Uploader Comments (Desertphile)
All Comments (337)
-
stuck up ass-hole
-
@Desertphile JESUS! With a solid argument like that, you have GOT to be right! It's incredible! 1 IS always less than 2! Even my calculator agrees with you, THEREFORE it follows on logically that there is no such thing as free energy! How could I be so naive! Hey try holding a ruler at arms length and match it up with a clear horrizon. IT MATCHES, THEREFOR THE EARTH IS FLAT! That logic of yours could get you a long way - if we were cave men.
-
@kellygwdobbs ; There is no such thing as "free energy," idiot. 1 is always less than 2 , therefore "free energy" is impossible.
-
@Desertphile You still haven't convinced me that you are making an INFORMED comment. Lets start with this one. "Is the world flat?"
-
@kellygwdobbs ; Yes: he's wrong because magic is impossible.
-
@Desertphile Can you please explain where you think Schauberger was wrong. I'm not convinced that you aren't just regurgitating the "perpetual motion is impossible" speach.
-
@kellygwdobbs ; No: free energy ("over unity") is impossible: "Victor Shauberger" did not "do it."
-
Maybe a device which utilises a sonic boom could be developed. If 2 disks on a common axis with air gap between them and output jets on the edges was rotated at a speed such that the rim velocity is > speed of sound, then if the jets were angled slightly tangential to the disk, once having gained sufficient RPMs the disk would self sustain. Thats not free energy, its over-unity. Look up Victor Shauberger, he's already done it.
Here's a serious ponderance for you. How much energy is in the quantum vacuum? 10^13Joules per cubic meter. How much of the universe is dark matter? 83% of all matter in the universe. Positron-electron pair production is part of the quantum fluctuations in which Energy is Conserved (perfectly normal). So maybe, perhaps not with current technology, we might be able to harvest energy from Dark Matter? or Quantum fluctuations? Can you see this?
kellygwdobbs 2 months ago
@kellygwdobbs ; Howdy.
(1) Nobody knows the energy volume of the Zero Point Field. Estimates vary by several orders of magnitude.
(2) There is no evidence dark matter can be a source of energy.
(3) Quantum vacuum fluctuations are at Planck sizes, far smaller than sub-atomic particles. They are useless as sources of energy,l and have been for almost 13.7 billion years.
Desertphile 2 months ago