Jun 16, 2013

How To Make A Solar Panel At Home

Chances are if you are looking for the answer to the question “How to make a solar panel at home” you are either a DIY enthusiast or perhaps someone looking to save some money by cutting their utility bills whilst doing their bit to help the environment.

Homemade solar panels are they a reality?

Building your own homemade solar panels is now a reality, for under a couple of hundred dollars you can assemble your own solar panels with readily available materials and its easier than you may think! You do need to be aware though, that you wont be able to power your whole households power needs on one panel alone, you will need to build several to even get close to this. But if you want to supplement your existing power source at home, create a portable panel or simply make one for a bit of fun then you wont be disappointed.

The main thing you need to do is ensure you get a good guide to follow, one that lays out all the materials and steps you need to take in a clear manner.

How to make a solar panel at home for under $200

The materials you will need to make a solar panel at home will cost you around $200 or less and are readily available from local hardware stores.

You will need some rudimentary tools such as hammer, screwdriver, drill, but you will also need some more specialized tools in particular clamps to help clamp the frames together and a glue gun, whilst not crucial is recommended.

The main items you will need to make a solar panel are :
  • A hotplate
  • Sheet metal shears
  • An Ammeter
  • Distilled water
  • Table salt
  • A Sheet of copper flashing
  • Power Drill
  • Peg Board
  • Ply Wood
  • Jigsaw or Ban saw
  • Soldering Iron
  • Electric Sander or sandpaper
  • A pair of alligator clip leads
  • Safety goggles
  • Gloves

Why build your own solar panels?

Most people want to know if building your own solar panels will help you to cut hundreds and in time even thousands of dollars from your utility bills as you start using your solar energy instead of traditional power grid supplied electricity? Well Depending on your usage and the number of panels you make you can indeed slash your power bills, but once again as mentioned before this would take a large number of panels. The amount of usable power you produce will depend entirely on the number of panels you build.

I feel the best way to approach building your own solar panels is to look at it as a fun project, then if you do master the art of building them and are enthusiastic enough you can go on and build more if your serious about replacing your existing power supply.

Another reason to learn how to make a solar panel at home is to help out mother nature by using a clean renewable energy in place of a polluting one.

Lastly, but by no means least, the project is a lot of fun, especially for a DIY enthusiast. Get your kids and family involved and turn the experience of building your own solar panel and educational one. You wont believe the difference in your kids our look on environmental issues and energy conservation after working on a project like this.


IF you think the task may be bit beyond your skills, then you can still assemble your own solar system by purchasing one in a diy solar power kit form, like the one shown below. These panels come in a range of output wattage’s, the larger ones will certainly make a dent in your power bills.


build your own solar panel

So if you are thinking of building you own homemade solar panel, don’t delay, one thing you need to do to ensure success is get one of the aforementioned “How to make a solar panel at home” guides.


Retrieve lost WiFi passwords with SterJo Wireless Passwords

We’re all for strong security, so don’t take this as a complaint, but why does it have to be so hard to retrieve wireless networking passwords on Windows? Surely there should be an easier way to locate and store these important bits of information?


SterJo Wireless Passwords is a free Windows utility which aims to do just that. You can download either an installable or portable version (which you can carry around on a USB stick), and from then on all you need to do is fire it up and bingo, your passwords will be instantly available to you. They’re displayed on screen, and can also be copied to a file for safe keeping or printing.

The software works by scanning your network and will automatically pick up all of your saved passwords as well, which is great if you regularly use a number of locations and networks (e.g. work, home, cafe etc) and have problems keeping track of the connections when you upgrade computers or use a different device. It’s simple, free and works and is a valuable tool to add to your tool box.

Jun 15, 2013

Wimax VIP Mac Address Generator: 00:21:07 (Seowonintech) Series




Mac Address
Command and MAC
Password
2008x2C6tVLzAWF8
 


With all due respect, I give credits to Jailbreak for the code.
Please post your speedtest on the comment box if you acquired VIP mac using this generator. I found 20 working VIP mac using this.

