Do you have enough detailed knowledge of what Sparky Sweet or Mark Comings did to build a working prototype that you could publicly describe what they did so some of us on your mailing list could try to duplicate their work in our homes?
Ha! Even if I knew, I would not tell, as lone wolves like that can only get into trouble. Mark is considered in some corners to be the father of his particular way to do it:
When his second lab was trashed, and Mark thought that he was sneaking past them, he wisely stopped and never tried again, I believe.
Sparky was a career scientist at GE, and his doctorate was in magnetics, as I recall. Sparky conditioned magnets to get his effect, in highly dangerous processes that used 20K volts. Sparky played the proprietary technology game and took his secrets to his grave, and his equipment was seized upon his untimely death, only weeks after the final threat was delivered to him. Tom Bearden tried to replicate it, and got 50-to-1 over-unity with his prototype, and then he ran out of money or some such. A typical fate.
Another way is rotating magnets, which Troy Reed did, and Dennis even had a similar prototype. But lone inventors in their garages and spare bedrooms can only get into trouble. And even if they get one working, it is hundreds of millions of dollars of R&D from there for something that the public could use, and no independent effort has ever crossed that chasm.
If a choir formed, which would be able to protect inventors, from the public awareness alone, then stuff like that could be developed, and even some crude prototypes could be shown off. But until that day comes, it is an exercise in futility, and life-risking, to play the prototype game.
Free-energy inventors are plentiful, while a choir has never existed. Inventors are more of the problem than the solution these days, as they get overwhelmed, declaring themselves to be the Messiah, expect to be paid a trillion dollars, etc. This is all part of the conundrum.
Do you have enough detailed knowledge of what Sparky Sweet or Mark Comings did to build a working prototype that you could publicly describe what they did so some of us on your mailing list could try to duplicate their work in our homes?
Ha! Even if I knew, I would not tell, as lone wolves like that can only get into trouble. Mark is considered in some corners to be the father of his particular way to do it:
https://phryllresearch.com/mark-comings-the-father-of-modern-phryll-research/
When his second lab was trashed, and Mark thought that he was sneaking past them, he wisely stopped and never tried again, I believe.
Sparky was a career scientist at GE, and his doctorate was in magnetics, as I recall. Sparky conditioned magnets to get his effect, in highly dangerous processes that used 20K volts. Sparky played the proprietary technology game and took his secrets to his grave, and his equipment was seized upon his untimely death, only weeks after the final threat was delivered to him. Tom Bearden tried to replicate it, and got 50-to-1 over-unity with his prototype, and then he ran out of money or some such. A typical fate.
Another way is rotating magnets, which Troy Reed did, and Dennis even had a similar prototype. But lone inventors in their garages and spare bedrooms can only get into trouble. And even if they get one working, it is hundreds of millions of dollars of R&D from there for something that the public could use, and no independent effort has ever crossed that chasm.
If a choir formed, which would be able to protect inventors, from the public awareness alone, then stuff like that could be developed, and even some crude prototypes could be shown off. But until that day comes, it is an exercise in futility, and life-risking, to play the prototype game.
Free-energy inventors are plentiful, while a choir has never existed. Inventors are more of the problem than the solution these days, as they get overwhelmed, declaring themselves to be the Messiah, expect to be paid a trillion dollars, etc. This is all part of the conundrum.
https://ahealedplanet.net/conun.htm#summary