updated 11-25-2013 Electronics World & Wireless World (January 1991) Eye-witness accounts suggest that US inventor Stanley Meyer has developed an electric cell which will split ordinary tap water into hydrogen and oxygen with far less energy than that required by a normal electrolytic cell. In a demonstration made before Professor Michael Laughton, Dean of Engineering at Mary College, London, Admiral Sir Anthony Griffin, a former controller of the British Navy,. . . CONTINUE
Jay Leno’s 1964 Chrysler Turbine car * Jay’s Jet Mopar Action mag. Feb. 2010 (10-27-2009) by Steve Lehto, an award-winning author from Detroit After World War II, Chrysler launched whole hog into the field of automotive turbines. They hired as many technological experts as they could find – metallurgists, mechanics, engineers, turbine specialists and started refining the technology to put a jet engine into a car and make it practical. . . CONTINUE
updated 03/25/2016 NASA Winner: MYT (Massive Yet Tiny) Engine design Nov 1st, 2010; posted-updated Jan 30th on pesn.com; Pure Energy Systems News by Sterling D. Allan (also, see Raphial Morgado’s website at Angel Labs LLC . com ) With 40 times higher power-to-weight ratio, low parts count (only 15 moving parts), low maintenance, high mechanical efficiency, and low pollution, the MYT Engine is poised to benefit pretty much any engine. . . CONTINUE
updated 01-30-2016 1806: Francois Isaac de Rivaz (born in Paris, December 19, 1752; Died in Sion, July 30, 1828) was a Swiss inventor, credited with inventing and constructing the first successful internal combustion engine in 1806. The engine was powered by a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen gas was contained in a balloon and the ignition was an electrical Volta starter. A year later, Francois Isaac de Rivaz. . . CONTINUE
Over 200 Miles on a Gallon of Gas Argosy Magazine, August 1977 By Gregory Jones Two hundred miles on less than two gallons of gas? That’s the spectacular fuel economy Tom Ogle got when he test drove a beat up, 4,600 pound, 351 cubic inch, 1970 Ford Galaxie on April 30, 1977, from El Paso, Texas, to Deming, New Mexico, and back. It’s that type of performance that Ogle believes. . . CONTINUE
updated 12-01-2014 What Ever Happened to Tom Ogle? His super carburetor gave 100 mpg on a 427 inch v8 1970 Ford Galaxy By Ron Laytner; Edit International; Copyright 2010 Did the world not go green because of a murder? Maybe 2 murders? The world is telling us to Go Green; from Sesame Street to the Campaign Trail, and Going Green has become as much a marketing tool as a call. . . CONTINUE
updated 07-24-2015 “a mysterious radiation, which comes out of the aether”, “Radiant energy” Tesla’s Discovery of Radiant / Dark Energy The electrical, Radiant, energy throughout the universe, which Tesla referred to and would use to provide power wirelessly at Wardenclyffe has recently been re-discovered and called Dark Energy (“because it cannot be seen”). Of all the great inventions and discoveries of Nikola Tesla, nothing stood out with greater potential benefit. . . CONTINUE
updated 2024-09-09 Nikola Tesla Greatest Electrical Engineer of all time Nikola Tesla, “the father of robotics” Nikola Tesla, “the father of physics” Einstein was still theorizing aether after Tesla had already started accessing it to power machinery. “Our entire mass communication system is based on Tesla’s system,” Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla – by Marc Seifer Tesla’s IQ is estimated at between 160 and 310. born at. . . CONTINUE