Jun 12, 2013

D-Link DIR-300 Flashed with DD-Wrt Firmware



D-Link DIR-300 DD-Wrt Firmware flashing Tutorial and How-To Documentation

BioLite Stove Charges Your Phone While Cooking?

Wood-burning stoves aren’t known for being particularly efficient, and their smoke not only contains high carbon emissions but causes health risks to those who inhale it. A portable design from BioLite aims to tackle this problem and turn the stove into a cell phone charger in the process.


The stove converts heat energy into electricity, powering a small fan to improve the wood’s combustion. Beyond this, one to two watts are available to charge a cell phone or LED light via a USB port.

The company sees two markets for their stove: Families in developing countries, and avid backpackers and campers. BioLite will release the CampStove version first, in spring of 2012. They hope profits from this product will help subsidize the cost of the HomeStove model for families in developing countries.


BioLite claims to require half the amount of wood as an open fire and to cut smoke emissions by as much as 95%. Because billions of people depend on wood as cooking fuel, the stove has potential to improve health and, perhaps, slightly curb deforestation.

The CampStove model weighs just under two pounds and boils a liter of water in less than four minutes. A variety of materials can be used to power it, including sticks, pine cones, dung, rice husks and underbrush. This could be convenient for campers tired of carrying cans of gas or petroleum to power their stoves.

BioLite has already won awards for its designs, including the St. Andrews Prize for the Environment and first place in the 2010 Sustainable Brands Innovation Open.

BioLite’s COO Jonathan den Hartog explains how the stove works:

HotCom HT-1008A WiFi ATA based on mesh

HT-1008A is some kind of device with open source Asterisk software embedded which works not only as an ATA but also an IP PBX. With an analog phone connect to its RJ11 port , you can make VoIP calls to another MP01 without traditional Ethernet cable connection.


Compared with standard WIFI network , Mesh networking (topology) is a type of networking where each node must not only capture and disseminate its own data, but also serve as a relay for other sensor nodes. So HT1008As biggest feature is easy deployment without needs of fixed networking infrastructure and central AP in standard WIFI network ,its some kind of self-organizing and scalable VoIP network. Some other features are as below:
  • Free of fixed internet accessing infrastructure.
  • Self organizing and expanding Mesh network , each node works as AP and repeater without need for central AP or IP PBX.
  • Compared with standard WIFI network , Mesh is with lower cost , longer transmission range and easier for deployment , scale up and down from 2 to over 500 units.
  • Protected against water, static electricity, lightning and bad power supply.
  • Targeting for village telco,emergency communication system and hotel telco etc.
  • Open software based on Asterisk for system integrators to develop their own applications
Application diagram:

Jun 11, 2013

Atcom Mesh Potato WiFi VoIP ATA (MP01)

The Atcom Mesh Potato (MP01) is a WiFi mesh VoIP ATA (analog terminal adapter) operating in the license-exempt 2.4GHz ISM band and is the first WiFi mesh ATA in the market using a wireless mesh network as a backhaul to interconnect phones and host LAN/WAN access to computers connected to its Ethernet port.


Targeting for village telco emergency communication systems and hotel telco etc. the Mesh Potato helps you to build the wireless VoIP communication system with open hardware design and open source firmware. It provides affordable voice and data services for people.

