BIG THANKS to Quantum Infinity and James for helping me with this! There were lots of pages and parts to sift through. P.S. Watch PART 1 if you haven't yet! ua-cam.com/video/B4G7iHK3jp0/v-deo.html
The hardest part about creating a perpetual motion machine is finding where to hide the battery. That's why internet marketers just decided to sell the book instead.
I actually own two light bulbs which have batteries inside. When they receive no electricity, they measure the resistance between the supply wires. High resistance: wall-switch is off, bulb can stay powered down. Low resistance: wall-switch is on (as long as there other devices on the circuit which lower the resistance), so the bulb should turn on. If electricity is present, the bulb turns on and recharge the battery. These are meant to provide light even when electricity fails. And they'd react just like the bulb shown at 10:40 when connected to that "free energy machine" (no free energy required, just some resistor or short-circuit).
@@klausstock8020 Yeah, but that wouldn't explain why the motors/generators keep spinning the whole time too. Most likely, this is just using a hidden battery somewhere to drive both the motors and an (ordinary) light bulb.. (Hiding a battery isn't too hard.. You could probably power something like this off of a couple of hearing-aid batteries (and a small boost regulator) as long as it didn't have to run for very long. My guess is that may be what's wrapped up in those big blobs of tape.)
@@jess_n_atx Just as the laws of thermodynamics make perpetual motion machines impossible they also dictate that the universe must always be getting more mixed up, thus this comment must spread.
Unfortunately there are many science and technology illiterate folks out there, and while this may seem clearly ridiculous to us, we aren't the target market and those who are will waste absurd amounts of money on these crackpot snake oil schemes.
A lot of people have little education in physics, if any at all. Couple this with the current cultural climate of anti-intellectualism in the West and the conspiratorial ideas being pushed by politicians that “they” are lying to you and it’s easy to see why people fall for this.
They are making them so dumb on purpose. A smart person won't fall for this bullshit anyway, even if it would be well-produced. You want the bottom shelf - people who would send money to a evangelist telemarketer, just because he's on TV and he told them to. You want these brainless morons. They won't care. They see big energy steals from you, save up to 87%, and they have already thrown all of their money at you. It's that easy.
They sell you the "guide" so they can say you didn't build/make it right and wouldn't be legally liable for it. If they actually sold a product then they can be liable for false advertising.
lol you sweet summer child im assuming you live in america if youre gonna sue scammers youre gonna have to sue your lawyer, judge, municipal politicians, your senators, and represenative, too. good luck.
Hey Ken, I just got an email from Pixel Peeper 3000... You still owe her 4 grand plus interest, since you didn't build this monstrosity and saved the money you were going to pay her with. In other notes, man, one of my ex-physics teacher actually tried to build some parts of this bullcr*p (to teach her students about the misconceptions around free energy, but mostly for the lolz), and totally lost it when some parts didn't even fit, and the students actually told her that this was crazy. So, I guess, mission accomplished?
C'mon...do you really think you could *light* your home with the *dark* side of the force? Well -- I must admit that that still sounds far more plausible than the Quick Power System.
11:17 those are 2 shaded pole motors just strapped together. They appear unintuitive, but are incredibly common in fans and other low torque applications that need to run off of AC. Because they're meant for AC only, they can essentially be shaped like and act like a C-core transformer, but with one side replaced with a rotor and shading coils.
We all know that if you want induction AC is your friend. I have NEVER taped a de-gausing coil to the underside of a table and placed two ac fan (used in clocks too) motors above the table and had them run, just like they were plugged into the wall. I was even able to lift them 6 inches from the hidden coil. oh. hold on. That is exactly what I did. It worked. really poorly. The light bulb was a 12volt light bulb. Not a 110v bulb. Others say batteries...ah. No. Batteries are DC and without some kind of oscillating circuit to turn the DC into AC you are not going to get much induction. So no hidden batteries.
Don't forget the trick light bulbs that have batteries inside the base of the bulb itself! Easy to find in magic stores etc. They could even have used that power source to run the motors too.
Oh boy they're in for a rude awakening when they figure out any incident that would actually call for all their prepped materials would probably be better handled by fleeing the area.
Just a observation note, and I did something similar for cosmetic looks one time on my kid's science fair project to cleanup/hide mini 12VDC alkaline batteries. We had a circuit that was a non-functional dummy, and to hide the battery, we placed it in the plastic cavity of an induction coil that wasn't really connected. The battery fit perfectly. I'm quite certain even a 9VDC battery or some of the tiny lithium packs could fit as well. And if connected properly, they could definitely power that same 12V light bulb they used, very brightly.
I've built it and it works great i make 1.21 gigawatts of power This fits into my car with no issues I do have a issue when my car hits 88MPH though I probability shouldn't of routed the power though a Flux Capacitor
on the scammer's video with the lamp turning on, the battery is on the bulb itself, they sell those on amazon all day...as long as you close the circuit the light turns on itself...seen other "free energy" scammers on youtube do the same.
Nope. That's a real light bulb at 10:28. It's clear, and you can see the wattage stamp at the top. The trick light bulbs are frosted, not clear. They have to be, to hide the fake bulb inside. Notice the wheels are half black, half white. When he spins them with his hands, you can see them spinning. Then there's a video edit and the wheels are now spinning so fast they're just grey. At this point, it's running on 120V. He's hidden the wires somehow, but those are real motors (probably only using one of them). He connects the bulb to the 120V that's powering the motor.
Ive spent months studying Tesla, and there is a half truth to what they said. Tesla is the father of alternating current, which is cheaper to manufacture than Edison companies Direct current. Tesla believed electricity was a right, not to be payed for by the users of said electricity. The problem was, that wasnt realistic. People want to make money, and that money goes into perfecting the system.
I can't get my 12 year old to load the dishwasher without a couple of eyerolls and how manual labor is ruining her life. I doubt I can get her to build me an infinite power generator in a half hour.
tell her the generator will load the dishwasher for her dumb@ss (im just kidding about the dumb@ss part i thought it would be hilarious and as usual i am right. im literally crying rn)
A mix of wind and solar is the most reliable option.. especially if you bank it with massive batteries. Unfortunately that is not only expensive but has ongoing maintenance cost that also cost a lot of money and time. A battery big enough to smooth out the highs and lows of your power production will cost at least 20k and need replacing every 10-15 years. Your solar panels and wind turbines will need replaced at around the same time. So you have 20-40k every 15 years 😮 to be truly independent. Let’s say 30k every 15 years. That equals 170$ a month for electricity.. which is probably about what you spend now.
