Uppsala

Gary L. Johnson: Searchers for a New Energy Source - Tesla, Moray and Bearden

Submitted by esaruoho on

Gary L. Johnson, IEEE Senior Member, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Kansas State University

Tesla, Moray, Bearden, and others have claimed the existence of another source of energy besides those presently in use. Like sun and wind, the source is available without regard to political boundaries. If true, the development of this energy source would be one of the most important events of the century.

Thomas Henry Moray Radiant Energy Pump/Electricity Generator

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Thomas Henry Moray: Radiant Energy Pump/Electricity Generator

Thomas Henry Moray, Ph.D., (August 28, 1892 - May, 1974) was an inventor from Salt Lake City, Utah. Moray graduated from The Latter Day Saint's Business College. Moray studied electrical engineering through an international correspondence school course. He received a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from the University of Uppsala.

Alternative Energy Institute: Dr. Thomas Henry Moray (missing page found on web.archive.org)

Submitted by esaruoho on

Dr. Thomas Henry Moray, like Nikola Tesla, believed that the earth is enveloped in an electrical energy zone that was free to be harnessed with the right equipment. Anyone who has witnessed the electrical phenomenon of the aurora borealis can attest to the energy streaming around us. The problem is how can that free energy be reliably and safely tapped.

The Moray Radiant Energy Device

Submitted by admin on

In the early 1900's, Dr. T. Henry Moray of Salt Lake City produced his first device to tap energy from the metafrequency oscillations of empty space itself. Eventually Moray was able to produce a free energy device weighing sixty pounds and producing 50,000 watts of electricity for several hours. Ironically, although he demonstrated his device repeatedly to scientists and engineers, Moray was unable to obtain funding to develop the device further into a useable power station that would furnish electrical power on a mass scale.

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