Home Electricity Generators

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Magnetic Generator - Viable Home Electricity Generators Or Not?

Author: Creztor Tessel

When it comes to the subject of creating your own home electricity, there are several ways you can do it but none can compare to a magnetic generator. Magnetic power generators aren't the only way home owners can create home electricity, but it is one of the newer methods available and very few people have even heard of them. Instead, more common alternative solutions have been solar power and wind power which have been around for some time. These two are extremely well known, but they have failed to promise the kind of energy savings that home owners had originally wished for. There are many factors about solar power and wind power that are the key to why the majority of houses around the world have not adopted them and will not adopt them anywhere in the near future.

The concept of using the sun to create electricity has been with us for around 30 years. However, to this day most houses don't use solar power to create home electricity. In fact, the most popular use of the sun has been in solar water heaters and not for actual home energy creation. Just why has solar power failed to deliver on the promises people had hoped for? The two main reasons why solar power is not a viable home electricity solution are the setup costs and the savings a home owner stands to gain. The biggest deterrent solar power has for most people is the setup cost. Unlike magnetic generators which are cheap to setup and get going, solar power can set back a home possibly several thousands of dollars. The reason for this is that solar technology is expensive. It is true that costs of solar panels have come down over the years, but they are still beyond what most people would call affordable. The second problem with solar power is that the low energy savings mean a house may possibly have to use solar power for twenty to thirty years before they saw any reasonable return and broke even on the installation costs. This means you may have to wait more than twenty years before you start to actually save money. These are two of the main reasons solar power has failed and where magnetic generators shine.

Magnetic generators, unlike solar power, don't cost the earth to install. The setup costs of a magnetic generator are extremely low and this is one of the many reasons it is extremely efficient at creating home electricity. The parts that are required to make a magnetic power generator are so cheap that you can have your own one up and running for around 0 USD. This price tag is more than enough to make many people seriously consider using these generators to make their own home electricity, especially when compared to the cost of solar power. Another benefit of having low cost parts is that repairing and keeping your generator in optimal condition is very inexpensive. Replacing parts is easy and very cheap to do, meaning ongoing costs are low and you won't be hit with any unexpected large expenses. These two reasons make a powerful combination and allow home owners to see real savings for a very low price on their home power bill.

Solar and wind power seem like good ideas at making home electricity, but the truth is they won't deliver on their so called promised savings. Magnetic generators, however, allow anyone to start making home electricity for a fraction of the cost and do deliver real savings on your home power bill. They are easy to setup and install and extremely cheap to keep running. This makes magnetic power generators an excellent home energy solution for anyone.

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/home-improvement-articles/magnetic-generator-viable-home-electricity-generators-or-not-1629585.html

About the Author
Are you looking for a way to slash your power bill and how to build your own magnetic generator? Powering your own home with a magnetic power generator is easy. An electromagnetic generator is the only viable answer to creating your own clean electricity at home.

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10 Responses to Home Electricity Generators

  1. a h says:

    How do you make a home nuclear generator to power electricity?
    Hey. I am tired of paying the electricity bill and got fined for taking my neighbours from his pond. Turned out he never watched tv or had a computer. When his bill went from £10 a month to £150 he got suspicious and found the cable and adaptor that I had connected to his fish pond in the back garden. Anyway thats another story. I did bury the cable but obviously he unearthed it.

    I know some people use solar plates to provide electricity for their home, but this costs too much. I don’t have £25.000 to spare for this stuff. Also it is a rented place so I don’t even own the roof.

    I was thinking of a nuclear generator that I can build at home and use to power my electricity usage off uranium or something. I am really good with building gadgets, and know where I can get weapons grade uranium from cheap. I just need advice or a walkthrough on how to build a mini nuclear power plant in my own kitchen.

  2. Bman says:

    Could a natural gas powered electric generator be used to generate electricity for the home cheaper?
    If natural gas is cheap enough compared to the cost of electricity, it might be much cheaper to generate your home electricity requirements with a natural gas motor/electric generator. I’m sure the gas companies would LOVE it if everyone did this! And, if everyone stopped buying electricity because this worked, the electric companies would have to lower their prices to compete!

