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This Week in New Energy
With Sterling D. Allan
Sunday, Jan. 15, 2006
Adjunct to FreeEnergyNews.com
- daily news
and PESN.com - feature news
Peterman magnet motor; Perendev replics video;
Chukanov's ball lightning video; wind walkers; desktop fusion at Purdue;
cold fusion reports; Krystal Planet distributing Magenn; algae cleans
emissions; algae as biofuel.
Brought to you by PESN (Pure Energy
Systems News) |
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Show Notes
James
This Week in Free Energy
Susan
Imagine a world in which each home has its own power generator that obtains its
energy in such a way that no fuel has to be added.
Imagine every vehicle being able to run without ever stopping for fuel.
Imagine each appliance having its own power source that never has to be
recharged. That is the world of the
future. Join with us as we track our
progress toward such a world.
James
This Week in Free Energy; Jan 15, 2006: exploring and reporting on energy
systems that tap into the inexhaustible, ubiquitous, and clean sources of energy
generation, such as solar, wind, tide, and geothermal, but also exploring those
non-conventional avenues such as zero point energy, radiant energy, cold fusion,
and magnet motors.
With us today for our report is Sterling Allan.
Sterling, what do you have for us this week?
Sterling
Hi James.
- Peterman
Magnet Motor - Brad Peterman seeks donations to build a stable
permanent magnet motor prototype based on a rough prototype he said ran for
5 1/2 minutes. If prototype is successful, he said he will open source the
design. (PESWiki; Jan. 10)
- Video
of Perendev Magnet Motor and Bedini Motor replication - "I
don't like the term perpetual-motion", says Sterling D. Allan.
Whatever you might call it, the Perendev
& Bedini Motors that Sterling brought to TeslaTech 2005 certainly caused
a stir. (American AntiGravity; Jan. 12) [video]
- Ball-Lightning
Generator Video - Dr. Kiril Chukanov demonstrates his "Angelina
IV" prototype generating & maintaining a stable ball-lightning
plasmoid, which he claims can be used to manipulate and extract significant
amounts of Zero Point Energy. (American Anti-Gravity, Jan. 13)
(video
footage from July 2005)
- Wind
walkers (video) - Animari are animals that can walk without having
to eat. One engineer has designed a
light-weight robot that can walk along the beach, powered only by the
wind... (Discovery.ca; Oct. 18, 2005)
- Desktop
fusion is back on the table - Can
the popping of tiny bubbles trigger nuclear fusion, a potential source of
almost unlimited energy? Purdue physicist claims to have definitive data. (Nature;
Jan. 10) (See also EurekAlert)
(See Slashdot
discussion.)
- New
Energy Times Issue #14 -- Jan. 10, 2005
Contents include: Low-Energy Nuclear Transmutations
2006 Cold Fusion Conferences Cold Fusion Short Documentary Video
Conference Proceedings 12th International Conference On Condensed Matter
Nuclear Science (ICCF12) The Hydraulic-Electrostatic Cold Fusion Method
Wikipedia Warriors Defend Cold Fusion.
- Krystal
Planet to distribute Magenns Airborne Wind Turbines -
Krystal Planet will use its marketing infrastructure to sell Magenn's new
aloft-floating wind turbines, set for production this year. (PESN;
Jan. 11)
- Krystal
Planet announces educational wind turbine program - Krystal Planet
will install turbines by Southwest Windpower in three U.S. schools to help
the schools save money on electricity and provide a hands-on clean power
learning experience for the children. (PESN; Jan. 12)
- Algae
That Cleans Emissions and Produces Fuel - Isaac Berzin, a rocket
scientist at MIT, has come up with an idea for using algae to clean up
power-plant exhaust. Algae farms near power plants would reduce CO2 and
nitrous oxide emissions, filtered through the algae. Then the CO2-saturated
algae is harvested and squeezed to produce a combustible vegetable oil
(biodiesel) and a dried green substance that can be further processed into
ethanol. (USA Today; Jan. 10) (Slashdot
discussion)
- Hawaii
Research Shows Algae Promising as Biofuel - Barry Raleigh is doing
research into making diesel fuel out of algae. Finding a viable way to
replace petroleum will be a major topic at a biotech summit in Waikiki. (Star
Bulletin; Jan. 11)
- Mitsubishi
Plans for 300 MW of Yearly Solar Production - Mitsubishi Heavy
Industries Ltd. plans to enter the solar
power market on a major scale, based on a significant advance in its
solar-cell technology. They say their cost for manufacturing the new solar
panels will be about half that of rival companies. (Ahasi; Jan. 10)
Sterling
Thus concludes This Week in Free Energy.
James
This Week in Free Energy is brought to you by PES Network Inc.
Join them online for daily updates at FreeEnergyNews.com
See also
Page posted by SDA
Jan. 31, 2006
Last updated March 21, 2006
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