James Randi does a good job at debunking this con man and his machine.
Perpetual motion is impossible on the scale we operate in. People believe in crazy things everyday, has anyone researched the "experts" that
"verified" his machine worked back in the 80's? First, are they real people? Second, what field do they work in (not just their title)?
The U.S. Patent Office denies any application with perpetual motion in it because it constantly is overloaded with applications for machines that are
an impossibility. So they save our tax dollars by automatically denying those applications. So why would someone put that on their application if they
knew it would be denied. So he can get on a stump and yell that "THE GUBMENT DON'T WON'T YOU TO HAVE THIS MACHINE!! IT'S A CONSPIRACY!"...he
created his own conspiracy. He also managed to con a congressman (that believes in UFO's, Bigfoot, etc.) to rally behind him as the little man that
is being held down by the big corporations.
The question you ask yourself is: Does this guy really believe he has created a miracle machine because he has used flawed science? Or does he know it
is a hustle and he purposely solicits funds from private investors knowing this machine is b.s?
You want free energy? Get a windmill.
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The reason it can't be patented is cuz it uses perpetual motion and perpetual motion can't be patented.
 reply to post by n8t_d
Hi N8t,
The fact that our patent office denies this sort of patent, will this guarantee that the discoveries in free energy and other exotic energy
utilization will be patented and developed elsewhere? (Of course it will!) This is the sad state for new invention that we live in!
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reply to post by plumranch
Google video search "Newman machine" and other variants.
There are several people who have build small scale versions that work.
Here's a link I posted on another forum.
http://#.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&thread=2788
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