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Overunity Machines Forum



quentron.com

Started by Philip Hardcastle, April 04, 2012, 05:00:30 AM

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0 Members and 82 Guests are viewing this topic.

trim12

Keep up the good work.

mikestocks2006

Quote from: Philip Hardcastle on December 04, 2012, 03:14:19 AM
Hi All,


Not sure that I appreciate the sort of snooping on my affairs re patents but let me simply say an international patent application was filed months ago citing the prior dates of 2 provisional applications.


There have been delays caused by many things, I am not going to parade them here but they have nothing to do with the Quenco itself, they were matters beyond my control of an administrative, clerical and contracts nature. We have but one hurdle to overcome and tomorrow I expect to be given the green light to conclude construction of the current Quenco device batch.


Those that think my estimates have been silly do not know the difficult road I have been on, the number of times people have broken their word or the immense technical challenges that only became apparent when we tried to do things at a scale of less than 3nm. I actually think we have done remarkably well to be now confident of getting to the end of this stage over the next week or so.


Those that want to snipe go ahead, I am not the slightest bit perturbed by such conduct, I after all have the advantage of knowing the facts, the skeptics merely want to posture and poke fun at people doing things they cannot.


I will not answer the barbs that pop up here, i will say thankd for the moral support from the kinder people here.


Quenco will change the World but I admit to being a bit ambitious to think I oculd do it all on my own, I now ahve the support of a number of experts from stanford and elsewhere, I now have support from many parts of the World, I now have quite a large team who are dedicated to making all this become a commercial reality as soon as humanly possible.


I admit to being too optimistic re delivery but if I had not set myself and others a goal we would find that the progress would have been slower, it is an obvious fact that this sort of work is impossilbe to accurately estimate for what seems simple has turned out to be a test at all levels. I feel though that when I read of other universities taking years to get to only half of what a quenco is then we have made incredible progress unfunded by fat government grants. This really is cutting edge work to deliver a device in such an advanced form, just think of the amn years almost every device requires, we had just me then a few dedicated scientists out of Australia and not a few more at stanford and elsewhere, in total perhaps a few man years, in nano technology that is really very little time.


I think it is strange that so little attention has been given to Quenco in comparison to the pseudo science of Steorn and such but in some ways it is good as it has allowed us to progress with little interference.


Anyway this is my last update before the launch.


Bye
Hi Phil,

In terms of coverage and exposure (it was noted in earlier posts as not being as high as expected) don't you think that having at least some web presence would be of benefit? Taking the website off line appears to be counter productive towards that aspect.

As far as Tesla, their cars are a bit pricey. Sportster close to 100k range, but the sedan is in the 50k before rebates.
If the funds are there, a Nissan Leaf could be an option in the 25k range. If they will not sell one without the batteries, purchase the vehicle, remove the existing battery power plant and replace it with the new quenco technology.

Nice work.
Thanks for posting,
Mike.

trim12

You could always get an electric golf cart, mobility scooter or even an old milk float, get some sceptical reporter to drive them  across the USA.

neptune

I would guess that with the cost of replacement batteries at around £16,000, You could have your pick of Teslas without batteries at your local scrapyard, from £1,000 each.

trim12