Meyer solar patents

Blazer

Meyer solar patents
« on October 30th, 2013, 07:20 PM »Last edited on October 31st, 2013, 04:50 AM by Blazer
Watching the news the other day and heard a large pumpkin looses 7 lbs a week after its cut.  (water weight thru the stem?)  But got me looking at Stans solar patent and his patent for multistage solar looks to be a green house and I am not saying pumpkins but he was injecting heat into it if needed to regulate the temp.  Many use a distilled water but are all distilled waters the same?  Water has memory?  Maybe he was compositing or growing something else?  Maybe he used electrollisis just to start an engine the get it up to temp then he subjected the water to a heat or light of a specific freq.?  Was Stans multistage storage in the water itself?  Did Stan collect the condensation from the unit?  Was Stan teaching water to evaporate at a specific temp? Just some thoughts.  He said to keep it simple!!

Blazer

RE: Meyer solar patents
« Reply #1, on November 6th, 2013, 10:06 PM »
Stans news letter 3 says he worked on the technology since 1975 and his fist solar patent came about in 76.  To me Stan is showing a simple solar still to collect water.  Possibly as simple as a hole in the ground with a plastic sheet and a collector vessel to catch the condensation. The purchased distilled water from the stores is probably a boiled distallation process.  Is that Natural?  These solar patents are a part of the overall system.  Can solar energy be stored in water?  The heating patent may also have a methane and compost heating along with the solar radiant energy aspect.

Jeff Nading

RE: Meyer solar patents
« Reply #2, on November 7th, 2013, 08:04 PM »
Hello Blazer, all good thoughts. I guess now someone is needed/willing to test out these ideas.:cool::D:P:P:P:P

Blazer

RE: Meyer solar patents
« Reply #3, on November 11th, 2013, 10:46 AM »
I had done some crude testing with regaurds to the evaporation rates and discovered melted snow did evaporate faster than well water.  Also the well water seems to have a higher surface tension that the snow.  I think Stan shows how nature creates the gas for his buggy in his first few patents or possibly the methods for getting the natural water.


cecil

RE: Meyer solar patents
« Reply #5, on January 12th, 2014, 06:00 PM »
Yes solar energy can be stored in other forms! the most common for solar thermal is in storage tanks or mass storage beds.