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David Bowling's Continuous Charging Device
Sterling D. Allan

David Bowling says he has developed a device that will put out a continuous 12 volt electrical current which he has then been using to run motors, small appliances, and charge batteries. "The more you load it, the more it puts out," he said.

"It is my belief that it taps into the zero point energy or the vacuum much the way Tesla was supposed to have done."

The device, which is presently proprietary, requires a battery on the input side, and involves a motor; but he says the amount of power on the output side is far more than what is going in. In one set-up, he had one battery charging six, which were then being used to run various motors; and he was then rotating one of the output batteries into the input side, to keep the system running.

"I have used it to charge a battery, drain the battery under a load, and recharge the battery. I have charged that same battery 30 times using the device. It will charge the battery in about half an hour or so, and as many batteries wired to it in parallel as I care to connect up (so far)."

He recharged his Dad's solar battery array (24 6-volt batteries) using his system in just over an hour. His dad said that it would have taken around five hours for the solar panels to charge it to that same point. Other things he has powered in the past two weeks since first making this discovery include a shop vac, a reciprocal saw, and light bulbs.

He says it is easy to build. "Anyone could build it." And it is cheap. "For less than ten dollars you can have a working model." That scaled-down model wouldn't put out 12 volts, but it would prove the principle, he said. The 12-volt model could be replicated for less than $200.00.

He said he has replicated the design three times on the 12-volt battery scale, using two different types of motors. His friend who has been helping him has replicated the design using AA batteries and a small motor from Radio Shack.

Among the myriad of applications for this technology would be keeping electric vehicle batteries charged.

Bowling is presently in process of filing a provisional patent on the technology.

Once the provisional patent has been filed, he plans to share this device with a few people under NDA to have them verify his results, both by replicating the effect as well as by inspecting and testing his prototypes. He is also strongly inclined to share the design in a quasi open source manner to allow the world community to help characterize, optimize, and develop functional applications of the technology, thereby speeding its dissemination and implementation.

He has already dispersed the design to a number of people who are instructed to spread it widely via the Internet if something should happen to him. He doesn't want this technology suppressed.

Pure Energy Systems News


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