Explains cold-current, free-energy devices. Using the 1920's inventions of T Henry Moray as a starting point, this book explores a wide range of popular science and frontier physics.
Moray B. King has written a useful book concerning T. Henry Moray and subsequent related work by others, even if the book's structure and general style is woeful.
The main body of the book consists of about 160 pages of which, generally, is comprised of a short paragraph and corresponding images. Apparently, the author has thrown together the elements of a slide show presentation; in the section pertaining to the suppression of Moray's works he writes, "I typically show the following slides only if the audience brings up the topic of suppression."
The book progresses from an overview of Moray's work and speculation about how Moray's radiant energy device is believed to have worked. Most of the speculations and descriptions, while seemingly intended for the everyday reader without any expertise in electronics (such as myself), are in fact quite technical and beyond the electronic know-how of non-specialists.
Perhaps over half the book is devoted to inventors who came along after Moray, and whose work the author believes helps explain how the radiant energy device worked and that also may provide hints of future development. For example, diagrammatic discussions are presented on element transmutation, "electrum validum," liquid metal protuberance, explosive emission, "Helical Flow in Plasmoid Vortex Ring Filament...well, you get the picture. This is a book that could well be utilized by someone experienced in electronics AND is open to the possibility of zero point or "free energy." Having said all that, I must admit that this one sentence positively impacted my conceptualization of what Moray may have accomplished: "The fundamental operating principle arises from a surprisingly simple hypothesis: (ital.) Abrupt, synchronous, ion surges in plasma appear to coherently activate the zero-point energy."
The more valuable part of the book, in my view, is the overview of work done that seems to follow in the path forged by Moray. Many technical diagrams including those associated with actual patents that have been issued, all together, may create a coherent picture for future research and development in the area of "overunity," or "zero point" or "free energy." For more details of the inventor, T. Henry Moray, I will be ordering The Sea of Energy in Which the Earth Floats by the inventor's son, John Moray.
The issue of the suppression of inventions is as important and critical as are the merits and efficacy of particular inventions. For further discussion, I refer the reader to my review of Suppressed Inventions & Other Discoveries by Jonathan Eisen.