Electric OU: The Truth About QEG Pennsylvania Prototype

This is a FAIR USE excerpt from the PESN interview where Sterling Allan interviewed James Robitaille about the QEG project.

This excerpt and the images accompanying it are FAIR USE for critical, educational and forensic purposes. The QEG project is OPEN SOURCE and information released by them, including audio, video, still images, plans, documents and data, under the OPEN SOURCE philosophy is in the Public Domain.

The original full interview is here:

I have not altered the audio in any way. The stress in JR’s voice is plain to hear, as he hems and haws and tries really hard to avoid confronting the FACT that the unit never ran itself and doesn’t actually produce any excess power.

This excerpt begins at about 20 minutes into the PESN interview, after Sterling has asked James Robitaille the same questions three times already. Robitaille can no longer avoid answering the questions about how long the Pennsylvania Prototype ran, what was its power output, how was it tested, and most importantly: was it ever self-looped to run itself.

The experienced electrical engineer or electrician will recognize that transformers designed to work at 50-60 Hz also work just fine at 400 Hz with only a small increase in core loss and efficiency.

The oft-repeated “inverter” that Robitaille doesn’t have, can’t get, and won’t work anyway, is not the real reason for why the Penn Proto never self-ran and never will.

“and my electronics background, I could see that the rest of it was pretty simple…”

Not simple enough, eh James? You saw the “rest of it was pretty simple”…. back in February or March, and you told Sterling it was pretty simple in early April. Here it is the middle of July, you have scattered non-working QEGs in workshops around the globe, you’ve altered the original plans, you’ve potted the UK’s core, more coils appear, and now you are back in Pennsylvania with the original “Eureka” Pennsylvania Prototype …. but you still haven’t gotten the right inverter to make it run itself.

Let me ask you this, Mr. James Robitaille, Engineering Artist: Do you still think “the rest of it was pretty simple”? I’ll also ask you to go out on a limb and tell me if you will be able to meet HopeGirl’s promised “in a few weeks” deadline, by having a self-running QEG by the end of July. After all, for the IndieGoGo campaign that gave you nearly twenty thousand dollars back in September of 2013…. nearly TEN MONTHS AGO…. HopeGirl implied it was a done deal, the plans worked as published and she promised a self-running prototype in five weeks after getting the money. And in May, asking for more donations, she said you’d have a self-runner “in one month” which would be, charitably, the end of June. So what happened? Wasn’t “the rest of it pretty simple?”

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