Features
  • One port WiFi Mesh ATA
  • WiFi Mode: AP, client, ad-hoc, ahdemo mode
  • Open Source OpenWrt OS
  • Asterisk pre-installed
  • SSH or HTTP management
Applications
  • Village Telco
  • Emergency Communication System
  • Hotel Telco
Hardware
  • Atheros AR2317 Soc
  • MIPS 4KEc processor 180MHz
  • 8 MByte Serial Flash EEPROM
  • 16 MByte RAM
Wireless LAN
  • IEEE 802.11b/g
  • Frequency Band: 2.412GHz to 2.484GHz
  • Antenna Type: Intenal Omnidirectional PCB Antenna with I-PEX connector
  • Transmit EIRP Power: 1-24Mbit 20dBm or 36-54Mbit 17dBm
Interface
  • 1 X RJ45 port
  • 1 X RJ11 port
Firmware
  • Linux kernel 2.6.26.3
  • OpenWrt Kamikaze
  • B.A.T.M.A.N. mesh routing daemon
  • Asterisk 1.4.11
Electrical
  • Power Options: AC adaptor, Passive PoE or PoTL (Power over Telephone Line)
  • PoTL Wire Requirement: standard 4/6 core telephone cable
  • Input Power: 24 VDC 300mA
  • Power Consumption: 3 Watt
  • Passive PoE Effective Distance: 0-100 meters
  • PoTL Effective Distance: 0-50 meters
  • Protected Ports: DC, RJ11 phone, RJ45 Ethernet
  • Protection: overvoltage, reverse DC, nearby lighting, static electricity
Environmental
  • Operating Humidity: 5 to 95% Codensing
  • Operating Temperature: -20 to +70 degrees Celsius
Physical
  • Casing: UV-protected, weatherproof outdoor enclosure
  • Mounting: Pole Mount/Wall Mount
  • Enclosure Size: 228mm x 106mm x 55mm
  • Weight: 0.3Kg

Why Edward Snowden Is a Hero?

Is Edward Snowden, the twenty-nine-year-old N.S.A. whistle-blower who was last said to be hiding in Hong Kong awaiting his fate, a hero or a traitor? He is a hero. (My colleague Jeffrey Toobin disagrees.) In revealing the colossal scale of the U.S. government’s eavesdropping on Americans and other people around the world, he has performed a great public service that more than outweighs any breach of trust he may have committed. Like Daniel Ellsberg, the former Defense Department official who released the Pentagon Papers, and Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear technician who revealed the existence of Israel’s weapons program, before him, Snowden has brought to light important information that deserved to be in the public domain, while doing no lasting harm to the national security of his country.

Doubtless, many people inside the U.S. power structure—President Obama included—and some of its apologists in the media will see things differently. When Snowden told the Guardian that “nothing good” was going to happen to him, he was almost certainly right. In fleeing to Hong Kong, he may have overlooked the existence of its extradition pact with the United States, which the U.S. authorities will most certainly seek to invoke. The National Security Agency has already referred the case to the Justice Department, and James Clapper, Obama’s director of National Intelligence, has said that Snowden’s leaks have done “huge, grave damage” to “our intelligence capabilities.”

Before accepting such claims at face value, let’s remind ourselves of what the leaks so far have not contained. They didn’t reveal anything about the algorithms that the N.S.A. uses, the groups or individuals that the agency targets, or the identities of U.S. agents. They didn’t contain the contents of any U.S. military plans, or of any conversations between U.S. or foreign officials. As Glenn Greenwald, one of the journalists who broke the story, pointed out on “Morning Joe” today, this wasn’t a WikiLeaks-style data dump. “[Snowden] spent months meticulously studying every document,” Greenwald said. “He didn’t just upload them to the Internet.”

So, what did the leaks tell us? First, they confirmed that the U.S. government, without obtaining any court warrants, routinely collects the phone logs of tens of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions, of Americans, who have no links to terrorism whatsoever. If the publicity prompts Congress to prevent phone companies such as Verizon and A.T. & T. from acting as information-gathering subsidiaries of the spying agencies, it won’t hamper legitimate domestic-surveillance operations—the N.S.A. can always go to court to obtain a wiretap or search warrant—and it will be a very good thing for the country.

The second revelation in the leaks was that the N.S.A., in targeting foreign suspects, has the capacity to access vast amounts of user data from U.S.-based Internet companies such as Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, and Skype. Exactly how this is done remains a bit murky. But it’s clear that, in the process of monitoring the communications of overseas militants and officials and the people who communicate with them, the N.S.A. sweeps up a great deal of online data about Americans, and keeps it locked away—seemingly forever.

