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| Quest for Zero Point Energy Engineering Principles for Free Energy | 
enlarge | Author: Moray B. King Publisher: Adventures Unlimited Press Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $9.03 You Save: $5.92 (40%)
New (25) Used (9) from $9.03
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 360871
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9 x 3.6 x 0.7
ISBN: 0932813941 Dewey Decimal Number: 531 EAN: 9780932813947 ASIN: 0932813941
Publication Date: January 30, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description Free energy and anti-gravity are new solutions to the world's energy crisis. Rarely mentioned in the media-- even as power shortages cripple the U.S.-- Zero-Point Energy can transform our earth to a self-sustaining, pollution-free planet. The basic theory of Zero Point Energy maintains that there are fluctuations of electrical field energy embedded within the fabric of space. By identifying the densest energy; and then using today's technology to balance the energy flow, we can acquire free energy which doesn't deplete the earth. Filled with detailed diagrams, patents, and photos, the chapters include: * Fundamentals of Zero-Point Energy Technology * Tapping Zero-Point Energy as an Energy Source * Vacuum Energy Vortices * The Super Tube * Charge Clusters
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
a masterpiece of free energy 's books November 12, 2008 very good book and one of dr. King's masterpieces in the field of knowledge and science of free energy devices
Where's the beef? August 24, 2008 1 out of 6 found this review helpful
I am not against 'alternative' speculation.
Terry Witt has written (Null Physics) a tome that proposes (can't say different as quantum theory is fog with numbers) a visually manageable way to view current observations in physics from quantum to relativity all in one formulation. Not it isn't 'One Theory for Dummies'. It is a deep deep and praiseworthy mathematical embodiment of real phenomena. Could be wrong. But that's OK. Maybe, if somehow missing a cog on a gear, it will evoke the better formulation in someone else's head. The point is that Terry's work is hugely evolved and argued stepwise through all facets of real world physics.
This book, on the other hand, is like a bar room rant from somebody who better not have his keys to the car. All disconnected this's and that's. See? Huh? You see? See it? Do you? THEY don't want you to know this because THEY suck your brains or something. ???
A good book to stop the patio table from rocking.
There is no such thing as "Zero Point Energy" August 20, 2007 4 out of 18 found this review helpful
There is no such thing as "Zero Point Energy," nor is there "free" or "unlimited" energy. The claims made by this book are ridiculous.
Perpetual energy, free energy, perpetual motion, etc., are all SCIENCE FICTION ideas which propose that energy is unlimited.
Any physicist will say that energy is the ability to perform work AGAINST OR ALONG A FORCE. There are four forces: gravity, electro-magnetic, strong nuclear, and weak nuclear. Basically, the concept of "Zero Point Energy" or "free energy" would contradict all of them.
There is a "theoretical" term called "vacuum" energy, which is the supposed "energy" of free space, but this isn't Zero, it's just a VERY LOW ENERGY STATE. It isn't free or renewable.
Quest for Zero Point Energy is worth reading. January 26, 2004 32 out of 45 found this review helpful
It is worth reading, along with T.E. Bearden's, Nikola Tesla, and John Bedini's work. The EM theory has many errors and if your a novice in this field and want some direction in how to approach the classical EM theory and understand where the problem areas exist. You will eventually understand the fundamental principles of extracting free energy from the vacuum and it's not as absurd as people would like for you to believe, in other words the world is definitely not flat. Go explore.
The Real Deal May 21, 2003 139 out of 144 found this review helpful
I've bought most of the free energy books out there and would put this on my "top ten" list. Most books published on this topic are not technical or rational, or are all hype and offer little of substance. This book is a notable exception in the genre. Moray doesn't reach too far with outlandish conclusions, and therein lies his--and ultimately this book's--credibility. The text is technical in places, and uses terms that may confuse the layman, but a layman could also learn much, as the explanations are nonetheless surprisingly lucid. But be aware that the book is a compilation of technical papers, not a hold-your-hand, dumbed-down, super-rudimentary description. This book doesn't contain--as many of the naive expect from such books--detailed plans that will allow you to build a free energy motor, nor does it claim to. But it offers concise, referenced, well-edited explanations of an "ether" or "zero-point-energy" theory that is the conceptual backbone of free energy systems. Postulated operational principles of some of the more infamous free energy devices are also included. I don't usually write reviews, but I made an exception in this case because I am (very) tired of this genre being polluted by so many quacks. Free energy is credible, and possible, and this is one book that helps disseminate useful information on a topic of critical importance to humanity.
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