Nexus - 0217 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 45 of 77

Page 45 of 77
Nexus - 0217 - New Times Magazine-pages

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INTRODUCTION In 1946 John Searl built the first modd of the SEG (Searl Effect Generator). He"'built this based on a series of dreams he had as a young boy. He was living with an old gentleman who financed his work and supplied him with everything he needed to com­ plete the first SEG at the age of 14. John later went to work for the Midland Power Board and convinced the owners to supply him with the machinery necessary to build a genera­ tor based on his previous experiments. All he would have.to do is buy the raw materials himself; ~ey would supply the rest. He then had a complete generator made. Some of the work was dOj1e thr.ough instruction by others, but most of the work was done by John himself. The SEG consists of a series of three rings with rollers travelling around these rings. Because of the speed at which they travel, an observer might think thal he was looking at spinning discs but there are no discs involved. There never were. The rings and roil~rs are a magnetic device that is its own prime mover and producer of great amounts of elec­ tricity. Although the design looks simple, it is a complex solid-state magnetic device. John built this devi.ce and placed coils around it so as to produce electricity and he suc­ ceeded, but he was not prepared for what followed when he ,increased the load on the gen­ erator. When the generator was started, a small diesel generator was used to get the rollers started by using the coils as a motor. This was necessary as the rollers were not made exactly to John's specifications. If they were, they would start to rotate around the ring on their own. There was no external motor involved as stated in the article [NEXUS vol. 2 no. ~2, p. 50]; only the small generator to get it started. Once the SEG was set in motion, the generator was no longer needed and was disconnected. The generator did exactly what John Searl said it would. It generated usable electricity. But when he started to increase the load to see how much he could'draw from the genera­ tor, it did just the opposite of any known generator. Instead of heating up and loading down with the increased load, it got colder and sped up to meet the load. As the load increased, the temperature decreased until it reached a superconductive state at approxi­ mately 4 degrees Kelvin. When this happened, the generator produced a gravity field around itself and rep.elled the Earth. ,It rose to about 50 feet above the ground, hovered for a few minutes still gaining in speed'. There was a pink glow surrounding the unit. At this point the unit had! produced a vacuum around itself and was putting, out tremendous volt­ age, about 10 to the 7th power and rising. This accounted for the radio receivers turning on by themselves as there was tremendous voltage produced which could induce a voltage into wiring feeding the radio circuits. After a few minutes of hovering, the voltage output increased and the gravitational 'field increased. The unit then shot off into space and was never seen again. Since that time, Professor Searlhas developed' ways of controlling the output and speed of his generator. He had used one to power his home. He has also pursued the flight potential of the SEG power supply and has perfected a flying craft that is capable of out­ performing ANY conventional aircraft or spac.ecraft of today. The models that he built and flew for aU to see were well-documented in the newspape{s and ma-galines at the time, around 1971. He was 3 months away from building a manned craft when he was wrongfully imprisoned on a trumped-up charge 'by the power company because he was using an SEG to power his home instead of using the conventional power that he would have to buy from them. John Sead hal! suffered many hardships, both physical and mental, in his quest to give this technology to mankind. As] look at his life, it amazes me that he has had the courage and fortitude to go on with this quest. DECEMBER 1993 -JANUARY 1994 NEXUS • 45 )