At 06:54 AM 2/24/2012, Zell, Chris wrote:
These battery pulsing/shuttling devices have been around since the Ed Grey motor. Whatever it is, it gets rediscovered and rediscovered.

Here's a 2000-page compendium of Free Energy Devices. (Ed Grey is only noted in an appendix).

Free Energy Devices
<http://www.scribd.com/doc/21334918/Free-Energy-Devices>

In section 5 (p 161 -- discussing John Bedini) the idea of pulses-to-batteries seems to go back to Tesla!

The Tesla Switch

It doesn't stop there. Nikola Tesla introduced the world to Alternating Current ("AC") butlater on he moved from AC to very short, sharp pulses of Direct Current ("DC"). He found that by adjusting the frequency and duration of these high-voltage pulses, that he could produce a whole range of effects drawn from the environment - heating, cooling, lighting, etc. The important point to note is that the pulses were drawing energy directly from the immediate environment. Leaving aside the advanced equipment which Tesla was using during those experiments and moving to Tesla's simple-looking 4-battery switch, we discover the same background operation of sharp voltage pulses drawing free-energy from the environment.

...

The Electrodyne Corporation tested the Tesla 4-battery circuit over a period of three years. They found that at the end of that period, the batteries did not show any unusual deterioration. The batteries used were ordinary lead-acid batteries. The system operated lights, heaters, television sets, small motors and a 30-horsepower electric motor. If the batteries were run down to a low level and then the circuit switch on with a load, the recharging of the batteries took place in under one minute. No heating was experienced duringthis rapid charging. Heat was only produced during discharge cycles. If left undisturbed, each battery wouldcharge up to nearly 36 volts. Control circuitry was developed to prevent this over-charging. They used mechanical switching and stated that below 100 Hz there was not much advantage with the circuit and above 800 Hz it could be dangerous ...



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