
Renewable Energy With A Tesla Generator
Author: Elizabeth Hind
In order to save electricity, more number of people around the globe are opting for alternate electrical sources to save on power bills. There are various options for renewable energy which are getting easier to use. Apart from solar energy and wind energy, there is an emerging trend of an alternate electrical source called a tesla generator. Based upon attraction and repulsion of magnetic poles, a perpetual motion is attained, which is later converted into electricity. Additionally, the magnetic generator has the capability to produce more electricity then it actually consumes.
This means that the creation of electrical energy doesn't need help from other energy source for operation. An individual will be able to produce free electricity after investing costs on materials used in setting up a tesla generator. Anybody can build their own DIY tesla generator, but it is best advised to spend quality on researching about the blueprints and guides during the process. Ideally, the material cost would be around hundred dollars and building it would effectively reduce the power bill charges by about 20% to 50%.In addition, these magnetic generators are reliable and offer electricity without any need for routine checking. The magnet has the capability of generating electricity nearly for four hundred years after which they would lose their ability. These magnetic generators are eco-friendly and safe to use, as they don't produce any harmful by-products. Typically, the tesla generator would involve less cost and provide free electrical energy for a life-long period.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/diy-articles/renewable-energy-with-a-tesla-generator-1791807.html
About the Author
To build your own Tesla Generator Follow the link below -



There’s a company from New Jersey that just put in for permitting to build a 50 MW tidal flow plant off the Oregon coast. Several more are proposed from Maine to Massachusetts and and Washington and California.
Tidal flow generation is similar to wind power in terms of mechanics, just translate the birds getting thumped into fish getting thumped.
It would likely depend on which of those energy systems you were working with.
If you generalize, and work on all of them together, you may be called a ‘Jack of all trades, master of none.’
Renewable Energy?
If you wanted to start a career designing and working with renewable energy like solar, wind, hydroelectric ect., what would your job title be?
If I were to start a career studying renewable energy specifically solar and trying to improve on it in the world, what would my occupation title be?
I dont want to work as the person actually buiding it, I want to be the person that figures out how the energy works. I want to work basically with all energy types but want to work on find the best way to store and produce energy. More lik a scientist wrather than an engineer.
You can read all about renewable and non-renewable energy here:
http://www.greenstudentu.com/energy.aspx
renewable energy?
can people help me come up with one type of re-usable energy and one type that isn’t re-usable? thanx
Renewable energy?
Why isnt there a massive program to include the ocean waves as a source of renewable energy? there are trillions of gallons pushed upon american shores everyday. There is no way to deplete this because the waves are cause by the pull of the moon. If there was a way to turn those waves into energy, then why hasnt man, with all the technology done it? And P.S. i know they have done it in a small way but in talking a massive!
P.S. not all of american shores have a beach.
so you want us to predict the future for you?
Hey Samantha, your question touches on a common theme today, but to see how it will play out, take a quick look at retirement. A couple today might live comfotably on say $75,000 USD annual income, but they are concerned whether their savings will be able to replace their work income when they retire. It doesn’t matter how many calculators you visited online, the day they walk out the door from work for the last time, they simply retire on whatever they have. In short order they will get their house in order to function on the lot that is available to them. Energy is no different. Because we use 5.5 gazillion kilowatthours of electricity today does not mean we need that much tomorrow. As oil gets harder and harder to find and recover, the price goes up, which adds value to renewable sources, which makes them more commonplace, and they slowyly replace the fossil based energy anyway. This does not mean there is no advantage to preparing for the change now, but different people see the situation differently, just like retirement.
Brazil is a good case in point. Several years ago they operated the second largest offshore oil platform in the world, until it caught fire one day, fell over and sank into the ocean. That one well represented 50% of thier countries domestic oil production, nothing short of a catastrophe. Yet today, they have a growing economy and use more energy than they did back then. They run their vehicles on 90% ethanol, based on their rich sugan cane industry, and make so much fuel with it today that they have to ship their excess to the United States. In this change in energy that we are currently experiencing, there are as many opportunities as there are problems, but most people don’t see them because they don’t have to.
Here is what we have done: About 11 years ago we embarked on a project to convert our home to wind and solar power. Now our home makes 90% of its own electricity and our electric bills come in at about $5 per month. We have replaced both of our vehicles over time with more efficient ones and altered out driving habits slightly. Now we use less than 900 gallons of gas each year instead of the 1150 we used to. Our next vehicle will be a plug in hybrid of some kind, and we are already in the process of expanding the solar array to provide at least part of the additional electric power we’ll need to run that car when it arrives. Half of our hot water comes from our solar water heater, and our primary source of heat is now wood and passive solar. I talk to people all the time about energy and they ask, “What can we do about it?” The answer is, “Plenty.” But again, it comes down to perception and an individuals willingness to make changes. We can wait until retirement to see how it looks then, or get ready for it now. Collectively, we’ll probably end up someplace in the middle. As for the carrying capacity of the earth, what has probably gotten us into these situations in the first place is our population. We can always alter our lifestyle to accomodate more people, but that makes overall life here less convenient no matter how it’s done since we all end up with less in the end. As far as nuclear power being the answer, yes, Illinois does have 11 plants, and the second highest utility rates in North America. Nuclear is one of the answers, but the economics of it have never made sense historically regardless of what your postiion is on nuclear waste.
Renewable energy is up to the task, but most of us won’t be until we have to. For those of us getting ahead of the change, we would love to have you join us and help. I’ll list some websites below you might find interesting. Good luck Samantha, and take care, Rudydoo
When is the renewable energy boom going to be?
I want to know when the renewable energy boom will likely happen, in what year and when I should consider buying into their stocks with options?
Will renewable energy sources be able to catch up before we run out of fossil fuels?
Considering our main energy source is oil and estimates for the time of peak oil production vary from a few years ago to ten to twenty years in the future, the fact remains that it’s an eventuality that we will run out sooner or later. Without mechanized agriculture, the carrying capacity of the earth has been estimated to only be about 2 billion and change, so are we set up for a Malthusian catastrophe, or do you think that we will be able to compensate with emerging renewable energy?