Bill Mehess Interview

Date: April 6th, 2006
File Size: 1.39mb (11kbps)
Format: Windows Media 10


Overview: We're joined by Bill Mehess, an independent inventor specializing in a self-described "nuts & bolts" approach to developing new technology. Our discussion involves his latest device - a modified clock-pendulum arrangement that's been running for over 150 hours, and might just start a public competition for the longest experiment ever...

The "Mehess Magnet-Motor" consists of a magnet attached to the pendulum of a wind-up clock, and swung between two sets of induction coils to charge a small storage battery. At the end of the 8-day wind-cycle, Mehess hopes that the storage battery will have enough power to wind the clock. While this approach puts him at odds with conservation of energy, he's nonetheless seeing a 3 millivolt rise per minute in his storage battery, which only has to turn a 6-watt motor for 9-seconds to completely rewind the clock & reset the experiment.

Is this the ultimate countdown experiment that free-energy advocates have been waiting for? If nothing else, it's certainly an exciting experiment, given the easy construction & widespread availability of parts to cobble together into a working replication. The Mehess Magnet Motor has all the makings of a great experiment - and even if it doesn't completely self-wind, it may go through a few partial cycles before it completely runs out of juice, leaving the door open for a countdown competition to put all others to shame..

Link: Bill Mehess Magnet Motor Audio Interview
Site: Bill Mehess Magnet-Motor Homepage & Video
Related: Bill Mehess Gravity-Shield


Comments (2)

Humbugger
Said this on 8-11-2007 At 10:46 am
Mehess is obviously quite delusionary and knows no practical physics or even basic electronics. He's playing a shell-game with energy and time and has managed to fool himself. His contraption is fit for Rube Goldberg's approval or even envy. He offers no scientific or other explanation of where his "excess energy" comes from in his contraption of standard common elements feeding each other in a great, energy-losing circle-jerk.
joe dupont
Said this on 2-22-2008 At 01:55 pm
bedini may be the answer. you know that you could run
such a pendulum off of tree power. i have measured tree power
at 5 volts to .8 volts. such tree power could charge capacitors
and then run a coil at the bottom bedini style.

New comments are currently disabled.