A day without electricity?..................

India
June 1, 2011 5:31pm CST
I live in India and like all other developing countries there is a problem of electric power shortage. So in the ongoing season because of excessive heat the demand is even more severe. Last week there was a day when the power cut was of around 26 hours. Well, I know people living in developed countries like USA will consider this as a nightmare. Is power cut a reliable solution to the insufficient amount of power..... Any options or alternatives.....
2 responses
@veganbliss (3895)
• Adelaide, Australia
24 Jun 11
The power cut system is the only real option available at the moment. It is in use occasionally here too, but for much shorter periods in peak demand times. A resourceful bloke like yourself, should be looking to build your own generator, especially in India with its current situation & for as little financial outlay as possible. We can very easily & for a very, very small cost in junk-box spare parts achieve this for ourselves today. We need to become self-sufficient again. We need to take responsibility, personally, for supplying our own energy & not exceed the extent that we can supply by the demands we make. The simplest, cheapest, best design I've seen put into practice uses the same principle Tesla discovered in his 1896 experiments in Colorado Springs, USA. Tesla's work is being carried on today in a very practical sense, particularly by John Bedini who has published a book of free energy generation circuits & schematics that people can build for themselves. It's also available from any large Library should you choose to read it. You can also read up on the principles involved at http://cheniere.org/ You may join up with a free yahoo group & there are over 3000 members there who have already built & tested the John Bedini Monopole Mechanical Oscillator Energizer with Simplified Schoolgirl Circuit. This model was so-named when an eleven year old school girl successfully built & tested a working model herself & had an article in the local paper about it. These 3000+ people from just about every country all over the world are standing by ready to help you with free 24/7 support. You can also buy a kit of parts from places like http://r-charge.com
• India
29 Jun 11
Thanks for the update... This is really inspiring but I didn't get it all right. It must be using a conventional energy source for its operation?.
• Adelaide, Australia
30 Jun 11
Sorry... here's the link to sign up & build your own. There's a huge amount of information on every aspect of it. http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/Bedini_Monopole3 It is essentially a really good & really cheap battery charger, but not in the conventional sense. It runs off the same capacity battery as that which is being charged & charges the battery on charge with radiant energy captured from the local environment. A battery charged with radiant energy is totally different from one charged conventionally. It is very fast to charge, it gets very cold & may even ice over a little, it has a slightly higher capacity after charging than manufacturers specifications, it never sulphates & lasts forever. You can build one & prove each of these for yourself.
• Philippines
2 Jun 11
you could buy a generator in any malls near you.. although i dont know how one work cuz i dont own one too. wow. living without electricity...just..plain sucks
• India
2 Jun 11
well it is not easy to own a generator for a small family as it adds the cost of fuel which is very costly to run the generator plus it increases the pollution as the energy conversion for small scale machines is not that cost effective. thanks for your opinion but there must be other way out.