Tim Harwood's Excess Energy CD Motor Tim Harwood M.A. © Feb 2004 v. 1.02
[email protected] The world's first excess energy experiment using household items & Radio Shack parts This experiment dates from the fall of 2001 when the Twin Towers were crumbling in New York. It concerns an attempt to replicate a rather obscure device invented in the 1960s, commonly referred to as the 'Adams motor.' The vision I had held was to produce a cheap and simple excess energy experiment, that could be replicated at home for minimal cost. Somewhat to my own surprise, but not due to lack of application or due to accident, I succeeded admirably in this goal, despite the near universal opinion such a thing was both 'impossible' and 'against all the laws of physics.' No-one can deny that despite the generosity of Nexus magazine and the articles they published on behalf of Mr Adams in the 1990s, the motor had become widely perceived as a fraud by the late 1990s. Indeed, a couple of the major 'free energy' websites actually listed the device as a known fraud, and when I began my researches, several people were kind enough to email me about these 'proved facts.' It is therefore due in very large part to my personal efforts and the 'CD motor' project, that the Adams motor has been successfully retrieved from historical obscurity. This file is presented as a practical guide to construction and replication, and will not address advanced optimization strategies or detailed theories of operation. Suffice to say significant performance gains above what can be obtained by following these instructions are possible. Besides saving a considerable amount of space, the physics involved is simply far too complex to explain without a common 'hands on' based grasp of the technology. There is no substitute for lab be