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View Full Version : Mass Produced Free Energy is Here! Introducing Orbo's O-Cube and O-Phone



TelosianEmbrace
20th December 2015, 06:50
I first heard of Steorn years ago, and have been keeping an eye on them since. There was something about this company that just made me feel they had enough balls and resources and nouse to be the ones to crack the 'mass produced free energy device' barrier.


Tomorrow, fifteen years after starting our little company Steorn, we finally launch our first two Orbo based products. It's been a journey for sure, we have had the **** kicked out of us on the road, but we always kept going, we always tried to have fun, and we have always tried to do the right thing.
Fifteen years is a long time, but it's only the start. I have heard many people compare Orbo to the Model T, it’s a technology at the very start of its journey into people's lives. I believe that Orbo as it exists today is not near the Model T in terms of what it is capable of, its Christiann Huygens first combustion engine. Many people will find our first products to be too expensive and too low in function. Hey, don't buy them, they are not for you, but they will be!
I will not even attempt to thank everyone who has helped us on this long and interesting journey, it's in the many of hundreds if not thousands. The next part of the road will be fun, but not without its potholes and turns, and we are looking forward to it, we love a good fight!

Shaun McCarthy, CEO at Steorn, on December 1st. https://www.facebook.com/shaundmccarthy


Despite the predictability of the ignorance by the mainstream press, It’s been a remarkable couple of weeks in the world of free energy. Steorn have quietly re-emerged onto the public stage with not one but two utterly Impossible products for sale and others in the pipeline all based on their Orbo ‘Never-Die’ battery technology.
Craig Brown, editor of steornnews. www.steornnews.com

One of these is the ocube...

http://i68.tinypic.com/vifs0o.jpg

Then there's the ophone...



http://i67.tinypic.com/t62s28.jpg

sigma6
20th December 2015, 15:19
no way! is it for real?! awwwwwwwwweeeessooommmmmmmeeeee!!!! (LoL)

Ted
20th December 2015, 17:41
$1,500 is a hell of a lot of money to spend for a device which only puts out 10 watts of power! Maybe this is why the PTB are allowing it.
More importantly, this may be a crack in the dam which will allow other products to be marketed.

Snoweagle
20th December 2015, 17:52
Free energy you say:-)
Really?
Has anyone checked the benefits?
Costs about $1500+, charges two phones per day, apparently free.
No technical specification, what about patent details?
So nobody other than the manufacturer knows the technique used.

And this is an article by Forbes magazine about the costs of charging your phone, ipad or laptop. Do the sums yourselves:-)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2013/09/07/how-much-energy-does-your-iphone-and-other-devices-use-and-what-to-do-about-it/
edit: The following italic are quotes from the artcle endorsed by the US Electrical Institute (article has embedded link): end edit:

Pop quiz: how much electricity (to the closest 10 kilowatt-hour) does it take to power your iPhone or Android for a year? 1 kWh? 10 kWh? Or 100 kwh? The answer: 1 kWh.

If you fully drained and recharged your phone everyday, then over the course of a year you would have to feed it about 2,000 watt hours, or 2kWh. At an average price of 12 cents that means that your phone uses about one quarter’s worth of electricity per year.
As for your iPad, keeping it fed costs just $1.36 a year, according to the Electric Power Research Institute.
Your average laptop, with its far bigger screen, uses about 72 kWh, costing some $8 a year.

So how many years would you have to wait to actually see any sort of saving?

I am now having a problem appropriating the tag "free energy" to this product.

Apparently, the designers and manufacturers like to party. Must be expensive parties.

Cynicism aside, they are apparently selling so the marketeers have succeeded as well.

Bill Ryan
20th December 2015, 18:29
no way! is it for real?! awwwwwwwwweeeessooommmmmmmeeeee!!!! (LoL)

It seems to be! They'd not be selling these things now if it was a scam, or even some mistake. It'd be commercial suicide for the company, and professional suicide for all the individuals involved.

Some interesting summary info here: http://steornnews.com. I'd like to find a concise, technical-but-not-too-technical video review of what's inside this thing (magnets, yes, but say more...), and basically how it works.

Magnets are pretty strange things (and so are gyroscopes). We're kind of used to them, but that may give us a very false sense of confidence about our level of real understanding.

The cost-benefit of owning one of these is really immaterial — I'd suggest. Better to use a solar battery recharger! But the principle is surely what's important, if it really works.

ThePythonicCow
20th December 2015, 19:33
Better to use a solar battery recharger!
Easy for you to say ... living in the hills of Ecuador :). That must be solar panel heaven.

What about our members near the Arctic Circle?

(Just teasing ... :offtopic: ... sorry ... :focus: )

ThePythonicCow
20th December 2015, 19:42
Your average laptop, with its far bigger screen, uses about 72 kWh, costing some $8 a year.
If your electricity costs about 12 cents (US) per kwh, then leaving a 50 watt light bulb on for the entire year will cost your about $50 (US) for the electricity.

If your electricity is substantially cheaper or more costly, then adjust proportionately, but for many of us, that's a close enough approximation.

In general, leaving an X watt device on for a year costs X US Dollars for the electricity.

So constantly charging one or another phone, tablet or such at a time, will cost about $10 per year for electricity, if the charger is constantly using 10 watts.

In other words, your estimate of $8 is just about right ... I'm just using a simpler rule of thumb that I find handy.

So ... yes ... paying $500 or $1000 for a device that can replace, at best, an $8 or $10 per year expense is not an economical choice. My rule of thumb is that investing in something to avoid an ongoing expense should pay out in 3 to 5 years, or it's not worth it. So I wouldn't spend more than $24 to $50 to avoid an $8 to $10 expense.

That's if it worked as advertised ... which is entirely unclear to me so far.

