Yes, he did. All of his sh!t was confiscated and it 'disappeared' as stated in the above post. Only an idiot wouldn't research the topic.
Well it's only been, what, 100 years or so since he died. And you or some other paranoid genius couldn't recreate the "discovery" since then? You're kidding, right?
Recreate? More like bringing it back into the light. 79 years since his death, to be precise. Another that can't see beyond their own nose. Tell me then, why is the electric car making waves in the marketplace, when the concept was thought of in the late 1800s, only to become a reality now? Ignorance is bliss in many.
Because electric cars still aren't competitive. The only reason they get sold at all is government subsidies. Enjoy your bliss.
And what's stopping you from recreating Tesla's mythical invention? Whatever it supposedly was would still have to follow all the laws of the physical universe. And those are widely known even outside of the auto companies. C'mon, step up. It can't be impossible IF it ever did exist.
Seriously? Do you read what you type? This is what you quoted me on: This is your response. Do you understand why they are subsidised by governments? To entice the consumer to buy them. Ever heard of a perpetual flywheel generator? Levels of consciousness is the only human limitation. If you can imagine it, it can become a reality. But, I gather that's something some would have difficulty with that, right?
Are you drinking? You mean people won't buy them normally? No *****? Yeah. Has anyone actually seen one? Do they actually exist or is that just some fever dream of conspiracy theorists? Do you mean to imply that in 79 years, nobody has been able to figure that out? Or maybe it just never was a real thing. I knew it! You're drunk!
No. Are you? Exactly my point, now you have to get your profanity count up now? It's not too difficult to create. A decent weighted disc that extra weight added to an area. This is then directly connected to an electric motor, which is connected to an inverter that converts DC to AC and regulates the voltage. I didn't imply anything. I was correcting your early response. Couldn't you work that one out hey? Have a look on YouTurd. You'll find plenty. No, you just can't grasp the concept. As I stated earlier, people's levels of consciousness differ, the lower they are the less they can comprehend. Who's drunk?
So, again, what's so secret about it? Why don't you commercialize it? Why are you waiting for the auto companies?
As I stated above, for Tesla's model for free electricity it can't be metered. As for the others, it will quickly and easily be dismissed. Just as you did at the start.
Electricity can always be metered just like it is now. That machine makes it and it goes out over the wires. Unless he had some way of willing it to move. Again, that's just silly.
Tesla could transmit electric current through the air from a central location. If you had a lamp or electric razor you didn't have to plug it in . Just turn it on.
Once it's on Earth, it will go through existing infrastructure. It's not going to go from the ether directly into your car.
There has been speculation that this energy from the ether devices is about half the size of microwaves.
Amen - there are a LOT of different kinds of batteries. They aren't all chemical. I have a friend in physics who thinks cars should have flywheels to store energy at stop signs and return it by mechanical means to take off again. That would dodge most of the loss due to converting that energy to electricity and storing that in a battery. Also, there are cars today that store that kind of energy in capacitors, since capacitors can be charged very rapidly and with very low overhead. The Al Noor solar plant in Morocco stores energy as molten sodium, thus extending solar power production through some percent of night time. Etc.!
Toyota hybrid Camary's had something similar here in Aus. It was petrol/electric. What I understand about it, is that it operates very similarly to a regular combustion engine car, apart from the fact that it did generate electricity and stored it in its batteries. When the car laboured/was under load/accelerating hard it would use petrol. When cruising/no load it or idling it would utilise the battery power. They were/are very fuel-efficient indeed.
Yes - pretty amazing. A 2023 Camry hybrid (that just runs on gas, no plug in) is advertised here at a little over 50 mpg - a little over 13 mpl, I think! Plus, that's a very reasonable family car.
What I meant was, that the energy within the ether can't be metered. Only what we draw from it we can. Saying that it is endless, doesn't give it a numerical value, only ∞.
Umm... that's what hybrids do. That's the definition of hybrid. The Honda Civic hybrid I had a decade ago did that (but more importantly it let me into the HOV lanes going into DC with only me in it). Of course, it can also be calibrated to simply increase performance and skip the whole gas mileage thing which is what most of them did. Nothing new there for the last 20 years or so.