Conceivably, the fact that Uncle Sam is watching their Facebook and Google accounts could come as news to some dimwit would-be jihadis in foreign locales, prompting them to communicate in ways that are harder for the N.S.A. to track. But it will hardly surprise the organized terrorist groups, which already go to great lengths to avoid being monitored. Not for nothing did Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad go without a phone or Internet connection.

Another Snowden leak, which Greenwald and the Guardian published over the weekend, was a set of documents concerning another secret N.S.A. tracking program with an Orwellian name: “Boundless Informant.” Apparently designed to keep Snowden’s former bosses abreast of what sorts of data it was collecting around the world, the program unveiled the vast reach of the N.S.A.’s activities. In March, 2013, alone, the Guardian reported, the N.S.A. collected ninety-seven billion pieces of information from computer networks worldwide, and three billion of those pieces came from U.S.-based networks.

It’s hardly surprising that the main targets for the N.S.A.’s data collection were Iran (fourteen billion pieces in that period) and Pakistan (more than thirteen billion), but countries such as Jordan, India, and Egypt, American allies all, may be a bit surprised to find themselves so high on the list. “We hack everyone everywhere,” Snowden told the Guardian. “We like to make a distinction between us and the others. But we are in almost every country in the world. We are not at war with these countries.”

For most Americans, the main concern will be domestic spying, and the chronic lack of oversight that Snowden’s leaks have highlighted. In the years since 9/11, the spying agencies have been given great leeway to expand their activities, with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Court, which deals with legal requests from the agencies, and the congressional intelligence committees, which nominally oversees all of their activities, all too often acting as rubber stamps rather than proper watchdogs.

Partly, that was due to lack of gumption and an eagerness to look tough on issues of counterterrorism. But it also reflected a lack of information. Just a couple of months ago, at a Senate hearing, Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden, one of the few legislators to sound any misgivings over the activities of the intelligence agencies, asked Clapper, “Does the N.S.A. collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of Americans?” To which Clapper replied: “No, sir.” (He added, “Not wittingly.”) At another hearing, General Keith Alexander, the director of the N.S.A., denied fourteen times that the agency had the technical capability to intercept e-mails and other online communications in the United States.

Thanks to Snowden, and what he told the Guardian and the Washington Post, we now have cause to doubt the truth of this testimony. In Snowden’s words: “The N.S.A. has built an infrastructure that allows it to intercept almost everything. With this capability, the vast majority of human communications are automatically ingested without targeting. If I wanted to see your emails or your wife’s phone, all I have to do is use intercepts. I can get your emails, passwords, phone records, credit cards.”

Were Clapper and Alexander deliberately lying? If so, perhaps Snowden should be extradited to the United States and dragged into court—but only as part of a proceeding in which the two spymasters face charges of misleading Congress. I suppose you could make the argument that he is a naïve young man who didn’t fully understand the dangerous nature of the world in which we live. You could question his motives, and call him a publicity seeker, or an idiot. (Fleeing to Hong Kong wasn’t very smart.) But he doesn’t sound like an airhead; he sounds like that most awkward and infuriating of creatures—a man of conscience. “I don’t want to live in a society that does these sort of things,” he told Greenwald. “I do not want to live in a world where everything I do and say is recorded. That is not something I am willing to support or live under.”

So what is Snowden’s real crime? Like Ellsberg, Vanunu, and Bradley Manning before him, he uncovered questionable activities that those in power would rather have kept secret. That’s the valuable role that whistle-blowers play in a free society, and it’s one that, in each individual case, should be weighed against the breach of trust they commit, and the potential harm their revelations can cause. In some instances, conceivably, the interests of the state should prevail. Here, though, the scales are clearly tipped in Snowden’s favor.

I’ll leave the last word to Ellsberg, who, for revealing to the world that that Pentagon knew early on that the war in Vietnam was unwinnable, was described in some quarters as a communist and a traitor: “Snowden did what he did because he recognised the NSA’s surveillance programs for what they are: dangerous, unconstitutional activity. This wholesale invasion of Americans’ and foreign citizens’ privacy does not contribute to our security; it puts in danger the very liberties we’re trying to protect.” - source

Jun 10, 2013

Top 10 World's Most Efficient String Inverters (< 5 kW)

The table below shows the Top 10 of the current commercially available string inverters for systems below 5 kilowatts with the highest maximum inverter efficiency.

