*AAESOP’s *LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD CHANGE THE WORLD (from the
aesopinstitute.org website)



The conversion of a small Briggs & Stratton engine to run without fuel is
now underway.

This Fuel-Free, scalable, modified engine (and proprietary future piston
and turbine engines) designed to never need fuel will run 24/7 on
Atmospheric Heat, *a vast, untapped reservoir of solar energy larger than
all the world’s fossil fuel reserves.*

PHASE TWO: Following the small Briggs & Stratton gasoline engine conversion
prototype, AESOP will build a proprietary Rauen 4 cylinder fuel-free piston
engine. 3-D printing will produce components. A 4 cylinder prototype can
deliver several hundred watts to prove the concept. Commercial gen-sets
rated at 1 kW and 10 kW will follow. These engines will later power 100 kW
gen-sets. They can also convert heat from LENR to electricity.

Ken Rauen’s engine concept, U.S. Patent #6,698,200 (and Chris Hunter’s
conversion of a FORD engine) proved the Second Law of Thermodynamics
requires modification.

AESOP Energy will develop five of Ken Rauen’s engines. Each designed to run
24/7 on atmospheric heat (“heat of ambient air”). Unlike converted engines,
four unique designs require no internal propane refrigerant. The temperature
in space is  - 454.72 o F.    50 o F. on Earth is more than 500o higher.  Think
of our atmosphere as a gigantic solar energy  storage system. Unlike
traditional engines, these engines do not depend upon resource depleting,
polluting, limited availability, limited reliability, scarce, and costly
resources.



These revolutionary engines will help accomplish rapid reduction of the
need for fossil fuels.

Mark Goldes
Chairman, CEO, AESOP Energy LLC

707 861-9070

AESOP Institute website: www.aesopinstitute.org


On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 10:49 AM, Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> I wrote:
>
>
>> 3. Oil is cheap now mainly because of fracking. This is also lowering the
>> cost of natural gas, which will lower the cost of electricity in the near
>> future.
>>
>
> Meanwhile, in Texas at night they will sometimes pay you to use
> electricity. The cost is negative:
>
>
> http://www.slate.com/articles/business/the_juice/2015/09/texas_electricity_goes_negative_wind_power_was_so_plentiful_one_night_that.html
>
> They get 9% of the their electricity from wind, and 40% at night
> sometimes. The best deal would be to use an electric car in Texas with a
> smart power meter and recharger, giving you a discount during off-peak
> hours, and a super discount when the cost of electricity goes negative.
>
> - Jed
>
>

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