Here is neatpete
Totally amazed at the captor.
Published on Sep 2, 2015
Here I demonstrate where the power for the transformer comes from.
While most other videos on the subject focus on the power and voltage around the device, the true cost of the power is between the battery and the inverter.
This is not an overunity device!
This is not a device that can power itself.
The only interesting thing about this device is the fact that when you attach a load to the device there is very little consumption of current measurable. This is an anomaly because the true consumption can only be measured between the battery and inverter.
Published on Sep 1, 2015
Part 1 of 2 showing a literal demo of the device.
Here I show how the device can be presented as an over unity device.
It can power a 240 volt 100 watt light bulb for only 32 milliamps and at the same time power a 12 volt battery charger as well as a 500 watt electric drill for only 34 milliamps at 220 volts from the power source.
On the face of it, the unit is indeed an amazing devise, but all is not what it seems.
See part 2 for the truth.
[VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRlKRGVMdCA[/VIDEO]
[VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsnlBgGwcLk[/VIDEO]
Totally amazed at the captor.
Published on Sep 2, 2015
Here I demonstrate where the power for the transformer comes from.
While most other videos on the subject focus on the power and voltage around the device, the true cost of the power is between the battery and the inverter.
This is not an overunity device!
This is not a device that can power itself.
The only interesting thing about this device is the fact that when you attach a load to the device there is very little consumption of current measurable. This is an anomaly because the true consumption can only be measured between the battery and inverter.
Published on Sep 1, 2015
Part 1 of 2 showing a literal demo of the device.
Here I show how the device can be presented as an over unity device.
It can power a 240 volt 100 watt light bulb for only 32 milliamps and at the same time power a 12 volt battery charger as well as a 500 watt electric drill for only 34 milliamps at 220 volts from the power source.
On the face of it, the unit is indeed an amazing devise, but all is not what it seems.
See part 2 for the truth.
[VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRlKRGVMdCA[/VIDEO]
[VIDEO]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KsnlBgGwcLk[/VIDEO]
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