Such stories come up every once in a while. Those are probably just schemes to attract the money of some uncautious investors.
i think it might work, but i dont think it will work as effectively as they say.
Free energy is quite impossible. A fundamental law of the universe is that energy can neither be created nor destroyed, so it's getting power from something.
The fact I can find no information about this device anywhere else leads me to believe it is a hoax, or simply a mistake.
I guess it wasn't as good as an idea as they thought, seeing as this video is over a year old.
What's the pretty amazing stuff? Two inventors claiming things about their product?
Mythbusters had a whole episode about free energy at home products, all of them failed miserably.
Ah, the good old perpetual motion scam. Give it a fancy name and some gullible millionaire with a primary school understanding of the laws of physics will invest some money in the idea.
Isnt "zero point magnetic power generator" the name of the gravity gun in half life 2?
Ah, the good old perpetual motion scam. Give it a fancy name and some gullible millionaire with a primary school understanding of the laws of physics will invest some money in the idea.
Except I don't know whether it's the sort of perpetual motion machine. I get the feeling that it's just leeching potential energy from a place nobody thought to look into before.
Sounds like a hoax to me...Let's all just go back to Stirling Engines!