KingTylerVVS



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Full MemberActivity: 178Merit: 100 Tesla's invention to mine for nearly free electricity July 06, 2016, 10:52:30 PM

Last edit: July 10, 2016, 07:01:24 AM by KingTylerVVS #1 * EDIT *How dare the below trolls call me a what they did??? They did not even do their due diligence! *



https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=nikola%20tesla%20free%20energy



*EDIT* I honestly believe in Tesla and was not even aiming at investments... someone contacted me saying they too believe in tesla and wanted to invest in me. I told the person if he did really want to invest in me, I would repay through my website which has legitimate bitcoin ad revenue being generated if we somehow fail. My original intention however was not even to secure investments, but to get a conversation about tesla and the idea of magnetic energy devices mining for super cheap electricity as a POSSIBLITY. A lot of people believe in tesla these days. I do not deserve to be called such preposterous names when I have done my due diligence in research and they have not. I can link many testimonials of real people both video and facebook comments to my honesty as a person. PLEASE REMOVE THE MEAN COMMENT. or REMOVE THIS POST MODERATORS as I will not be associated with that word. It is wrong and I have too much heart in what I do to be labeled as such.*



Everyone believes in windmills, which are almost always moving from wind, and dams from water...



Now hear me out - GRAVITY is ALWAYS flowing. You are always being pulled down to the earth. You cannot deny that.



And a long time ago, Nikola Tesla invented a magnetic resonator that can tap into the gravity flow and produce nearly 99.9999% free electricity - limitlessly. However, Thomas edison (who had more money) buried tesla's research in lieu of the more "profitable" alternating current. This is a widely accepted historical fact now and has been discussed more and more by historians, electricians and mechanics lately.



I have blueprints and tons of articles with evidence supporting my claim. The initial setup of such a device could cost more than I can imagine considering my inexperience as a mechanic. It could also be cheaper than I realize - I'm a gamer geek, not a mechanic.

But deep down I KNOW it will work. Who knows, maybe I can attract a team to work with.



The designs I have were sent to me from a friend in the UK.



I have faith, and based on another topic on these forums,

I will say that EVENTUALLY I might have less than 1¢ per kw/h mining!

Could be in 5 years, or longer... but I believe and I know I will never give up.



If anyone wants to debate this, bring it on!

I can answer most questions with links to articles as well as videos from my own personal library.

But I will spare you a super long post for now and see where the conversation goes. Cheers!



Quote from: ripple on November 14, 2013, 01:37:46 PM What Are Your Electricity Cost for Mining Bitcoins?



Please vote in the POLL.



I was keen to know what type of electricity costs people take into consideration when they mine.



If you are a homeowner you usually will find the cost per kW hour on your utility bill, and will need to add any Sales Tax if not included. The average US rate and which is used by most mining calculators is around 15c per kWh, and in the UK a bit more at 15p (24c).



There is a table showing a global electricity price comparison breakdown by country on Wikipedia:



Anyone who thinks they are paying much less than their country's average and is unsure the reason why, should check their utility bill just in case they made a mistake with the decimal point, or other calculation error, and maybe they are not mining as economically as they thought.



Would be interesting to find if many people don't know their cost of electricity when mining, or the percentage of those mining for free.



It may help people when they plan future purchases of mining equipment to know what other people think they are paying.



As an example of how to calculate cost of mining you would start with the kWh (a kiloWatt hour) price from your utility bill. A kW is a thousand Watts, so if you had a Jalapeno running at 40W, this would equate to 40/1,000 = 0.04 kWh. If you were paying 15c per kWh your cost to run the Jalapeno would be 0.04 x 15 = 0.6c per hour or 0.6 x 24 hours = 14.4 cents per day. If the Jalapeno was putting out 7GH/s then it would pay you to run it as long as you could earn more than 14.4 cents per day i.e. as long as you are covering variable costs. This would be around mid-Feb 2014 assuming a $440 Bitcoin price, and difficulty levels appreciating at 32.4% (average of last 10 changes) per difficulty change. After that date you would lose money simply switching it on. This calculation does not take into account covering fixed costs or obtaining a Return on Investment (ROI) as this is another question entirely, and given that difficulty levels are presently appreciating faster than the Bitcoin price, a better result may be had by selling the equipment to someone with a lower or zero electricity cost.



Obviously the results are less meaningful than if they were part of a full questionnaire, but still may be useful for an understanding the world of mining.