We live in a world where most people have a device with an hd camera in their pocket. Their smartphone. Yet. They didn’t have access to a decent quality camera when they filmed this?
That 'machine' at 10:06 appears to be made from two 'shaded pole motors'. These are low powered things used to run cooling fans in certain appliances (can't think of an example unf.!). But there's no way they would generate electricity as they DON'T have magnets in them to start with! Great video, and it certainly shows that some people could be more productive actually doing useful work rather than trying to get money out of people who don't know what's going on...
Hey, the short video with the lightbulb and coils etc, isn’t it just 2 microwave motors next to each other? Pretty sure there aren’t any permanent magnets in those.
Why? They're completely different types of scams. Krazy Ken and Thunderfoot would be closer to making sense, but Thunderfoot gets annoying after 10 minutes and gets too hyperbolic. KK and EEVBlog might make the most sense, and their personalities mesh. But the team-up I'd most prefer to see would be Krazy Ken and KK Downing. They could bond over their shared initials, and bust guitar pickup scams, or something. 😄
I have almost finished my over-unity perpetual motion device that will output the surplus energy. I'm 90 percent of the way there but admit the last 10 percent is taking longer than anticipated 🙂
i live in Vietnam there is a book named "Năng lượng vĩnh cửu" (roughly translated into English will be "Infinite Energy"), i was 17 when i first saw my aunt bought that book, i told her it's a scam and the product was sold along with that book couldn't work - the book was sold with a "recycle energy device" that was basically an electricity socket, that said it would help you recycle the energy of your fridge by plugging the fridge into it and would save you 50% bill - my aunt didn't believe and she said "what does a kid know". Needless to say, she got scammed and bought a 40$ socket, in a country that avg monthly salary is 320$, 40$ is a lot to loose
The real world would be thrilled if the perpetrators of this disingenuous device responded to your UA-cam video and/or the email and see what they have to say for themselves. But once again,in true Krazy Ken/Computer Clan style, debunking these idiots is very entertaining and fun to watch. Thanks.....
He did essentially build something much more efficient than coal based generators though, possibly solar power and they refused to finance him cos, you know, greed. He would not have put power companies out of business, but perhaps just made it so there was not ridiculous profit.
@@georgeyreynolds Tesla spent a lot of time championing Hydroelectric power as a cheap power source. It’s one reason he put so much efforts into developing AC power as that could be transmitted long distances letting you take advantage of where that could be done. He then got obsessed with wireless technology wanting to get rid of transmission lines.
I watched an Indian youtube video on how to make a device that gave free electricity. The comments were full of people asking for help in making their own, and suggestions on improvements to the design. Obviously it was complete nonsense but... it had over 3 million views. Sad, tragic even.
Technically, you CAN obliterate your power bill using energy of the Sun and some easy-to-obtain things. To do that, go outside on a bright sunny day. Also don't forget to take your paper energy bill and a lens (almost any lens will do). The rest of the recipe I will gladly sell you for 10000 bucks
What drives me nutz is when people that believe in this stuff try to come back to you with something like "Imagine if the wright brothers accepted flight was impossible". Naturally these people don't understand that flight is actually possible and does not violate any known laws of physics. An overunity device clearly does. Which is why as far as we can say today, it's not possible to get more enery out that you put in. In fact if at any point someone does make something that seems to output more energy than put in, it's clearly getting that energy from somewhere (like say a heat pump, which is the closest thing to "free" energy we have). Energy can't simply be magicked in.
The motors at 11:16 are so called shaded pole motors. These types of motors can't even be used as generators without completely modifying the rotor as the rotor of a shaded pole motor is just laminated steel sheets and an aluminium squirrel cage. By the way: shaded pole motors are horribly inefficient. Only around 25%'ish. That's why a industrial 50W BLDC fan is so much more powerful than a normal 50W desk fan.
How much is the typical electricity bill in the US? I pay around 50 dollars a year for the urban apartment a country farm, combined, which makes the whole "save on energy" theme quite insignificant.
It varies greatly. I live in the southeastern US, which typically has brutally hot, humid summers, and some pretty gnarly winters that are miserable and rainy. The bill at my old 750 sqft apartment would be nearly $200 monthly during peak usage, so July/August for AC, and December/January for heat. We moved a mere seven miles away to a 1500 sqft house with AWFUL inefficient windows and doors, and our bill actually _lowered_ down to about $125 during peak usage since we changed providers. Utility providers generally have local monopolies here. Granted, we have a propane tank for heat, so the low electricity costs during winter would be offset by our propane company breaking my kneecaps during winter. There are a ton of different factors at play, given the monopolies, regulations, and the sheer size of the US. We also get pinged for a lot of upcharges. When I had natural gas at my old house, I'd get popped for around $50 a month during winter for "maintenance" of the lines. That same charge would be as low as $3 during summer. Atlanta Gas Light is an awful company, but you're hosed and have no other option if you have natural gas. Statewide monopoly. There are other "providers" but they're all buying from Atlanta Gas Light.
The only "free" electricity generator with zero friction is an antenna array that picks up artificial and natural radio signals, both terrestrial and from outer space. The current of radio can produce a small voltage in the antenna array, albeit not a very usable amount.
I wonder who will be the star of the backstory next year. I'm hoping it's Colonel Sanders. "Big Electric sued him into bankruptcy, so he gave up on his unlimited power machine and concentrated on chicken."
7:30 "I'm not saying a system like this is abusive, it's a legitimate sales and marketing technique, only that it can be abused" Counterpoint, all sales and marketing is abusive and manipulative, psychological warfare on the consumer trying to get them to spend money they otherwise wouldn't.
A former class mate fell for it, he even asked me for help, I just said: "It just won't work, stop wasting your time!" He replied: "Because I need better parts and your great skills to build it, you can do it!" And I said: "Don't talk to me anymore!", some people are worse than the most stupid manager.
Hey Ken, in that video they show at 11:30 are just basic AC induction motors, you can find them in fridge freezers, small desk fans, etc. They will not run off DC.
@@ComputerClan It means the motors cannot generate electricity. So spinning one to start making power to get the second one started to then power the first and run forever and powering a bulb is impossible. Which we know, but some viewers don't have enough knowledge about generating to grasp how this is a scam
Рік тому+1
The targeting of this is perfect: - Those who are stupid enough to believe this think they are just too stupid to understand the instructions. - Those who are smart enough to understand what the instructions are saying are smart enough to understand this is a scam and don't buy this to begin with.
