It would be interesting to see some power info as I couldn't find any on
their website. The Genny is labelled with that name in the picture but
they call it the Nomad. It looks like a metal can with three hoses, one
going into the middle, the other two coming out the sides. None of
those are labelled in the picture so I think the input would be from the
axis. Since the device uses two planes, one hose on the side must be
from one of the planes, like a centrifugal turbine and the other hose
must be from the output of the other turbine which is at 90 degrees.
All this should be clearly labelled, maybe with a wattmeter hooked up to
the unit and measuring a load like a bank of 100 Watt light bulbs, maybe
10 X 1 for 1000 watts, 5 X 5 for 2500 watts, etc...its always a good
demonstration.
I saw something in the description about 1KW as output but it gave ne
tech details. It did say that it could be powered by water flowing from
a 30 foot drop, a river or moving air. So far, as a generator, I'm not
certain any of this is all that amazing until I can see some information
about power output. A McCullough or Onan power generator routinely puts
out 1KW to 3KW and they are about 3'X 2' X 2', running on gasoline.
What they really need to do is have comparisons with known off the shelf
generators all being fed by the same source and show clearly that their
size and power output is far superior to what is currently available.
So far, I found the description of the ribbons of electricity coalesced
into a ball as the most intriguing comment.
It would be great to also include some results from antigravity tests
where even a rudimentary weight loss could be shown, even 5% as in John
Schnurers' improvement over the Tampere experiment.
-- Jerry Wayne Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science" Voice : (214) 324-8741 / FAX : (214) 324-3501 ICQ # - 13175100 / AOL - Keelyman KeelyNet - PO BOX 870716 - Mesquite - Republic of Texas - 75187