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Full Version: Nikola Tesla's "Self-Acting" ambient heat engine
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As I've mentioned in another thread recently, Peter Lindemann and I have written, corresponded and had a few phone conversations on this topic and our research overlaps quite a bit.

So, he gave a lecture, I think about six years ago possibly, 2019 I believe, but don't quote me on that.

Anyway, if anyone interested in the subject has an hour to kill sometime, this video is a pretty good introduction.



Unfortunately, after the introduction Peter dropped his microphone and there was an issue with the audio for a while, which I think was later dubbed in with a voice over, but be patient. It gets better.
BTW, for anyone who might be interested, my first encounter with Peter Lindemann was 8 years earlier (prior to the above lecture) on this forum thread:

http://www.energeticforum.com/forum/ener...eat-engine

I think it is well worth reading from the begining. I don't join in on the discussion until near the bottom of page 5.

It was actually, I think, reading through the first few pages of that thread that I first learned about and read portions of the article on "Increasing Human Energy" by Tesla which Peter had previously written an article about.

At the time, I saw Tesla's article as support for a kind of combined Stirling engine and heat pump that I had already been working on as part of a project for a friend in California who was, (as I understand it now), applying for a government grant or military contract.

He had, I believe, been competing for the same contract as INFINIA and others.

Infinia got the contract:

https://vimeo.com/48084629




Sometimes after that they tried to go commercial on a utility scale as well as to the general public, but that was quickly squashed:

I did however manage to aquire one of their units intended for commercial production which had been sent to a university in Colorado for testing and had been put in storage and apparently forgotten.

Now it's in my basement where I'm trying to run some tests:



The sound you here in the video is not the engine though, just the coolant pump. I haven't actually gotten it running yet, mostly because it requires about 10,000 watts of heat concentrated at a small area about the size of a softball at one end of the engine.

I've been having trouble finding a heat source hot enough and concentrated enough to get it started. Still working on it though.