I was hoping you would explain how they claimed it would work. Or at least guess at what they were suggesting. I got the impression that the spinning rotors were supposed to somehow harvest some kind of background energy. I think you have to put some energy in to drive the rotors and that is why they say the 87% cut. You can get off the grid entirely if you use the solar panels to power the motor that turns the rotor, then the machine upscales the small energy input into enough to run your house. Allegedly.
That Oatmeal cartoon about Tesla has caused more than a decade of misinformation. Anyways, a perpetual motion machine for $49 seems like a great deal. You probably built it wrong. I'll be rich once I do it right!
here's a tiny little secret. it's like a very special toy so be careful with it.... You can get free and unlimited electricity if you set up a solar power system. Buy a few solar panels and some high capacity batteries, do some wirings and poof, electricity. This works best if you live in the tropics where there is no snow and there is sun shine all year round.
Years ago, while I worked for a somewhat shady technology development company, I met a man with a perpetual motion machine. Better than perpetual motion he reckoned, because it created heat that could be used to make more energy! What he actually had was a particularly inefficient home-built motor. But people like him are out there, and they are buying this book, and believing that they are just a few days away from sticking it to Big Science, Big Energy, and The Man. They will never know they were scammed.
Since no one has seen this machine, perhaps you could build it as per the instructions? Would be fantastic to see it, and would absolutely debunk the scam. Also, I'm pretty sure an ex of mine bought this over a decade ago. I vaguely remember reading some of it.
Fortunately I have been able to use an HHO generator to power my generator so I don't have to worry about scammy generators like this. Now I have limitless energy from abundant water. Fantastic. Link in the description (haha).
I have downloaded some of these systems they do come with a 60 day money back (Which I use). The big question is why the bundle with other systems build your own solar panel, your own wind generator, etc. Now there are some that you can build that do work on a small scale like the ones that use biomass (heat from Compost) you could use something like that to charge a battery or 2. Remember if you look at your electric bill your usage this is how many watts you need to replace or I should say Kilowatts (1,000 watts). Most electric co. will give you a summary of your daily use. This is how many watts you need to have per day divide that by 24 and you will have an idea of what size generator you will need. There is no way this little thing can do that. Also you need 240V. yes I know most of your stuff need 120V. but your circuit breaker panel is set up for 2 120V. input or 240V.
if you tried to make a way to store energy using the 2 motors and a belt you would have less efficiency and more paracitic draw than just using a fly wheel
Ken - I absolutely love your videos. I was getting ready to sign off from work for the day and found that you had just posted this video. Need to hang around a bit longer to watch it.
Have you seen the one that runs all the time on youtube, claiming some kid created an electric heater that produces several times the heat of other electric heaters? Again, violates the laws of thermodynamics. Why does youtube allow this?
That idea is, kind of, based on Tesla's invention that was actually in use in the early days of electric grid. You know, there are two types of current. Alternating and direct. In the days before vacuum tubes or semi-conductors, Tesla invented the rotary DC-converter. And there it is. The reason to run generator with DC to create AC (wich was Tesla's choice over the DC favored by Edison). So that Quick Power System is _kind of_ accurate from the historical view :D
Ofcourse, with rotary converter you'll lose some energy in conversion. Much more than with even the simplest pair of diodes. But it works and gets the job done if you haven't invented the diode or a vacuum tube yet.
@@Qassu78 How come when I google "rotary dc converter" I get only 7 hits, and none mention Telsa? There is a lot of misinformation and lies about Tesla out there. Tesla invented the AC generator. Using a DC motor to spin an AC generator isn't much of an invention, really. In fact it's pretty common sense, and would only be useful when your spinning shaft (from wind or water wheel, etc.) can't spin at a constant rate, so you need to convert it to DC which then spins a governed AC generator. Governed, so that it spins at a constant speed to keep the AC frequency constant. And why are you mentioning diodes? You're talking about converting DC to AC, and then say "lose energy moreso than with diodes", but diodes (in a bridge configuration) are for converting AC to DC, so they really have nothing to do with your DC to AC conversion.
@@Hyxtryx I tried to find again the source where Tesla is named as the inventor of the rotary converter, I couldn't find it. But, I found an article where Tesla was named as the father of AC motor and on that same article there are two inventors for rotary converter. Charles Bradley and Benjamin Lamme, latter worked for Westinghouse Company, just like Tesla. It might be that my original source has erronous information for that reason. Anyways, that hoax gizmo isn't 100% wrong, there is a rotary converter that can be used to electrify a house with solar power. But it does not create free energy. It's actually quite inefficient since some of the energy is transferred to kinetic energy and heat due to internal friction of such device.
@@Hyxtryx And sorry for being a bit incoherrent. Ofcourse diodes are for AC-DC conversion, so was the rotary dc converter. But rotary converter can work both ways. With a pair of AC and DC motors you can go either way. From AC to DC or from DC to AC. In that way rotary converter is actually pretty clever device.
The saddest part is I am sure there are some less than sharp DIY guys out there, trying so hard to make this, spending money they don't have. It really pisses me off when places con money out of people, people who are innocent, people that gave them the benefit of the doubt, and have decided to believe in them, and spend money they dont have with them. Criminals.
DANG! COSMIC energy: I REALLY need that! Shut up and take my money! I don't always make custom graphics, but when I do, I have a spider monkey use M$ Paint. I had NO IDEA Crazy Ken did vasectomies; WOW, I am totally using him next time. Thanks Ken for sharing the contents of this eBook, because now I TOTALLY understand how it works, and all I need to do is buy a solar panel and a mirror, which luckily I can install in my spare room. Why didn't I see this before, that the energy from the solar panel will reflect in the mirror and make endless cosmic energy! I may even write my own eBook!
For my work barn I built my own solar panels, power storage unit and a power converter and inverter. It powers everything I need there but it's just a few lights and to charge my battery powered tools and on occasion, my shop vacuum. I know it's limits and the only way to effectively get power to the barn since it is located on the far end of my property. If there was a device like this scam was trying to sell, I would have spent everything I have to build it. Foolish to believe you can have unlimited, free power in two hours and for less than $200. 😅
I feel really sorry for the kind of people who fall for this. They obviously have internet access, yet can't be bothered reading up on just the Wikipedia page for perpetual motion machines.
As an engineer, when I see someone talk to me about “free energy” machines they found on the internet, I don’t fight their logic. i just go: “What is the stability of the voltage? Does it has surge protection? Do you need transformers to rise or lower the voltage for home use? What is its headroom of power consumption? Does it install on the measurer? Don’t you need a proper electrician to avoid accidents? How is it powered down in case of issues?” They just shut up. Because even if they believe these thing, they realize it is not as simple to implement as they thought.
there are idiots that believe this and also that some buy came up with a 100 mile per gallon carburetor and mysteriously died and also the guy that invented a car that ran on water but also was offed by big oil or the government. People don't think, that with all the knowledge in the world and everybody having access to a computer, that if these things were real that people would have figured out how to duplicate these claims...ok
18:01 Without reading the book to get the context, it SOUNDS like a 'rotary inverter'. A DC motor driving an AC generator. Thats the only thing I can think of that they might be going at.