I was keen to know what type of electricity costs people take into consideration when they mine.If you are a homeowner you usually will find the cost per kW hour on your utility bill, and will need to add any Sales Tax if not included. The average US rate and which is used by most mining calculators is around 15c per kWh, and in the UK a bit more at 15p (24c).There is a table showing a global electricity price comparison breakdown by country on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electricity_pricing Lucky people in Kuwait only pay 1c per kWh, while people in Solomon Islands paying up to 64 cents per kWh.Anyone who thinks they are paying much less than their country's average and is unsure the reason why, should check their utility bill just in case they made a mistake with the decimal point, or other calculation error, and maybe they are not mining as economically as they thought.Would be interesting to find if many people don't know their cost of electricity when mining, or the percentage of those mining for free.It may help people when they plan future purchases of mining equipment to know what other people think they are paying.As an example of how to calculate cost of mining you would start with the kWh (a kiloWatt hour) price from your utility bill. A kW is a thousand Watts, so if you had a Jalapeno running at 40W, this would equate to 40/1,000 = 0.04 kWh. If you were paying 15c per kWh your cost to run the Jalapeno would be 0.04 x 15 = 0.6c per hour or 0.6 x 24 hours = 14.4 cents per day. If the Jalapeno was putting out 7GH/s then it would pay you to run it as long as you could earn more than 14.4 cents per day i.e. as long as you are covering variable costs. This would be around mid-Feb 2014 assuming a $440 Bitcoin price, and difficulty levels appreciating at 32.4% (average of last 10 changes) per difficulty change. After that date you would lose money simply switching it on. This calculation does not take into account covering fixed costs or obtaining a Return on Investment (ROI) as this is another question entirely, and given that difficulty levels are presently appreciating faster than the Bitcoin price, a better result may be had by selling the equipment to someone with a lower or zero electricity cost.Obviously the results are less meaningful than if they were part of a full questionnaire, but still may be useful for an understanding the world of mining. Everyone believes in windmills, which are almost always moving from wind, and dams from water...Now hear me out - GRAVITY is ALWAYS flowing. You are always being pulled down to the earth. You cannot deny that.And a long time ago, Nikola Tesla invented a magnetic resonator that can tap into the gravity flow and produce nearly 99.9999% free electricity - limitlessly. However, Thomas edison (who had more money) buried tesla's research in lieu of the more "profitable" alternating current. This is a widely accepted historical fact now and has been discussed more and more by historians, electricians and mechanics lately.I have blueprints and tons of articles with evidence supporting my claim. The initial setup of such a device could cost more than I can imagine considering my inexperience as a mechanic. It could also be cheaper than I realize - I'm a gamer geek, not a mechanic.But deep down I KNOW it will work. Who knows, maybe I can attract a team to work with.The designs I have were sent to me from a friend in the UK.I have faith, and based on another topic on these forums,I will say that EVENTUALLY I might have less than 1¢ per kw/h mining!Could be in 5 years, or longer... but I believe and I know I will never give up.If anyone wants to debate this, bring it on!I can answer most questions with links to articles as well as videos from my own personal library.But I will spare you a super long post for now and see where the conversation goes. Cheers!

KingTylerVVS



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Full MemberActivity: 178Merit: 100 Re: Tesla's invention to mine for nearly free electricity July 10, 2016, 02:16:38 AM

Last edit: July 10, 2016, 07:08:06 AM by KingTylerVVS #2

Looks like we might be able to actually attract investors in to this.



*EDIT* IS THIS A SCAM TOO? : http://www.keshefoundation.org/new-horizons/dynamic-reactors



EDIT - person approached ME, not the other way around!*** EDIT - person approached ME, not the other way around!***



Quote from: AceOfPentacles on July 10, 2016, 01:19:13 AM How much would that Tesla set up cost? I am an investor



I have a website that will generate revenue and returns no matter what, so investing is safe with me.



Even if the tesla project fails,



How do I know this?



Simple: Bitcoin ads allow me to get 10 visitors for 7¢ worth of bitcoin.



Facebook would charge $10 for 10 visitors. And they wouldn't even know anything about bitcoin. Simple math really To those who messaged me about this, Thank you for contacting me!Looks like we might be able to actually attract investors in to this.I have a website that will generate revenue and returns no matter what, so investing is safe with me.Even if the tesla project fails, www.d3fc.me will be a money making machine that pays everyone no matter what.How do I know this?Simple: Bitcoin ads allow me to get 10 visitors for 7¢ worth of bitcoin.Facebook would charge $10 for 10 visitors. And they wouldn't even know anything about bitcoin. Simple math really

KingTylerVVS



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Full MemberActivity: 178Merit: 100 Re: Tesla's invention to mine for nearly free electricity July 10, 2016, 07:03:52 AM #5 based on your views of thermodynamics, earth should lose all heat, the winds stop, and the waters freeze and everything STOP moving alltogether.



But the universe is a living thing, water and air will flow as long as the sun exists, and so too will GRAVITY which comes from ALL ATOMS which perpetually ROTATE, *DEFYING* the laws of thermodynamics!!! (and NOT thermodinamics which isn't even a real word)

KingTylerVVS



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Full MemberActivity: 178Merit: 100 Re: Tesla's invention to mine for nearly free electricity July 10, 2016, 08:30:38 PM

Last edit: July 10, 2016, 08:46:10 PM by KingTylerVVS #7 Quote from: Slow death on July 10, 2016, 05:43:25 PM Quote from: KingTylerVVS on July 10, 2016, 02:16:38 AM

Looks like we might be able to actually attract investors in to this.



