This machine is surely an enigma but is it a scam? It does not seem to be. 

There is a possibility that the unit presently will function more as a UPS than 
a primary source of electrical power. Otherwise it makes no economic sense... 
other than being a scientific curiosity supplying "free energy" in a limited 
sense which ignores the capital cost. Here's why.

Las Vegas has very low electricity rates 8+ cents/kwh thanks to a famous nearby 
dam. There is no way this device will save money to the customer unless they 
are practically giving the hardware away. It appears that the 25 kwh electrical 
energy represents the total energy storage capacity of the flywheel+magmo, when 
the unit is fully charged, not a continuous output.
 In fact, the continuous power output looks to be something in the range of 500 
watts. IOW in a full year of operation, 24/7 it will only produce 4000 kwh 
total (nominally free) energy for the year. 

Yet apparently that energy is indeed "free" in the sense of coming from 
magnets, confounding the experts and ignoring the overhead cost of the unit... 
i.e. unless... the present purpose was indeed different - and the plan is that 
it will to be used as a UPS backup... plus possibly... the customers have other 
incentives as well (stock?) 

IOW this unit's best useful purpose at present seems to be as a UPS backup 
since even if it did supply 500 watts continuously the value of that 
electricity would be about $170 bucks per year - so it is not going to save the 
planet at this stage of development, and the customer cannot benefit from it 
compared to regular utility rates. A further breakthrough seems to be needed. 

And given that it shouldn't even work at all - maybe that follow-on 
breakthrough is not farfetched as it seems.

Who knows? Maybe the business plan is to get a few hundred of them out there as 
UPS systems and hope they can figure out how to boost the output considerably 
further down the road.
Jones

    H LV wrote: 

  :-D  "two tens for a five"https://youtu.be/f7pMYHn-1yA

Harry
Terry Blanton wrote:


40 kw of mechanical energy

uh-huh.  They sure know what they are talking about. 
  

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