"Obscure New York hotel" ah, yes, the obscure *Hotel New Yorker* which was a major landmark in the latter end of Tesla's life and is considered an important example of Art Deco construction to this day.
17:52 it’s definitely nonsense for powering, but back when people have no IGBT/PWM components, they way to get a strong enough sine wave signal is to run a generator with another generator. Telephones used to have such mechanisms for ringback tones.
Actually, there is a way to seemingly generate electricity from "nothing." You take a crystal radio and modify its output so that instead of audio, the radio waves would be converted into a small amount of electricity. Of course, to have any measurable amount of electricity at all your antenna would have to be absolutely huge (a rectenna 2 acres or more across), but in theory it can be done
Isn't this what they call "energy harvesting"? You just receive what cellphone-towers and radio stations push out and "convert" it back to electricity? It's easier to just steal electricity by hijacking a street lantern...
You could also stick a specially doped silicon semiconductor in a brightly lit location. I think it's called a "solar panel" or something. (not saying you're wrong, just pointing out another source of "free" energy that's much more accessible).
He didn't die in an obscure place Tesla died alone and in debt on 7 January 1943, at the age of 86, on the 33rd floor in Room 3327 at the Hotel New Yorker located in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of Manhattan at 481 8th Ave, New York City, New York 10001, United States which is operated by Wyndham Hotels & Resorts. You can literally if you want to waste your money stay there it even comes with a plaque stating that it's history. Even during his lifetime it wasn't obscure it was a cheap middle range hotel I am thinking they heard New Yorker Hotel and thought yeah new yorker hotel I know it’s in New York but what is the name of the hotel.
7:26 No but it is abusive though. If you have to use a “hypnotic effect” to sell your product or service instead of being honest, that’s abusive. Just because something is used by corporations, doesn’t make it not abusive.
The claims about “hypnotic effects” are just bullshit the creator uses to market this format, remember marketing people also have to market their products and they're just as likely to lie. Hypnosis insofar as it is real only works if the subject is at least initially willing to go along, it's more like extremely powerful peer pressure than directly controlling someone. What he's really saying is that VSLs just drone on forever and can easily bore you so much that you don't really think about what is being said, but that of course wouldn't make this marketing technique sound good.
BIG THANKS to Quantum Infinity and James for helping me with this! There were lots of pages and parts to sift through. P.S. Watch PART 1 if you haven't yet! ua-cam.com/video/B4G7iHK3jp0/v-deo.html
Whatever turns you on, man
This was really funny. Great job
Glad to help!
Thanks : )@@harryroesser2763
@@ComputerClan When is the next episode?
The hardest part about creating a perpetual motion machine is finding where to hide the battery. That's why internet marketers just decided to sell the book instead.
I actually own two light bulbs which have batteries inside. When they receive no electricity, they measure the resistance between the supply wires. High resistance: wall-switch is off, bulb can stay powered down. Low resistance: wall-switch is on (as long as there other devices on the circuit which lower the resistance), so the bulb should turn on.
If electricity is present, the bulb turns on and recharge the battery. These are meant to provide light even when electricity fails.
And they'd react just like the bulb shown at 10:40 when connected to that "free energy machine" (no free energy required, just some resistor or short-circuit).
@@klausstock8020 Yeah, but that wouldn't explain why the motors/generators keep spinning the whole time too. Most likely, this is just using a hidden battery somewhere to drive both the motors and an (ordinary) light bulb..
(Hiding a battery isn't too hard.. You could probably power something like this off of a couple of hearing-aid batteries (and a small boost regulator) as long as it didn't have to run for very long. My guess is that may be what's wrapped up in those big blobs of tape.)
The hardest part about watching videos about perpetual motion machines. It's having to read this comment every time
@@jess_n_atx Yup. The *perpetual comment.*
@@jess_n_atx Just as the laws of thermodynamics make perpetual motion machines impossible they also dictate that the universe must always be getting more mixed up, thus this comment must spread.
A prepper not bragging? Prepping is at LEAST 90% bragging.
LEAT LEAT LEAT LEAT LEAT LEAT LEAT LEAT
Real Preppers DON'T brag. They keep their preparations on the quiet, as best they can.
@@stepheneyles2198I was hiding it in my to-go bag, not part of my EDC kit.
Q: You know how you find the prepper at the party?
A: Don't worry. He'll tell you.
@@ScrambledAndBenedict If preppers are going to survive the apocalypse, that's a pretty good argument for not wanting to do so ourselves.
These things are so obviously fake it is depressing that people clearly fall for them.
Unfortunately there are many science and technology illiterate folks out there, and while this may seem clearly ridiculous to us, we aren't the target market and those who are will waste absurd amounts of money on these crackpot snake oil schemes.
A lot of people have little education in physics, if any at all. Couple this with the current cultural climate of anti-intellectualism in the West and the conspiratorial ideas being pushed by politicians that “they” are lying to you and it’s easy to see why people fall for this.
Well, the positive side of it is that stupidity tax exists.
There are people who think the Earth is flat. These people feed on the same mentality.
They are making them so dumb on purpose. A smart person won't fall for this bullshit anyway, even if it would be well-produced. You want the bottom shelf - people who would send money to a evangelist telemarketer, just because he's on TV and he told them to. You want these brainless morons. They won't care. They see big energy steals from you, save up to 87%, and they have already thrown all of their money at you. It's that easy.
They sell you the "guide" so they can say you didn't build/make it right and wouldn't be legally liable for it. If they actually sold a product then they can be liable for false advertising.
lol you sweet summer child
im assuming you live in america
if youre gonna sue scammers youre gonna have to sue your lawyer, judge, municipal politicians, your senators, and represenative, too.
good luck.
@@aa-tx7th That was the worst attempt at cynical nihilism I have ever seen, you don't even sound 14 year old you sound like you're 10.
Hey Ken, I just got an email from Pixel Peeper 3000... You still owe her 4 grand plus interest, since you didn't build this monstrosity and saved the money you were going to pay her with.
In other notes, man, one of my ex-physics teacher actually tried to build some parts of this bullcr*p (to teach her students about the misconceptions around free energy, but mostly for the lolz), and totally lost it when some parts didn't even fit, and the students actually told her that this was crazy. So, I guess, mission accomplished?