This information has been collated from public sources such as online product datasheets.

Manufacturer
Inverter Efficiency
Inverter Model
98.60%
StecaGrid 3600
97.80%
NT5000
97.70%
IG TL 5.0
97.70%
4800 TL
97.70%
VS 5
97.60%
SE4000
97.50%
SunMaster ES4.6
97.50%
PV-S4200
97.40%
Solplus 50
97.40%
Refusol 500K

Why are Perpetual Motion Machines considered impossible?

Why haven't the 1st & 2nd Laws of Thermodynamics been broken, enabling 'Perpetual Motion' & 'Free Energy'?
  • The first law of thermodynamics, which mandates conservation of energy, and states in particular that the flow of heat is a form of energy transfer.
  • The second law of thermodynamics, which states that the entropy of an isolated macroscopic system never decreases, or (equivalently) that perpetual motion machines are impossible.

Perpetual Motion describes hypothetical machines that operate or produce useful work indefinitely and, more generally, hypothetical machines that produce more work or energy than they consume, whether they might operate indefinitely or not.

There is undisputed scientific consensus that perpetual motion would violate either the first law of thermodynamics, the second law of thermodynamics, or both. Machines which comply with both laws of thermodynamics but access energy from obscure sources are sometimes referred to as perpetual motion machines, although they do not meet the standard criteria for the name.

Despite the fact that successful perpetual motion devices are physically impossible in terms of our current understanding of the laws of physics, the pursuit of perpetual motion remains popular.
The pursuit of 'Perpetual Motion Machines' dates back to the Middle Ages. For millennia, it was not clear whether perpetual motion devices were possible or not, but the development of modern thermodynamics has indicated that they are impossible. Despite this, many attempts have been made to construct a perpetual motion machine. Modern designers and proponents often use other terms, such as over unity, to describe their inventions.
Example of a Magnet Motor:

Over Unity Generator - How To Generate Your Own Electricity

The over unity generator is a device that hundreds of thousands of people are making at home, DIY-style, and using it to generate large amounts of their own electricity. 7 kilowatts is a typical starting figure and this alone is enough to power most homes. What is "over unity" and how is it possible to make this theory a reality in terms of real, practical power generation? In this article, I will tell you how.

Over Unity Theory

Unity refers to a ratio. When people talk about over unity generators, they refer to machines that can produce more energy than is required to use in getting them to start or to run.

Over unity is not a new theory. It has been discussed and researched for over a century. Some of the major discoveries in over unity theory were by Nikola Tesla, a man widely regarded as the inventor of alternating current, without which there would be no way to transfer power over large distances and power every home.

Until recently, there were few and far between applications of this theory. This is mostly explained due to lobbyists and others with vested interests who do not like this technology because it upsets the status quo and will inevitably lead to a loss of profits in extracting fossil fuels and burning them up for power generation.

How To Build An Overunity Generator

An over unity generator is a very simple device indeed. It consists of little more than a rotor, upon which are mounted several strategically placed magnets. All that remains is to install and configure some copper wiring and you have almost everything you need to start generating your own power.

An initial input of force is put into the system (you can do this yourself or use a battery) and then the motion is self-sustaining. Frictional losses in the bearings and from air resistance are countered by the intrinsic properties of the magnets.

Overunity Generator Plans

While the over unity generator is very simple and easy to construct, you will still save yourself a lot of time and returning to the drawing board if you make use of a modern set of generator plans.

These may set you back around 50 bucks but, before you baulk at that price, consider how much your time is worth. If you prefer to try and figure it out yourself and are willing to tinker for a year or more (this is how long many of the recent pioneers have taken to refine their concepts into working prototypes) then be my guest. Most people, however, find that a 50 bucks investment is more than worth it if it means that they can get a generator up and running and producing 7 kilowatts of power in less than a week.