*EDIT* IS THIS A SCAM TOO? : http://www.keshefoundation.org/new-horizons/dynamic-reactors



EDIT - person approached ME, not the other way around!*** EDIT - person approached ME, not the other way around!***



Quote from: AceOfPentacles on July 10, 2016, 01:19:13 AM How much would that Tesla set up cost? I am an investor



I have a website that will generate revenue and returns no matter what, so investing is safe with me.



Even if the tesla project fails,



How do I know this?



Simple: Bitcoin ads allow me to get 10 visitors for 7¢ worth of bitcoin.



Facebook would charge $10 for 10 visitors. And they wouldn't even know anything about bitcoin. Simple math really

To those who messaged me about this, Thank you for contacting me!Looks like we might be able to actually attract investors in to this.I have a website that will generate revenue and returns no matter what, so investing is safe with me.Even if the tesla project fails, www.d3fc.me will be a money making machine that pays everyone no matter what.How do I know this?Simple: Bitcoin ads allow me to get 10 visitors for 7¢ worth of bitcoin.Facebook would charge $10 for 10 visitors. And they wouldn't even know anything about bitcoin. Simple math really

I tried to understand, but do not understand anything, you want people to invest in their "project tesla"?



Or do you want people to invest in their websites that promises 1900% returns?



Both cases are extremely risky, and in the second case I doubt not to collapse.

I tried to understand, but do not understand anything, you want people to invest in their "project tesla"?Or do you want people to invest in their websites that promises 1900% returns?Both cases are extremely risky, and in the second case I doubt not to collapse.

I originally was not asking for investments in this thread, it is not the appropriate thread for that anyways,

I was only wanting to get other people's thoughts - do you believe the tesla free energy machine hooked up to bitcoin miners would be a good idea? Of course, if it works, i think it would be brilliant. Free bitcoin mining minus the miner cost.



Someone on another thread made a good point though - china or whoever manufactures the miner unit itself ultimately profits the most. Atleast in the short term... Even if electricity were not a factor at all.



I was not expecting someone to come to me saying "I am an investor, how much do you think it would cost to build a tesla unit?" At which I replied that it could cost anywhere from $10,000 to $100,000 but I don't honestly know. (Can screen shot or even screen share video of my laptop and the entire conversation to prove my integrity.)



That was at which point I mentioned it here and said thanks for the messages as a reply to this post - and I guess that is where my mistake was:

Quote from: KingTylerVVS on July 10, 2016, 02:16:38 AM

Looks like we might be able to actually attract investors in to this.



I have a website that will generate revenue and returns no matter what, so investing is safe with me.



Even if the tesla project fails,



How do I know this?



Simple: Bitcoin ads allow me to get 10 visitors for 7¢ worth of bitcoin.



Facebook would charge $10 for 10 visitors. And they wouldn't even know anything about bitcoin. Simple math really

To those who messaged me about this, Thank you for contacting me!Looks like we might be able to actually attract investors in to this.I have a website that will generate revenue and returns no matter what, so investing is safe with me.Even if the tesla project fails, www.d3fc.me will be a money making machine that pays everyone no matter what.How do I know this?Simple: Bitcoin ads allow me to get 10 visitors for 7¢ worth of bitcoin.Facebook would charge $10 for 10 visitors. And they wouldn't even know anything about bitcoin. Simple math really

My personal plan is not to build a tesla machine yet - in fact, it is to finish my website,



I ultimately have confidence that my site will generate a couple million in revenue in the future - even if it could be a decade - I have been working on it for a while now and I don't plan on giving up EVER, or shutting it down like the cloud mining sites that always go POOF!



Anyways, cheers! Thanks for hearing me out! I originally was not asking for investments in this thread, it is not the appropriate thread for that anyways,I was only wanting to get other people's thoughts - do you believe the tesla free energy machine hooked up to bitcoin miners would be a good idea? Of course, if it works, i think it would be brilliant. Free bitcoin mining minus the miner cost.Someone on another thread made a good point though - china or whoever manufactures the miner unit itself ultimately profits the most. Atleast in the short term... Even if electricity were not a factor at all.I was not expecting someone to come to me saying "I am an investor, how much do you think it would cost to build a tesla unit?" At which I replied that it could cost anywhere from $10,000 to $100,000 but I don't honestly know. (Can screen shot or even screen share video of my laptop and the entire conversation to prove my integrity.)That was at which point I mentioned it here and said thanks for the messages as a reply to this post - and I guess that is where my mistake was:My personal plan is not to build a tesla machine yet - in fact, it is to finish my website, www.d3fc.me - which is much more than a faucet site but it has games, soon to be tons of bitcoin and technology articles I write, and lots of other unique content... after which I will drive cheap bitcoin traffic (10 visitors for about 7¢ which would cost $10 for the same 10 visitors if using facebook's price gouging...)I ultimately have confidence that my site will generate a couple million in revenue in the future - even if it could be a decade - I have been working on it for a while now and I don't plan on giving up EVER, or shutting it down like the cloud mining sites that always go POOF!Anyways, cheers! Thanks for hearing me out!