That's amazing! (The physics part, not the "I owe an evil AI money" part)
I like your sense of humour, telling us after 20 minutes, that the scammers wasted 20 minutes of our time.
Yes but this was an entertaining 20 minutes, I'm sure you'll agree!
At least i didn't lose any money lol
I wish i could find those types of videos to play when i can't sleep.
I was hoping the Quick Power System was an ancient Sith tomb that would teach techniques for infinite power that many consider to be unnatural.
C'mon...do you really think you could *light* your home with the *dark* side of the force?
Well -- I must admit that that still sounds far more plausible than the Quick Power System.
Is it possible to learn this „Power“?
The alternate history where Tesla smoked so much weed he invented a ZPM is quite funny.
Stargate referenced 🔥🔥💯💯
And he still gets to invent the radio.
My dad was the master of saving 87% on all utilities,it's called being a miserly tightwad😂😂😂😂 bless his memory, I miss the cheap bastard😢😢😢😢
The book costs $69, one of the testimonials is from a 69 year old. They knew what they were doing!
Here's hoping the responsible bro's GF drank too much coffee that day
Oh, they knew. Four hundred and twenty percent chance they knew
@@corvidconfidential8826😂😂
I was literally your 69th like. I took a screenshot too as I couldn't believe it 😂
Nice.
11:17 those are 2 shaded pole motors just strapped together. They appear unintuitive, but are incredibly common in fans and other low torque applications that need to run off of AC. Because they're meant for AC only, they can essentially be shaped like and act like a C-core transformer, but with one side replaced with a rotor and shading coils.
Oh you beat me to it!! Much better explanation of the motors, thanks!
@@stepheneyles2198 thanks!
Oh you said it first D:
Good explanation.
We all know that if you want induction AC is your friend. I have NEVER taped a de-gausing coil to the underside of a table and placed two ac fan (used in clocks too) motors above the table and had them run, just like they were plugged into the wall. I was even able to lift them 6 inches from the hidden coil. oh. hold on. That is exactly what I did. It worked. really poorly. The light bulb was a 12volt light bulb. Not a 110v bulb.
Others say batteries...ah. No. Batteries are DC and without some kind of oscillating circuit to turn the DC into AC you are not going to get much induction. So no hidden batteries.
@@Artiken1 nice explanation but they wouldn't be used in clocks; that would need synchronous motors with gearing...
The three laws of thermodynamics: -
1) You can't win.
2) You'll always lose.
3) You'll never even break even.
also the rules at ceasars palace, insurance companies, and the voting booth
@@aa-tx7th what does breaking even at the voting booth mean?
There's one more rule; 'you can't get out of the game."
Amazing how scientifically illiterate many people are. My science degree is now 51 years old, but the Laws of Thermodynamics haven’t changed.
11:16 those look like basic AC fan motors from an appliance to me. Possibly a refrigerator? They have coils like that.
you also see them in cheap desk fans, they probably had one working motor and the other was hollowed out for a battery
Yup shaded pole motors, very simple, reliable motors, awful as generators lol
@@electricalmayhem Not efficient as motors too but i can be wrong hah
Looks like a couple of bathroom exhaust fan motors, I bought one from a hardware store when mine quit working.
Don't forget the trick light bulbs that have batteries inside the base of the bulb itself! Easy to find in magic stores etc. They could even have used that power source to run the motors too.
I like how you bust these scams while ALSO having a sense of humor about it all 😊
And also COMPLETELY disrespecting the pronunciation of the word "vague"
The "solar panels" clip from birdemic just made my day.
I figured someone would like that!
@@ComputerClanme too! Don't forget your coat hangers!
Default fonts and white background - the staple of online scams.
I know preppers. They don't shut up about it. It's literally their life's work, of course they are proud of all the stuff they have/make!
Oh boy they're in for a rude awakening when they figure out any incident that would actually call for all their prepped materials would probably be better handled by fleeing the area.
@@OrbObserverwhat if you couldn't flee?
@@aiodensghost8645 Then you're probably dead.
They are the first to get robbed because they bragged about having so much.
@@aiodensghost8645 then you're probably fucked.
if you actually invented free, infinite power, you would use a nicer font for the front cover. or at least I would, I'd really splurge on it
Just a observation note, and I did something similar for cosmetic looks one time on my kid's science fair project to cleanup/hide mini 12VDC alkaline batteries. We had a circuit that was a non-functional dummy, and to hide the battery, we placed it in the plastic cavity of an induction coil that wasn't really connected. The battery fit perfectly. I'm quite certain even a 9VDC battery or some of the tiny lithium packs could fit as well. And if connected properly, they could definitely power that same 12V light bulb they used, very brightly.
In this house we obey the laws of thermal dynamics!
damn straight
* thermodynamics
You know it’s going to be good when Ken has to do a part two!
I've built it and it works great i make 1.21 gigawatts of power
This fits into my car with no issues
I do have a issue when my car hits 88MPH though I probability shouldn't of routed the power though a Flux Capacitor
I HAVE DETECTED A MISLEADING CLAIM!!! You said the book was made by a 8th grader who used Microsoft Publisher 2000 in the previous video.
you *NAILED* that motherf@cker real good
on the scammer's video with the lamp turning on, the battery is on the bulb itself, they sell those on amazon all day...as long as you close the circuit the light turns on itself...seen other "free energy" scammers on youtube do the same.
Nope. That's a real light bulb at 10:28. It's clear, and you can see the wattage stamp at the top. The trick light bulbs are frosted, not clear. They have to be, to hide the fake bulb inside. Notice the wheels are half black, half white. When he spins them with his hands, you can see them spinning. Then there's a video edit and the wheels are now spinning so fast they're just grey. At this point, it's running on 120V. He's hidden the wires somehow, but those are real motors (probably only using one of them). He connects the bulb to the 120V that's powering the motor.
The tone when Ken said "and I got a sneak peek at Jesus!" made me chuckle heartily.
Ive spent months studying Tesla, and there is a half truth to what they said. Tesla is the father of alternating current, which is cheaper to manufacture than Edison companies Direct current. Tesla believed electricity was a right, not to be payed for by the users of said electricity. The problem was, that wasnt realistic. People want to make money, and that money goes into perfecting the system.
I can't get my 12 year old to load the dishwasher without a couple of eyerolls and how manual labor is ruining her life. I doubt I can get her to build me an infinite power generator in a half hour.
tell her the generator will load the dishwasher for her dumb@ss
(im just kidding about the dumb@ss part i thought it would be hilarious and as usual i am right. im literally crying rn)
Bravo to who ever found the back door! 🎉🎉🎉
Probably just use inspect element on the website
6:30: *No 12 year old kid's lunch break is two hours long.*
Finland: *hold my beer*
This is just a kind of stupidity tax. I have mixed feelings about it.
