| The World's Weirdest Machines | |
The Hutchison Effect
Inventor: John Hutchison
The Invention: No formal name for machine.
Claimed Effects: Levitation of heavy,
non-magnetic objects.
Details: In 1979, John Hutchison of
Vancouver, Canada, accidentally discovered a remarkable phenomenon while
experimenting with longitudinal waves - waves that another inventor, Nikola
Tesla, had experimented with. According to The
Hutchison Effect - An Explanation, what has become known as the Hutchison
Effect occurs as the result of very powerful radio wave interferences. Heavy
objects - even non-magnetic, non-metal objects - levitate or fly into the
air. Objects of metal, porcelain, wood and rubber are affected. Hard alloy
metals become soft and pliable. Hutchison even performed his experiments for
scientists from Los Alamos Laboratory. The effect has been videotaped many times
and even broadcast on network television. A complete understanding of the
phenomenon has yet to be found, but the implications of its potential seem
mind-boggling.
More Information:
The Energy Machine
Inventor: Joseph Newman
The Invention: The Newman Motor/Generator.
Claimed Effects: Device has potential to
produce virtually unlimited energy.
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More Information:
- The Energy Machine of Joseph Newman - Newman's own site.
- Joe Newman's Free Energy Claims: Are They Valid?
Orgone
Energy Accumulator
Inventor: Wilhelm Reich
The Invention: The Orgone Energy
Accumulator
Claimed Effects: Collects orgone - a kind
of free energy - to use as a power source.
Details: Taking off from an age-old belief in the "aether" - an invisible energy source that surrounds us
- Dr. Wilhelm Reich called this
energy source orgone. "In 1939," according to Orgone
Energy: A Power Alternative, "Reich was working with ‘bions' and
accidentally discovered that some of the bions emitted an energy that did not
obey the laws of any known form of energy." A bion, they say, is an energy
vesicle, that is transitional in form between non-living and living matter.
Reich then created a device consisting of alternating spaces of metallic and
organic substances that he claimed could collect orgone energy. Those who have
continued the research of Reich, who died in 1957, say that the energy
accumulation is measurable, but they are still struggling with a way to turn
this "free energy" into mechanical energy or motor force. The existence of
orgone is, of course, disputed by conventional science. But if you'd like to
experiment with it yourself, some of the sites listed below describe how to
build your own orgone energy accumulator.
More Information:
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