Skype faces ban in Saudi Arabia

WhatsApp, Viber and Skype users in the Kingdom face the risk of being barred from these applications if the owners of these communication platforms do not provide a monitoring server by the end of this week.


The Communications and Information Technology Commission (CITC) is threatening blockage of programs and applications that provide conversation and visual communication because they use encrypted connections, an Arabic daily reported.

According to two informed sources who work at local telecommunication companies, this issue has been at the top of the agenda of discussions during meetings between heads of telecom companies and the CITC over the past 20 days. The meetings have finally concluded with the CITC demanding that it be allowed to monitor the encrypted applications. In addition, officials from the CITC have cautioned that they might block these programs if they fail to reach an acceptable solution with the owners.

In an initial reaction to the news, both Saudi and non-Saudi users have expressed anger and annoyance, as some of the applications that might be halted have become vital conduits of communication between family and friends.

“I would be very disappointed if CITC disconnects this server; I use it every day to talk to my wife and children who live in India,” said Indian schoolteacher Mohammed Akram. “Viber is the cheapest way to reach my children. It enables me to chat with them, share pictures and send voice messages. If they ban it, I would have to go back to talking to my children once a month without seeing them until I visit them,” he added.

Saudi students on scholarships who use the Skype video application to contact their parents are also disappointed.

“I really don’t understand what they mean by monitoring. Are they going to tap into the conversations I have with my mother and sister? Does that mean they are going to have to wear the veil when they open the camera for me?” pondered Khalid Tunsi, a finance student in the US. “If they cut off these applications, it will make my life really difficult because with this technology I am able to see my mother every day,” he added.

Tunsi’s mother is also concerned with this news, saying this application has bought her comfort. “No one understands what I’m going through; my only son is living a million miles away and he only receives one ticket per year from the Saudi Cultural Attaché to come home for a visit,” she said. “If they take these applications away from me, I will really be depressed.”

WhatsApp is an application that businessmen such as Hani Ayyash use to communicate with his employees and clients for free. “I have created a group for my colleagues and employees, especially when I’m traveling, as I need to be informed about any updates,” he said. “Is CITC giving us lower rates after banning free applications that everyone uses? I believe they should provide us with a replacement because all we want is to obtain lower rates and free communication technology,” he added.

Magniwork Review - is it a Scam?

Internet fraudsters are raking in thousands of dollars a day with an elaborate scam selling magnetic perpetual motion machines that are claimed to produce infinite free energy.

Since spring this year an operation called Magniwork has been selling a $50 DIY guide to building a perpetual motion device at home. On their web-site the fraudsters claim the materials are available in any local hardware store for less than $100. One estimate puts sales of the guide as high as 5,000 copies a month, making the magniwork generator scam worth up to $3m a year. However, Is Magniwork scam or not? Does Magniwork work?

The claims for Magni work are advanced via an extensive Google advertising campaign, and a network of blogs, web-sites and reviews endorsing the product. They are given further credibility by a clip of film from Sky News Australia about plans for a similar product made by a legitimate if optimistic research company called Lutec. Lutec patented its technology in 19 countries in 1999, but the product has still not seen the light of day. Off-Grid has discovered that the clip is over 8 years old.

Perpetual motion machine

Magniwork free energy generator which describes its product as ‘a magnetic power generator’ claims to have invented a revolutionary off-grid power source that uses magnets to “power itself and create energy by itself, without requiring solar energy, heat, water, coal or any kind of resource.” The web-site promises the device will generate perpetual energy which will “fully power your home for free.”

However even the idea of such a device is dismissed by trained physicists. “The little explanation they give on their website makes no sense to me,” said Gunnar Pruessner, a lecturer in physics at Imperial College London. “For starters it breaks with all we know about quantum physics since Dirac, which says that we cannot tap into zero point fluctuations or virtual particles.”


Priceless IP

He observed that if the claims were true, they would mark the biggest advance in science ever. “It would bring a world-wide socio-economic revolution with incalculable political consequences. So you have to ask why are they scuzzing around selling their priceless IP (intellectual property) for a few dollars?”