A mix of wind and solar is the most reliable option.. especially if you bank it with massive batteries.
Unfortunately that is not only expensive but has ongoing maintenance cost that also cost a lot of money and time.
A battery big enough to smooth out the highs and lows of your power production will cost at least 20k and need replacing every 10-15 years. Your solar panels and wind turbines will need replaced at around the same time. So you have 20-40k every 15 years 😮 to be truly independent.
Let’s say 30k every 15 years. That equals 170$ a month for electricity.. which is probably about what you spend now.
We live in a world where most people have a device with an hd camera in their pocket. Their smartphone. Yet. They didn’t have access to a decent quality camera when they filmed this?
The device obviously uses the same technologies aliens use that somehow makes it impossible to take good pictures of them.
That 'machine' at 10:06 appears to be made from two 'shaded pole motors'. These are low powered things used to run cooling fans in certain appliances (can't think of an example unf.!). But there's no way they would generate electricity as they DON'T have magnets in them to start with!
Great video, and it certainly shows that some people could be more productive actually doing useful work rather than trying to get money out of people who don't know what's going on...
I can find this motor in my old microwave oven as fan motor. Now PC like fans are more common.
Always a great day when you upload!
it fun watching you break down these scams. i'm suprised they are stil around . Just are there really so many fools.
Hey, the short video with the lightbulb and coils etc, isn’t it just 2 microwave motors next to each other? Pretty sure there aren’t any permanent magnets in those.
I think Krazy Ken and Coffeezilla should do a team up scam busting.
Why? They're completely different types of scams. Krazy Ken and Thunderfoot would be closer to making sense, but Thunderfoot gets annoying after 10 minutes and gets too hyperbolic. KK and EEVBlog might make the most sense, and their personalities mesh. But the team-up I'd most prefer to see would be Krazy Ken and KK Downing. They could bond over their shared initials, and bust guitar pickup scams, or something. 😄
I have almost finished my over-unity perpetual motion device that will output the surplus energy. I'm 90 percent of the way there but admit the last 10 percent is taking longer than anticipated 🙂
thanks for keeping up on the scams, very helpful to prove to the older generation that think im not educated enough to prove them wrong.
i live in Vietnam there is a book named "Năng lượng vĩnh cửu" (roughly translated into English will be "Infinite Energy"), i was 17 when i first saw my aunt bought that book, i told her it's a scam and the product was sold along with that book couldn't work - the book was sold with a "recycle energy device" that was basically an electricity socket, that said it would help you recycle the energy of your fridge by plugging the fridge into it and would save you 50% bill - my aunt didn't believe and she said "what does a kid know". Needless to say, she got scammed and bought a 40$ socket, in a country that avg monthly salary is 320$, 40$ is a lot to loose
The real world would be thrilled if the perpetrators of this disingenuous device responded to your UA-cam video and/or the email and see what they have to say for themselves. But once again,in true Krazy Ken/Computer Clan style, debunking these idiots is very entertaining and fun to watch. Thanks.....
I thought the backstory was full of bs but how Tesla died was true
Yeah, we know. Its also in the video.
@@medes5597 (:
Given who they were portraying as the evil ‘them’ Ken should have mentioned who was paying for that hotel room.
He did essentially build something much more efficient than coal based generators though, possibly solar power and they refused to finance him cos, you know, greed. He would not have put power companies out of business, but perhaps just made it so there was not ridiculous profit.
@@georgeyreynolds Tesla spent a lot of time championing Hydroelectric power as a cheap power source. It’s one reason he put so much efforts into developing AC power as that could be transmitted long distances letting you take advantage of where that could be done. He then got obsessed with wireless technology wanting to get rid of transmission lines.
I love how you used a water pipe to make a fake cable just like they did in Robocop.
I watched an Indian youtube video on how to make a device that gave free electricity. The comments were full of people asking for help in making their own, and suggestions on improvements to the design.
Obviously it was complete nonsense but... it had over 3 million views.
Sad, tragic even.
Technically, you CAN obliterate your power bill using energy of the Sun and some easy-to-obtain things. To do that, go outside on a bright sunny day. Also don't forget to take your paper energy bill and a lens (almost any lens will do). The rest of the recipe I will gladly sell you for 10000 bucks
And then throw the bill into the sun
1:24
Nice callback to a previous video!
What drives me nutz is when people that believe in this stuff try to come back to you with something like "Imagine if the wright brothers accepted flight was impossible". Naturally these people don't understand that flight is actually possible and does not violate any known laws of physics. An overunity device clearly does. Which is why as far as we can say today, it's not possible to get more enery out that you put in. In fact if at any point someone does make something that seems to output more energy than put in, it's clearly getting that energy from somewhere (like say a heat pump, which is the closest thing to "free" energy we have). Energy can't simply be magicked in.
In many ways, this is my favorite video but you have rocketed to number one in like my hundred favorite UA-cam channels. You are currently number one.
You need to give that book to electroboom
Yes. Let’s see what he’s got to say about this
The motors at 11:16 are so called shaded pole motors. These types of motors can't even be used as generators without completely modifying the rotor as the rotor of a shaded pole motor is just laminated steel sheets and an aluminium squirrel cage. By the way: shaded pole motors are horribly inefficient. Only around 25%'ish. That's why a industrial 50W BLDC fan is so much more powerful than a normal 50W desk fan.
How much is the typical electricity bill in the US?
I pay around 50 dollars a year for the urban apartment a country farm, combined, which makes the whole "save on energy" theme quite insignificant.
It varies greatly. I live in the southeastern US, which typically has brutally hot, humid summers, and some pretty gnarly winters that are miserable and rainy. The bill at my old 750 sqft apartment would be nearly $200 monthly during peak usage, so July/August for AC, and December/January for heat.
We moved a mere seven miles away to a 1500 sqft house with AWFUL inefficient windows and doors, and our bill actually _lowered_ down to about $125 during peak usage since we changed providers. Utility providers generally have local monopolies here. Granted, we have a propane tank for heat, so the low electricity costs during winter would be offset by our propane company breaking my kneecaps during winter.
There are a ton of different factors at play, given the monopolies, regulations, and the sheer size of the US. We also get pinged for a lot of upcharges. When I had natural gas at my old house, I'd get popped for around $50 a month during winter for "maintenance" of the lines. That same charge would be as low as $3 during summer. Atlanta Gas Light is an awful company, but you're hosed and have no other option if you have natural gas. Statewide monopoly. There are other "providers" but they're all buying from Atlanta Gas Light.
