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The Bedini SSG motor is just one of many magnet motor prototypes designed and built by accomplished audio electrician John Bedini. In this article I will explain what the Bedini SSG is exactly and how it can show you the way to your own simpler engine that will allow you to generate 7 kilowatts of your own power to meet all your household appliance needs.
Bedini SSG
The Bedini SSG is one of many magnetic motor generators based on zero point technology developed and demonstrated by John Bedini.
SSG stands for Simplified Schoolgirl Motor. The aim of this model was not to generate large amounts of electricity, but simply to demonstrate to those who might previously have been skeptical that this technology works.
The SSG is based on the original work of Nikola Tesla and then further developed by Bedini and several others. Like all magnet motors, it requires an initial boost – the rotor then accelerates until it reaches a new state of equilibrium at constant speed. The output of the device charges a specific battery.
While plans for this device can be found online, keep in mind that the resulting device is intended for demonstration purposes only. Don’t even try to power your house with this motor.
This is how you generate a useful amount of electricity for your own use
We have seen that this engine is limited in what it can do. That’s not Bedini’s fault, because that’s what the SSG should do and nothing more.
Fortunately, there are other types of magnetic motors that produce more useful power. Other experimenters have built motors capable of delivering 20 to 30 kilowatts, enough to power several homes. However, these are often large, bulky and spirited in the run.
Most enthusiasts looking to build their own device instead choose to build a very simple device that can provide a useful about 7 kilowatts of power. Since the average household requires around 3 kilowatts of electricity, this is more than enough for most people’s needs.
These motors are also so simple that almost anyone can build one, even if you can’t typically assemble pre-built dressers from Ikea. They consist of a rotor, some ordinary magnets, and some basic electrical wiring. Only basic tools are required.
To get an engine up and running as quickly as possible so you can stop paying the utility right away, it’s best to invest about $50 nominally in a set of solid, reliable, tried and tested plans. The other way is to do what Bedini and other experimenters have done and spend hundreds or thousands of hours tinkering, testing, and often going back to the drawing board. While you save $50 on the plans you never bought, you end up paying the utility for many more months and losing a lot more money that way – this “money saving” strategy is total false economics.
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