Is it possible that an antigravity generator exists that can serve as clean source of energy and revolutionize transportation by creating a whole new class of vehicles: vehicles that defy gravity and travel at incredible speeds?
I find it hard to believe, but you judge for yourself whether you believe an inventor has the knowhow to make a vehicle that can hover effortlessly and travel at incredible speeds.
The story goes like this: A young British professor beset by recurring dreams builds a circular generator composed of magnets and coils. After assembling it, he invites a colleague over and sets the device in motion. Not only does it spin, but the speed of the spin increases without any energy input. Then, unexpectedly, as the two men watch, the device rises up to the ceiling of the laboratory and smashes its way through the roof. Outside it keeps on flying, causing birds that get near it to fall to the ground and tearing roof tiles off buildings. The first flight of a fantastic device.
But it wasn't fantasy to John Searl. He later goes on to develop the Searl Effect Generator and something he calls an Inverted Gravity Vehicle, or a levity disc, otherwise known as a flying saucer. There, I said it.
Wouldn't the invention of an anti-gravity transportation device that somehow generates the energy it needs revolutionize our world and end our energy dependence? Searl claims the energy used iszero point energyalthough critics point out that no device claiming to use zero point energy has been shown to work. What about the promise of faster travel with cleaner energy and a cleaner environment? Who wouldn't want it. But where is this machine? Why isn't it being built and tested? That's what other inventors and scientists have asked for years. And according to critics, the reason it hasn't been tested is simple: It's a fraud.
Searl's answer, however, is practical: Patent issues prevent him from revealing all the details and the energy generated is so powerful that it could be a security risk to expose details. Also, the device isn't ready for public release. Searl has supporters and backers who say his invention works.