The only "free" electricity generator with zero friction is an antenna array that picks up artificial and natural radio signals, both terrestrial and from outer space. The current of radio can produce a small voltage in the antenna array, albeit not a very usable amount.
I wonder who will be the star of the backstory next year. I'm hoping it's Colonel Sanders. "Big Electric sued him into bankruptcy, so he gave up on his unlimited power machine and concentrated on chicken."
You should still build it according to the "plans" and show us what you get!
7:30 "I'm not saying a system like this is abusive, it's a legitimate sales and marketing technique, only that it can be abused"
Counterpoint, all sales and marketing is abusive and manipulative, psychological warfare on the consumer trying to get them to spend money they otherwise wouldn't.
Everyone forgot that Tesla _was_ the big energy in his days.
A former class mate fell for it, he even asked me for help, I just said: "It just won't work, stop wasting your time!" He replied: "Because I need better parts and your great skills to build it, you can do it!" And I said: "Don't talk to me anymore!", some people are worse than the most stupid manager.
Bruh
You could give him a powerbank and told him that he need to charge it sometimes to give it a kick to run xD
And then everyone stood up and clapped and you were given the keys to the city for your sheer intellect
@@ICasinI no, but they found it still rather more useful than your comment.
@@ICasinI This isn't even a particularly hard to believe story why are you doing that?
Hey Ken, in that video they show at 11:30 are just basic AC induction motors, you can find them in fridge freezers, small desk fans, etc. They will not run off DC.
What does that mean in the context of the scam exactly?
@@ComputerClan It means the motors cannot generate electricity. So spinning one to start making power to get the second one started to then power the first and run forever and powering a bulb is impossible. Which we know, but some viewers don't have enough knowledge about generating to grasp how this is a scam
The targeting of this is perfect:
- Those who are stupid enough to believe this think they are just too stupid to understand the instructions.
- Those who are smart enough to understand what the instructions are saying are smart enough to understand this is a scam and don't buy this to begin with.
Krazy Ken: … still here?
Me: Gah! Don’t do that!
Man you make my days with every upload. Thank you!
I thoroughly enjoy and always look forward to these posts.
FYI the reason for the coils on the motors at 11:15 is they’re Shaded pole motors, those coils are part of the motors construction.
I was hoping you would explain how they claimed it would work. Or at least guess at what they were suggesting. I got the impression that the spinning rotors were supposed to somehow harvest some kind of background energy. I think you have to put some energy in to drive the rotors and that is why they say the 87% cut. You can get off the grid entirely if you use the solar panels to power the motor that turns the rotor, then the machine upscales the small energy input into enough to run your house. Allegedly.
this thing is a whole Sokka forehead slap
That Oatmeal cartoon about Tesla has caused more than a decade of misinformation.
Anyways, a perpetual motion machine for $49 seems like a great deal. You probably built it wrong. I'll be rich once I do it right!
""If you've done six impossible things this morning, why not round it off with breakfast at Milliways, the Restaurant at the End of the Universe?"
here's a tiny little secret. it's like a very special toy so be careful with it.... You can get free and unlimited electricity if you set up a solar power system. Buy a few solar panels and some high capacity batteries, do some wirings and poof, electricity. This works best if you live in the tropics where there is no snow and there is sun shine all year round.
The fact that it happens after purchase sounds like they would end up in legal hit water very quickly.
Years ago, while I worked for a somewhat shady technology development company, I met a man with a perpetual motion machine. Better than perpetual motion he reckoned, because it created heat that could be used to make more energy! What he actually had was a particularly inefficient home-built motor.
But people like him are out there, and they are buying this book, and believing that they are just a few days away from sticking it to Big Science, Big Energy, and The Man.
They will never know they were scammed.
I do wanna point out that Tesla WAS looking into energy stuff, but his goal was mostly cheap transmission, not production.
But the video says that Tesla patented this tech, so you wouldn't even need the book as all patents are publicly available.
Since no one has seen this machine, perhaps you could build it as per the instructions?
Would be fantastic to see it, and would absolutely debunk the scam.
Also, I'm pretty sure an ex of mine bought this over a decade ago. I vaguely remember reading some of it.
Yeah. I was expecting him to follow the instructions and build it and then show how it doesn't work. Bit disappointed.
Fortunately I have been able to use an HHO generator to power my generator so I don't have to worry about scammy generators like this. Now I have limitless energy from abundant water. Fantastic. Link in the description (haha).
This is like the first time I see Ken rage on something.
I have downloaded some of these systems they do come with a 60 day money back (Which I use). The big question is why the bundle with other systems build your own solar panel, your own wind generator, etc. Now there are some that you can build that do work on a small scale like the ones that use biomass (heat from Compost) you could use something like that to charge a battery or 2. Remember if you look at your electric bill your usage this is how many watts you need to replace or I should say Kilowatts (1,000 watts). Most electric co. will give you a summary of your daily use. This is how many watts you need to have per day divide that by 24 and you will have an idea of what size generator you will need. There is no way this little thing can do that. Also you need 240V. yes I know most of your stuff need 120V. but your circuit breaker panel is set up for 2 120V. input or 240V.
if you tried to make a way to store energy using the 2 motors and a belt you would have less efficiency and more paracitic draw than just using a fly wheel
Ken - I absolutely love your videos. I was getting ready to sign off from work for the day and found that you had just posted this video. Need to hang around a bit longer to watch it.
Tesla dying in an obscure hotel in New York? It was the friggin New Yorker hotel, super famous and historic.
Have you seen the one that runs all the time on youtube, claiming some kid created an electric heater that produces several times the heat of other electric heaters? Again, violates the laws of thermodynamics. Why does youtube allow this?
That idea is, kind of, based on Tesla's invention that was actually in use in the early days of electric grid. You know, there are two types of current. Alternating and direct. In the days before vacuum tubes or semi-conductors, Tesla invented the rotary DC-converter. And there it is. The reason to run generator with DC to create AC (wich was Tesla's choice over the DC favored by Edison). So that Quick Power System is _kind of_ accurate from the historical view :D
Ofcourse, with rotary converter you'll lose some energy in conversion. Much more than with even the simplest pair of diodes. But it works and gets the job done if you haven't invented the diode or a vacuum tube yet.
