Overunity.com Archives is Temporarily on Read Mode Only!



Free Energy will change the World - Free Energy will stop Climate Change - Free Energy will give us hope
and we will not surrender until free energy will be enabled all over the world, to power planes, cars, ships and trains.
Free energy will help the poor to become independent of needing expensive fuels.
So all in all Free energy will bring far more peace to the world than any other invention has already brought to the world.
Those beautiful words were written by Stefan Hartmann/Owner/Admin at overunity.com
Unfortunately now, Stefan Hartmann is very ill and He needs our help
Stefan wanted that I have all these massive data to get it back online
even being as ill as Stefan is, he transferred all databases and folders
that without his help, this Forum Archives would have never been published here
so, please, as the Webmaster and Creator of these Archives, I am asking that you help him
by making a donation on the Paypal Button above.
You can visit us or register at my main site at:
Overunity Machines Forum



GDS 3 KW generator runs on water

Started by ramset, October 25, 2014, 09:24:26 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 13 Guests are viewing this topic.

gyulasun

Quote from: memoryman on November 15, 2015, 10:07:52 AM
How and where is that ultra high frequency generated? How high is it?
Are the links in English?

Hey memoryman,

From one of the links given above by member l0stf0x, when translated by the link's online translator, it turns out that the device 'consumes' i.e. uses up a certain metal while operating in the GHz range.

This sounds as the Meyer Mace device in which the iron rod is also said to be consumed when it transmutes.

And an estimation is given how the cost of the material for a given output power compares to the cost of same power taken from utility company (in Greece).

Translated text from Greek to English from the link I mention above: http://tinyurl.com/nmr2xhu 

"Suppose that the metal used in a power device (for 1 kw output) worth of 7-8 euro and lasts one month. For a house we need twice as effective, ie two power devices, so two for 8 euros equals 16 euros per month, so for two months will spend two times 16 equals 32 euros. The reasoning is that the mistake of identification of kw power plant with the consumption unit kWh. As in any home we have continuous consumption 24 hours a day of installed capacity, the correct calculation of these same data is that we pay 32 euros for consumption of 2880 Kwh  (1 kwh for 2 devices for 24 hours for 60 days),  so the cost of electricity produced by this technology is 0,011 euros per kwh, when the PPC (utility provider) charge ten times (0.102 per kwh)".

In this video, also given by member l0stf0x, you can read a test report in English from time 18:56    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDJh2j-Skds

In the same video the inventor shows probably the "heart" of his device when he add water to the container, watch from 32:14

and at 36:40 he shows the metal sheets which are probably the ones that are consumed... I guess.

At 38.35 the metal covers are removed from the sidewalls of the water container. I picked a picture of the printed circuit board, it looks indeed like as a microwave circuit. I wonder where the power comes from to operate that circuit? He adds water to the container and electricity appears at the output:  is the water also used as a kind of (low power) galvanic cell with different metals and is able to run the microwave circuit which then does something to the metal (say transmutes it) ??

More info is needed of course, with more observations.

Gyula

db_pdx

With respect to the return policy, the product did not meet its published specs initially and throughout the warranty period; It's defective. It was supposed to do what was advertised at the time of sale (5kW for 4hrs every 24hrs). Options would be repair/replace/refund or something else agreeable to the buyer. Anything else has gotta be breach of contract/false advertising.

memoryman

gyulasun, thank you.
Wish I could understand what they are saying...
The English translated parts don't really help much.

SoManyWires

Quote from: gyulasun on November 15, 2015, 12:31:18 PM
Hey memoryman,

From one of the links given above by member l0stf0x, when translated by the link's online translator, it turns out that the device 'consumes' i.e. uses up a certain metal while operating in the GHz range.

This sounds as the Meyer Mace device in which the iron rod is also said to be consumed when it transmutes.

And an estimation is given how the cost of the material for a given output power compares to the cost of same power taken from utility company (in Greece).

Translated text from Greek to English from the link I mention above: http://tinyurl.com/nmr2xhu 

"Suppose that the metal used in a power device (for 1 kw output) worth of 7-8 euro and lasts one month. For a house we need twice as effective, ie two power devices, so two for 8 euros equals 16 euros per month, so for two months will spend two times 16 equals 32 euros. The reasoning is that the mistake of identification of kw power plant with the consumption unit kWh. As in any home we have continuous consumption 24 hours a day of installed capacity, the correct calculation of these same data is that we pay 32 euros for consumption of 2880 Kwh  (1 kwh for 2 devices for 24 hours for 60 days),  so the cost of electricity produced by this technology is 0,011 euros per kwh, when the PPC (utility provider) charge ten times (0.102 per kwh)".

In this video, also given by member l0stf0x, you can read a test report in English from time 18:56    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDJh2j-Skds

In the same video the inventor shows probably the "heart" of his device when he add water to the container, watch from 32:14

and at 36:40 he shows the metal sheets which are probably the ones that are consumed... I guess.

At 38.35 the metal covers are removed from the sidewalls of the water container. I picked a picture of the printed circuit board, it looks indeed like as a microwave circuit. I wonder where the power comes from to operate that circuit? He adds water to the container and electricity appears at the output:  is the water also used as a kind of (low power) galvanic cell with different metals and is able to run the microwave circuit which then does something to the metal (say transmutes it) ??

More info is needed of course, with more observations.

Gyula

thankyou for sharing and your efforts to help understand through translation. so, disolving metal additives it could be then. interesting.

still the marketers at gds are not being all that on the level when considering their version of how a warranty should work,
if the device worked exactly as they claim, not only customers with broken contraptions would be wanting their the expensive investment to be well covered against anything for a reasonable amount of time.

and gds chosing certain channels to market their product release also is enough to make anyone who does not stand to receive a reward or affiliated payment, might want to wait and see, as if there hasn't been enough waiting already for them to be granted CSA and UL standard approvals being an electrical device built and sold in canada that it only makes sense they would need to have unless gifting them away (for 5 grand us dollars cash) from a minivan touring various parkinglots like a garbage speaker merchant from the late 80's.

MileHigh

A hypothetical is that the GDS guy simply paid the commercial real estate agent $1000 cash for the privilege of putting up his logo on the small sign outside the huge industrial building in Oshawa.  In other words, the sign outside the building could be meaningless and when a real tenant moves in the GDS sign will be taken down.  You can call it sign spoofing.

If you plan on building "50,000 per month" by the end of Q1 2016, how come they are not hiring full staff for a GIANT FACTORY?