteries. I've
> never forgotten the laboratory explosion in Japan involving electrical arks
> in water. My primary interest at the moment is to figure out how to avoid
> them.
> >
> > The bottom line is that we seem to have several anomalies here. The
> motor's pulse to the battery is produced by a caducisus coil. It reverses an
> irreversible reaction, and a reversible reaction, in addition to producing
> anomalous energy. I wonder if the coil gets cold when it runs?
> >
> >
> > --- Get FREE High Speed Internet from USFamily.Net! --
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> >
> >
>
>
>
> --
> -
> whatever it is that you take from others is taken from you