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Wes Crosiar says he knows how Marcus Kipper has been getting his alleged over unity technology to work. Microwave transmitter in back yard pumps added energy into demo device. Gadget in car does same thing when demonstrating out in the desert. Says Les Hendershot and Floyd Sweet devices are probably of similar ilk.
by Sterling
D. Allan
Pure Energy Systems News
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REMOTE ARIZONA, USA - Marcus Kipper has been
demonstrating a technology that purportedly yields up to ten times the power
out than what is put in. After five trips of ten hours each and $14,000
later, Wesley Crosiar of
The device consists of a 12-volt battery that runs a
motor, which in turn runs an alternator, that then,
after a rectifier, passes energy through a specially designed coil that is
tucked between the motor and the alternator to allegedly extract the
electromagnetic fields emitting from both, to then charge an output battery or
run a load. Once the system is operating, the loop can be closed, and
10-times the current begins to flow through the wires, which causes the
insulation on the wires to begin melting, followed by arcing, at which point
100 times the energy flows, even melting the wires.
Supposedly, this is possible because the device is tapping
"ionic energy" from the surrounding aetheric
medium found between the motor and the alternator.
Not so, according to Crosiar,
who has documented reasons to believe the device is actually powered by local
wireless transmission of microwave power. The power is picked up by the
"antenna" coil that consists basically of several 3-inch loops of
wire, approximately matching the wavelength of the microwave.
Behind the Curtain of Oz
Crosiar said he recently took a look around Kipper's property and
discovered a microwave dish situated about 150 feet from the home, tucked back
away in the trees, trained on the home. He speculates that a microwave
oven that he once saw in an adjoining room could have also been modified to do
the trick as well. Kipper later denied ever having a microwave, but both Crosiar and his wife saw it on one of their visits.
Crosiar said that when Kipper gives a demonstration in his home (which
seems to be one of the only places the device will work), he says something
like, "Feel the wires starting to get hot?!" It is then, Crosiar guesses, that Kipper's wife (who is usually in an
adjoining room during the demonstration) flips a switch, activating the
microwave dish, which then causes a transmission of energy to the coils.
This would also explain why when Kipper holds his clamp-on
amp meter in the air above the device, the meter shows a current of up to two
amps. The diameter of the fluke enclosure and the diameter of the coil
antenna are roughly the same.
"One of my friends told me the
Crosiar has replicated the effect using a cheap microwave oven.
He placed the coil inside the oven, threading the coil ends up through the top
of the oven to then connect to the rectifier and battery. The coil
configuration picks up the microwave frequencies and causes a high current to
flow in the wire.
When the microwave transmitter is turned on, the current
goes from 0.5 amps up to 7 - 8 amps as the wires act as an antenna for the
microwave power. That much energy causes the insulation on the wires to
begin melting in spots. Then, the next jump to 70 to 80 amps happens when
the wires start arching, short-circuiting the battery, filling the room with
smoke within a fraction of a second. If the wires are not immediately
disconnected from the battery, they begin to glow red.
Of course, that is not what Kipper says. As far as
the observers are concerned, they are witnessing copious amounts of free energy
flowing in from the aether. Melt down.
Crosiar was witness to this show on numerous occasions, and said it was
very convincing and impressive.
The room where this demonstration takes place is lined with screen from the
waist up. Screen mesh blocks microwave radiation. The motor is
sitting on a small child's table below the level of the screen mesh. As
far as the visitor is concerned, it is just mosquito netting in a sun-room, and
making do with what is lying around. Reasonable enough.
Crosiar points out that when the device is demonstrated "out in
the desert," Kipper's pick-up truck is situated nearby, and probably has a
microwave horn. This is not the kind of horn that honks, but one
installed for the purpose of microwave broadcast. Crosiar
also points out that Kipper gives some kind of excuse as to the depletion of
the battery in his truck. He said Kipper claims it is related to the
phenomenon that some have reported such as that batteries become depleted when
UFO's are nearby.
The Elusive Grail
Kipper has been at this since at least 1990. He no
longer sports the beard and headband, but has a clean-cut look.
Crosiar came along around three years ago, and put up his life savings
to get involved.
He attempted to replicate the technology, but it would
only work when Kipper was around. He was so baffled that he even wondered
if maybe Kipper, who is a Wiccan, wasn't playing some
kind of occult trick on his mind to make him see an illusion of something
happening that was not.
The device itself is very simple. If it were what
Kipper claims it to be, this device should therefore work just about anywhere,
but it does not.
About a year ago, Crosiar had
thought maybe the device was picking up energy from high power lines, serving
as a wireless transformer. He thought maybe Kipper's property was near an
underground high power transmission line. He disproved that notion by
taking his replication to several locations underneath high power lines, but to
no avail.
One of the final tell-tale signs and last straws was when Crosiar showed up at Kipper's place and requested that he
run it there in the driveway, not in his home. The device had run in
Kippers porch before, but Crosiar could not get it to
work when he returned home. Kipper fiddled with it for about an hour but
could not get it to run. That was also the trip when Crosiar
discovered the microwave dish out behind Kipper's home.
The Recipe
Crosiar gives the exact ingredients of the simple system, so anyone can
build it and prove to themselves that it is just microwave energy that is being
picked up -- not "ionic energy."
- Two 12-volt batteries, one for input, and one to receive
the output charge until the loop is closed.
- One DC motor (the kind used in a tread mill work best).
- One belt.
- One alternator that uses neodymium magnets on its rotor,
with nickel. This is probably not crucial, but it is what Kipper
prescribes -- most likely for effect.
- Full wave bridge rectifier.
- Six foot length of 12 gauge
wire.
- Switch.
- Microwave oven.
The DC motor is run by one of the 12-volt batteries.
The motor is hooked to the alternator by a belt. The alternator is
connected to the full-wave bridge rectifier. The rectifier is connected
to the output battery via a specially wound coil.
The crucial, but not highly finicky part is winding the
coil. Take two 6-foot lengths of 12-gauge wire (preferably stranded, not
solid copper). With the two lengths of wire parallel to each other, tie
half a square knot in the wires, as if they were one wire, leaving about a
3-inch diameter loop. Then tie another similar knot, but with the overlap going
the other way so that the overlap of wires alternates, from one knot to the
next, down the 6-foot length of wire. You then twist these loops so they
wind back on themselves into a thicker overlapped toroid
loop of the same diameter. That is the coil.
One wire connects the positive of the bridge to the
positive of the battery, and the other wire connects the negatives.
If you don't want to see the battery short-circuit effect,
then you just do one length of wire like this, and run it between the positive
lead of the bridge and the positive lead of the battery, and run a regular wire
between the negative leads.

A single
strand, used by Kipper, which has been melted.
Related Devices
Crosiar says that Kipper is not the first person to have pulled this
hoax. He believes that the legendary Les Hendershot
was doing the same thing. His device had a similar arrangement. Crosiar says, "You always see magnetron magnets in the
photos, which suggests he had access to microwave technology".
Crosiar points out that Hendershot worked in Brimerton Shipyard, a military operation in
Crosiar also wonders about Floyd Sweets device since it had some of the
same key ingredients.
- - - -
CREDITS
Thanks to Mary-Sue Haliburton
for her editorial skills.
SOURCES
Wes Crosiar and video
demonstration prepared by Marcus Kipper and his wife from around 1991, showing
the device in operation in the desert and in their home porch.
RELATED LINKS
Lester Hendershot
Floyd Sweet
Pylon
Ambient Energy Lights Fluorescent Bulbs - Hundreds in
Page composed by Sterling D. Allan Oct. 31, 2004
Last updated January
07, 2005
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