According to the cookbook, an external power source like a battery is
required to start the reaction going. This may be way a capacitor based
storage system did not work.

On Fri, Mar 3, 2017 at 3:42 PM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> Whatever Sweet did or did not accomplish is now in the realm of fiction.
> No scientific proof exists today in the form of a working device, despite
> millions spent over the years.
>
> There were eye witnesses who were experts in circuits who saw it
> "working," but could not replicate it after years of trying. Bedini was his
> assistant. This circumstance actually amounts more to proof of trickery,
> than proof of an anomaly - since experts saw it and could not replicate it.
>
> Thus the best explanation is that Sweet was cleverly faking it. There are
> a dozen ways to fake this kind of thing. YouTube has become a repository of
> overunity fakes, some surprisingly good.
>
> Common sense suggests that if Sweet's transformer ever worked, it would
> have been replicated from available evidence and be in production today. Of
> course, that has not happened. Thus it may have myth value to those who
> want to believe in miracles, but none to science ... whereas the Manelas
> device may have value to science in the anomalous cooling, if not the
> battery effects.
>
> People seem to be overlooking the implications of the "Gigafactory" in
> Reno... in the context of  combining low cost cells with a possible
> doubling of battery-life with a regenerative circuit. No overunity
> required. We could be looking at a bona-fide paradigm shift in the history
> of transportation - if that were to happen...
>
> ... or it could be hype and spin. Indeed, the stock has been suffering of
> late.
>
> BTW Tesla's Gigafactory grand opening is set for *July 29th*.
>  Axil Axil wrote:
>
> This battery theory does not make sense, The Sweet system worked with
> power coming off the grid.
>
>
> This is the same as saying that he could not close the loop. In short, it
> never worked for Sweet as a self-powering device or he wouldn't need the AC
> at all. He paid his full electric power bill like the rest of us.
>

Reply via email to