Made in Macedonia

The site gives no way of contacting Magniwork -other than to order the guide. But its legal disclaimer reveals that despite the .com web address which suggests a US-based company, Magniwork is in fact located in Macedonia, a tiny republic on the northern border of Greece in Europe. “This Agreement shall all be governed and construed in accordance with the laws of Macedonia applicable to agreements made and to be performed in Macedonia,” it reads. It has similarly proved difficult to identify the individuals behind the scheme. But one researcher claims to have written to the site’s web-master who referred in his reply to a man simply called “Igor”, the manual’s publisher.

Kernel of truth

Angry customers admit that the guide does contain kernels of truth. “Some of the suggestions in the e-book can reduce your home power consumption. For example, checking for air leaks, have better home insulation, servicing your air-conditioning unit or heate etc,”wrote one. But is it essentially amateurish and misleading, they say. “The whole “document” is 57 pages long and looks like something a kid in high school put together.

The final “generator” is basically a magnet that is 2″ high sitting on a turntable that is 4″ high! They claim that its output is 24.5 Watts! That is 1/100th of what my house uses when the AC is on. It wouldn’t put out enough power to light up a standard light bulb,“ wrote another angry blogger.


Alternative energy expert Sterling D. Allan founder of The New Energy Congress has examined Magniwork’s claims. “Most of the 50+ page manual contains energy conservation tips that are based on well-established principles,” he said. But he points out that plans for the device are freely available elsewhere, they are based on other people’s work and he claims to have tried to contact people offering testimonials, without success. “The wording on their site still gives the reader the idea that the plans will result in a working free energy device but that is not the case. Such representation is fraud,” he concluded.

Although highly implausible, the idea of somehow harvesting magnetic power has intrigued scientists for over a century. It was first suggested by pioneering physicist Nicola Tesla in the nineteenth century. Australian company Lutec is still trying to perfect such a device.

And U.S based based Magnetic Power Inc, headed by Mark Goldes, has claimed to be on the verge of launching a ‘Magnetic Power Module’ for at least six years. There is no suggestion that either Lutec or MPI are part of the scam.

Magniwork Free Energy Generator - Does It Really Work?

The Magniwork free energy generator - you have heard of it but are wondering if it can really be true: can this device really deliver a minimum of 7 kilowatts and easily power your home and all your energy needs? Or is this just the stuff of fantasy? In this article, I will tell you exactly how this generator works and why you should be making your own Magniwork device.

The Suppression Of Zero Point Energy

The generator is based on a concept in physics known as zero point energy. Others also refer to this concept as "over unity".

Regardless, zero point is a concept that has long been known about but only a few have developed it into a workable technology.

The single largest reason for the slow progress until recently has been the incredibly pressure from energy and oil companies, lobbyists, governments and other vested interests to suppress this technology.

You see, these companies do not see solar power or wind power as a threat because they can cost a lot to install and do not generate much energy. But they do see zero point as a major threat to their profits.

Also, governments have long been developing this technology in secret, for military use. It suits them to decry this technology as unworkable while at the same time working on it in secret. These secret government programs have been exposed by investigative journalists.

The most famous of these is highly credible: Nick Cook, former Aviation Editor of the world-renowned defence journal, "Jane's Defence Weekly" and regular contributor to the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal, is widely considered to be an expert on military "black projects". His investigative work revealed that many governments are using zero point concepts to try to produce anti-gravity propulsion. Such a use of this technology would give instant air superiority to the world government that can perfect it first.

Thousands Running Their Own Generators

For many decades, only a few DIY pioneers were able to make their own working prototypes of free energy generators. Thanks to the proliferation of the internet and social media, these people are now able to showcase their prototypes to the world, without fear of retribution.

There are several companies selling their working generator plans. Magniwork is just one of them but the current market leader. These plans allow anyone to construct and run their own generators which is currently the only option available unless you are willing to wait 5 years for the first consumer models to come to market. Many people are understandable not prepared to wait that long.