  3. b4f2f says:

    If an upper class home in Haiti has one or more generators for electricity, what about a small retail store?
    Would such a small retail store, or corner market, consider using a small wind turbine and/or solar panel if it is in a safe area of the main city? How would the UN or the World Food Program help with this research?
    Can just one small corner store owner in the entire country get any protection from the UN or the World Food Program to at least run their store and try some alternative energy sources free of violence?

  4. Bill Wants to Know says:

    Are home auxliary electric generators dangerous?
    When a storm takes down the electric lines a lot of home generators kick in. Since electricity flows both ways on a wire, the wire past the break is now carrying energy. But the repair crew doesn’t know this. Has this killed some repairmen?

  5. Maybe I know, maybe not says:

    Who makes the parts for a wood fired steam powered electricity generator that can also heat a home?
    Outdoor wood and coal furnaces as add on units to heat pumps are becoming popular now. I’m trying to find a vendor who makes a stand alone unit for powering a riverside cabin home. A 200 amp 240 VAC unit would be perfect, but a 100-150 amp unit would power everything.

  6. Anonymous says:

    My next door neighbors are from there and recently returned.

    There is no where safe in Haiti.

    That is the UN at work.

    ***********

    My friend. The UN does nothing. My neighbors went back for her moms funeral. They had to wait until the day of the funeral to tell friends and then the did it at night because otherwise they would have been robbed.

    Your generator wouldn’t be there a day before it was stolen and sold.

    The UN is there as a token to say they do something. The armed drug lords are better armed then they are. Children have been raped in front of the soldiers and they do nothing because that is not part of their mandate.

    This is the UN that never is talked about. It’s a joke and a farce.

  7. Anonymous says:

    You likely don’t have the space to build a nuclear generator and provide adequate shielding. The uranium in a nuclear plant is basically a heat source, used to heat either water or liquid sodium which then drives an electromagnetic turbine. So you need room to put the turbine. Liquid sodium is tricky to handle — it tends to catch fire when exposed to water — and water used in a nuclear plant turns to steam, and requires some containment vessels.

    You also need a place for the water or sodium to cool off after it drives the turbine. A commercial water-cooled nuclear plant uses a cooling tower on the order of 100m high (about like a 30-floor building). For residential use you don’t need a 100m tower (nor would the landlord let you install it through your roof) but you will still need some place to let the water or sodium cool.

    In 1994 a boy scout who lived near Detroit, Michigan collected americium from smoke detectors and thorium from lantern mantles and built a sort of working nuclear reactor, but the radioactivity spread across his neighborhood and he never got working power out of it. He did, however, attract the attention of the federal government, which took away the radioactive materials and his mother’s tool shed (which had become radioactive) and some other things that had become radioactive.

    If you don’t in fact have weapons grade uranium, but only commercial uranium, then you may need to enrich the stuff (meaning to sort out the U-235 from the U-238), because the U-235 is fissionable and the U-238 is not. To do this properly you need the facility to work with uranium hexafluoride (a gas) and in particular to run it through a centrifuge, then to remove the fluorine from the uranium. Fluorine is toxic and corrosive and eats just about everything except fluorspar. It’s difficult to handle and store, and you’ll run into major problems trying to combine it with the uranium and then to dissociate it from the uranium.

    Overall you’re going to be much happier spending your money on solar plates. Sorry!

  8. Anonymous says:

    anybody with any smarts will not connect the generator power in parallel with the power company input. You have to disconnect or turn off the latter before connecting your local power. Or. use separate plugs for the generator power, or a relay or switch to switch between the two.

    .

  9. Anonymous says:

    I recently made a few rough calculations and figured it would be cheaper but the payback would be lengthy due to the investment.

    Natural gas generators are readily available but are going to cost $4-5k to be big enough for the whole house, even then you have to consider where you live and ac demand since this uses alot of power, although natural gas powered ac is available.

    Even at my local rates of 4:1 gas versus electric, it was going to be a long payback.

    Gas prices have risen since the “dash for gas” by generation companies eager for a quick buck on de-nationalization.

  10. Anonymous says:

    wood and coal good for heating and cooling but using them to produce steam to power a small generator would be too costly. Hippies run 200 amp services using solar panel arrays for lights and fans to move the hot and cold air.

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