Posted by keelynet on November 20, 2007
“Matt Snow launched his business five years ago with $5,000 and his invention: a water-and-methanol injection system that boosts the horsepower of just about any vehicle. His Woodland Park home became the factory for Snow Performance Inc. In his spare time, Snow began playing around with an old concept that was used on fighter planes in World War II - cooling an engine to increase performance using a combination of water and methanol. By applying technology to the physics of combustion, Snow said he and a few fellow engineers were able to create the most advanced system on the market. The system injects on demand a fully atomized spray of water and methanol into the intake track. As the liquid evaporates, it absorbs heat, which allows more air into the combustion chamber and increases performance. Compact digital sensors read internal engine signals, such as revolutions per minute and air flow, and engage the system to deliver power when it’s needed. On a typical street-performance car, the Boost Cooler kit adds 50 to 100 horsepower and on race-car engines, up to 200 horsepower, Dunn said. The system also improves fuel economy by 10 to 15 percent, he said, and decreases emissions. KAZ MotorSports’ Kouba said it takes him about five hours to install a Boost Cooler kit. Snow offers about 20 kits that fit virtually every vehicle, and can be used on either gas or diesel engines. Kits cost $249 to $769, before installation. Snow plans to continue to gain more of the market and sees the business potential as limitless. He’s making a move into the commercial diesel market.” - Source
Posted in Invention | No Comments »
Posted by keelynet on November 20, 2007
“Chicago First Black Inventors Entrepreneurs now has 127 members in 21 states. The organization is black-run and based in Chicago, but Flowers said that should not deter inventors of all stripes from contacting them. “We target people with limited resources,” said Daniels, who is now secretary of the company. Inventors have been vocally responsive, often calling the organization a godsend. At any given time, they have 100 patents or patents pending that members would likely not have pursued if they had been working alone. Thomas Ross invented a bike with three sprockets, making one half-turn of the pedal sufficient to power the bike for a half a city block.” - Source
Posted in Invention | No Comments »
Posted by keelynet on November 20, 2007

“In the late 1980s, an out-of-work math instructor in Colorado built an electronic device he claimed could diagnose and destroy disease — everything from allergies to cancer — by firing radio frequencies into the body. But the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which regulates medical devices, ordered William Nelson to quit selling his machine and making false claims. Protected by barred gates, surveillance cameras and guards, he rakes in tens of millions of dollars selling a machine used to exploit the vulnerable and desperately ill. This device is called the EPFX. In the U.S. alone, Nelson has sold more than 10,000 of them. More have been sold in the Northwest than in any other region, company officials said. Nelson built his business by recruiting a sales force of physicians, chiropractors, nurses and thousands of unlicensed providers, from homemakers to retirees, drawn by the promise of easy money. From his restored, five-story building in downtown Budapest, Nelson operates the main EPFX business, Eclosion, and lives with his fifth wife and 8-year-old son. He has a personal staff of about a dozen, including a cook, hairdresser, nanny, security guards and chauffeurs. From his movie production studio, he has created films that portray him as the crusader of alternative medicine and the FDA as the corrupt villain. He said he has sold 17,000 EPFX devices worldwide. They now cost $19,900 each. Energy-device operators benefit from the placebo effect, a psychological phenomenon in which patients report improvement that cannot be linked scientifically to treatment, studies show. People feel better through the power of suggestion or because they believe they are expected to feel improvement, experts say. The EPFX is made up of circuit boards and other computer components that run software full of colorful graphics of the body. During a typical EPFX treatment, a patient may watch as a computer screen displays an animation of the interior of an artery blocked by white blobs, representing cholesterol. Then the blobs shrink and disappear. One of its strangest features is found on top of the EPFX: a 5-inch silver plate. Nelson claims the device can detect problems in the body by analyzing hair, saliva or blood placed on the plate. The device then fires healing frequencies to patients — even if they’re hundreds of miles away.” - Source
Posted in Health | No Comments »
Posted by keelynet on November 20, 2007
An assortment of alternative science videos that provide many insights and inside information from various experimenters. Also MP3s extracted from these DVDs that you can listen to while working or driving. Reference links for these lectures and workshops by Bill Beaty of Amateur Science on the Dark Side of Amateur Science, Peter Lindemann on the World of Free Energy, Norman Wootan on the History of the EV Gray motor, Dan Davidson on Shape Power and Gravity Wave Phenomena, Lee Crock on a Method for Stimulating Energy, Doug Konzen on the Konzen Pulse Motor, George Wiseman on the Water Torch and Jerry Decker on Aether, ZPE and Dielectric Nano Arrays. Your purchase of these products helps support KeelyNet, thanks! - Source to Buy
Posted in Alternative Science | No Comments »
Posted by keelynet on November 20, 2007
As I mentioned before, there are more than a few strange things in Mexico. I took a few more photos of the winged dog in the cantina in Santa Cruz de Soledad. It kind of looks like a Greyhound but no one I spoke with knew where it came from or what it represented.

Posted in Personal Anecdotes | No Comments »