@@Qassu78 How come when I google "rotary dc converter" I get only 7 hits, and none mention Telsa? There is a lot of misinformation and lies about Tesla out there. Tesla invented the AC generator. Using a DC motor to spin an AC generator isn't much of an invention, really. In fact it's pretty common sense, and would only be useful when your spinning shaft (from wind or water wheel, etc.) can't spin at a constant rate, so you need to convert it to DC which then spins a governed AC generator. Governed, so that it spins at a constant speed to keep the AC frequency constant.
And why are you mentioning diodes? You're talking about converting DC to AC, and then say "lose energy moreso than with diodes", but diodes (in a bridge configuration) are for converting AC to DC, so they really have nothing to do with your DC to AC conversion.
@@Hyxtryx I tried to find again the source where Tesla is named as the inventor of the rotary converter, I couldn't find it. But, I found an article where Tesla was named as the father of AC motor and on that same article there are two inventors for rotary converter. Charles Bradley and Benjamin Lamme, latter worked for Westinghouse Company, just like Tesla. It might be that my original source has erronous information for that reason.
Anyways, that hoax gizmo isn't 100% wrong, there is a rotary converter that can be used to electrify a house with solar power. But it does not create free energy. It's actually quite inefficient since some of the energy is transferred to kinetic energy and heat due to internal friction of such device.
@@Hyxtryx And sorry for being a bit incoherrent. Ofcourse diodes are for AC-DC conversion, so was the rotary dc converter. But rotary converter can work both ways. With a pair of AC and DC motors you can go either way. From AC to DC or from DC to AC. In that way rotary converter is actually pretty clever device.
The saddest part is I am sure there are some less than sharp DIY guys out there, trying so hard to make this, spending money they don't have. It really pisses me off when places con money out of people, people who are innocent, people that gave them the benefit of the doubt, and have decided to believe in them, and spend money they dont have with them. Criminals.
DANG! COSMIC energy: I REALLY need that! Shut up and take my money! I don't always make custom graphics, but when I do, I have a spider monkey use M$ Paint. I had NO IDEA Crazy Ken did vasectomies; WOW, I am totally using him next time. Thanks Ken for sharing the contents of this eBook, because now I TOTALLY understand how it works, and all I need to do is buy a solar panel and a mirror, which luckily I can install in my spare room. Why didn't I see this before, that the energy from the solar panel will reflect in the mirror and make endless cosmic energy! I may even write my own eBook!
For my work barn I built my own solar panels, power storage unit and a power converter and inverter. It powers everything I need there but it's just a few lights and to charge my battery powered tools and on occasion, my shop vacuum. I know it's limits and the only way to effectively get power to the barn since it is located on the far end of my property. If there was a device like this scam was trying to sell, I would have spent everything I have to build it. Foolish to believe you can have unlimited, free power in two hours and for less than $200. 😅
Send book to Big Clive and have him build. :)
It can't be a scam, they didn't use the word quantum, not once!
I feel really sorry for the kind of people who fall for this. They obviously have internet access, yet can't be bothered reading up on just the Wikipedia page for perpetual motion machines.
To be fair, I doubt perpetual motion is mentioned in the book.
As an engineer, when I see someone talk to me about “free energy” machines they found on the internet, I don’t fight their logic. i just go: “What is the stability of the voltage? Does it has surge protection? Do you need transformers to rise or lower the voltage for home use? What is its headroom of power consumption? Does it install on the measurer? Don’t you need a proper electrician to avoid accidents? How is it powered down in case of issues?” They just shut up. Because even if they believe these thing, they realize it is not as simple to implement as they thought.
there are idiots that believe this and also that some buy came up with a 100 mile per gallon carburetor and mysteriously died and also the guy that invented a car that ran on water but also was offed by big oil or the government. People don't think, that with all the knowledge in the world and everybody having access to a computer, that if these things were real that people would have figured out how to duplicate these claims...ok
i can put energy on any cooper winding - wireless by put my tesla coil under the table, there is no free energy unless you steal energy
Ken being an absolute chad, as always
18:01 Without reading the book to get the context, it SOUNDS like a 'rotary inverter'. A DC motor driving an AC generator. Thats the only thing I can think of that they might be going at.
"Obscure New York hotel" ah, yes, the obscure *Hotel New Yorker* which was a major landmark in the latter end of Tesla's life and is considered an important example of Art Deco construction to this day.
17:52 it’s definitely nonsense for powering, but back when people have no IGBT/PWM components, they way to get a strong enough sine wave signal is to run a generator with another generator. Telephones used to have such mechanisms for ringback tones.
Yeah free electricity... otherwise known as electrical contraband in America
Actually, there is a way to seemingly generate electricity from "nothing." You take a crystal radio and modify its output so that instead of audio, the radio waves would be converted into a small amount of electricity. Of course, to have any measurable amount of electricity at all your antenna would have to be absolutely huge (a rectenna 2 acres or more across), but in theory it can be done
Isn't this what they call "energy harvesting"? You just receive what cellphone-towers and radio stations push out and "convert" it back to electricity? It's easier to just steal electricity by hijacking a street lantern...
You could also stick a specially doped silicon semiconductor in a brightly lit location. I think it's called a "solar panel" or something. (not saying you're wrong, just pointing out another source of "free" energy that's much more accessible).
Good look finding a working AM station
@@bosstowndynamics5488 free? nah. There's always a price. Notice I never used the word "free" in my original comment anywhere
@@gelo1238 true. There are a handful that have regular enough broadcasts (for example, the traveler info stations you see advertised on highways)
He didn't die in an obscure place Tesla died alone and in debt on 7 January 1943, at the age of 86, on the 33rd floor in Room 3327 at the Hotel New Yorker located in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood of Manhattan at 481 8th Ave, New York City, New York 10001, United States which is operated by Wyndham Hotels & Resorts. You can literally if you want to waste your money stay there it even comes with a plaque stating that it's history. Even during his lifetime it wasn't obscure it was a cheap middle range hotel I am thinking they heard New Yorker Hotel and thought yeah new yorker hotel I know it’s in New York but what is the name of the hotel.
7:26 No but it is abusive though. If you have to use a “hypnotic effect” to sell your product or service instead of being honest, that’s abusive.
Just because something is used by corporations, doesn’t make it not abusive.
The claims about “hypnotic effects” are just bullshit the creator uses to market this format, remember marketing people also have to market their products and they're just as likely to lie. Hypnosis insofar as it is real only works if the subject is at least initially willing to go along, it's more like extremely powerful peer pressure than directly controlling someone. What he's really saying is that VSLs just drone on forever and can easily bore you so much that you don't really think about what is being said, but that of course wouldn't make this marketing technique sound good.
I'm so early that it doesn't event show up in the videos section of the channel