Rocky_Shorz
20th December 2015, 19:56
What is most important is breaking free energy is impossible. Physics books need to be rewritten, showing no energy in can have energy out...

I agree it is the model T, put the Tesla 1000x booster on it, and at every appliance a Keshe plasma loop to draw in plasma energy to help power the device. And our world can run without oil.

All unexplainable by 1600 physics formulas, but it is a start...

I was just told to place this inside of the magnetic and gravitational loops and test output...

sigma6
20th December 2015, 20:23
$1,500 is a hell of a lot of money to spend for a device which only puts out 10 watts of power! Maybe this is why the PTB are allowing it.
More importantly, this may be a crack in the dam which will allow other products to be marketed.

It's the principle not the wattage... once this is established and accepted into the market... no worries... the skies the limit... what are "they" going to do? Make a law limiting how much electricity your allowed to create? It's brilliant... That it works and people are buying it... is all that matters... this is huge!

Just like some people pay extra for "convenience" here you are paying for an "ability" that you didn't have before... FREEDOM & INDEPENDENCE....

How much is that worth?

Snoweagle
20th December 2015, 22:37
[I]Your average laptop, with its far . . . [/B]
If your electricity costs . . . comment . . . or it's not worth it. So I wouldn't spend more than $24 to $50 to avoid an $8 to $10 expense.

That's if it worked as advertised ... which is entirely unclear to me so far.

Hadn't wished to mislead by the italicised as being my quotations as they were pertinent (to this topic) within the article by Forbes magazine as posted. I pulled them to show by example from others that the article covered. Furthermore, the article was researched through some US Electrical Institute so why invent the wheel when the figures were Institutionalised already. Blame them:-)
____________________________

On the subject of how it works, and I'm as much in the dark as anyone else with regard this device but since my earlier post I realise how they have accomplished this device and solution is effectively a high school project.

Its a simple reactive circuit that has to be excited. Target output is 10mW. So start with a crystal oscillator and start running the numbers.

You might like to investigate Eric Dollard and his Crystal Oscillator Free Energy guide which he has for sale at about thirty bucks. Build your own. Have fun. Live a little.
(Analogue not Digital) (Fields over Particles).
_______________________

Here you go, Eric Dollard Crystal Oscillator Project:
http://ericpdollard.com/category/crystal-radio-initiative/
Quote (italicised) from article (page):
Crystal Radios are free energy devices because they don’t need batteries. They are powered by the very AM radio waves that they’re tuned in to. This is a profound concept, but has its limitations because by the time the energy transmitted in those radio waves are received by the crystal radio, there isn’t much left. There is barely enough to just power the headset so you can listen to the station. Some people have lit LED lights with Crystal Radios but its not really anything to write home about. . . . build your own real Tesla Resonant Transformer with nothing more than junior high school basic algebra. . . more

So the output from this free energy device is only 10 watts, so compare that to that needed to power the LEDs and radio.
Enjoy:-)

Eric Dollard Crystal Oscillator Project:
http://ericpdollard.com/category/crystal-radio-initiative/

_______________________________________________

Go to You Tube and do a search for: crystal oscillator working animation
heap load of results to list.
Build your own:-)

Compliments to the Marketeers of this free energy device, swamp the free energy forums with screams of "free energy" to a limited supply and they'll be snapped up just like "Cabbage Patch Dolls" did once before.

Clearly compliments to builders for seeing the market in the first place which is huge.

Bubu
21st December 2015, 00:07
free energy will not come from mass production line at least not till worldwide system is fixed

sigma6
21st December 2015, 01:06
free energy will not come from mass production line at least not till worldwide system is fixed

Never say "never"! .... this could be a back door... worth watching...

and Dollard and his marketing buddy Aaron Murakami should build the damn things and sell them and make some money? Aaron is selling everything else... I'm not big on "instructions" ...they don't usually come with a clear guarantee that they will work... and who do you blame when it doesn't? And there are so many hoaxes in the market selling instructions to build everything these days...

TelosianEmbrace
21st December 2015, 09:06
It's the principle not the wattage... once this is established and accepted into the market... no worries... the skies the limit... what are "they" going to do? Make a law limiting how much electricity your allowed to create? It's brilliant... That it works and people are buying it... is all that matters... this is huge!

Just like some people pay extra for "convenience" here you are paying for an "ability" that you didn't have before... FREEDOM & INDEPENDENCE....

How much is that worth?

It's the principle we would invest in if we buy one of these. We are at the leading edge of an inevitable paradigm shift in energy systems on Earth, indeed, a shift in ALL man-made systems on Earth. An investment here, a show of intent could be crucial in shaping our future.

Now, who's going to buy one? Could it be a joint purchase, a pet Project Avalon project?

Ted
21st December 2015, 17:47
free energy will not come from mass production line at least not till worldwide system is fixed

Never say "never"! .... this could be a back door... worth watching...

and Dollard and his marketing buddy Aaron Murakami should build the damn things and sell them and make some money? Aaron is selling everything else... I'm not big on "instructions" ...they don't usually come with a clear guarantee that they will work... and who do you blame when it doesn't? And there are so many hoaxes in the market selling instructions to build everything these days...I wouldn't buy anything from Murakami, or Dollard for that matter.

Rocky_Shorz
23rd December 2015, 16:22
this is where it started:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zO1bOfIEqoI


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NTMQFvWkS9s

Webinars of the new technology...

21 mins is where they show components


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0oLR3l64bTY


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hp_pbV9-Yvo

Rocky_Shorz
23rd December 2015, 18:22
another that has been around since 2010


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shkFDPI6kGE

Electricity can be used as the Fuel for the bloom box, so yes, the Orbo can power the bloom box...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wieUWqxPF0A


ancient batteries of Baghdad, this stuff isn't new...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmlMJab7pd4