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Author Topic: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?  (Read 67308 times)

SaneOne

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #15 on: May 01, 2014, 02:58:31 AM »
I know the address and it is an office building, not manufacturing.
The day I spend money on the likes of Magnacoaster is in the very distant future...

I was with Wllis when he first rented the mail box still listed as his mailing address on his web site: 500-23-333 Fairway Rd S Kitchener Ontario, n2c 1x3

At that time, he moved his "lab" out of his apartment and into a  small unit in a converted cold storage building.

Now that he has downsized because of paying "to much" rent, who knows where his "factory" is.

As the deal with Brett Wilson "was never finalized and discussions are still ongoing" he may get into the Guinness Book of World Records for the longest negotiations in the world.

Mr. Wilson said IF Willis could prove his claims, he would invest. Mr. Wilson has never endorsed the technology.

Brett Wilson is a serious businessman, a venture capitalist capable of making decisions in 10 seconds for any deal he likes.

The fact Willis has not closed the deal with Mr. Wilson says everything anyone needs to know about "Little Dicky" and his magic box.

TinselKoala

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #16 on: May 01, 2014, 06:03:55 AM »
One thing about Willis is known for certain:

Fat people definitely _are_ harder to kidnap.

Paul-R

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #17 on: May 01, 2014, 03:57:41 PM »
The sad thing is that, if we look at the patent, and Patrick's write-up, there is a possibility that one or both of his two concepts could be made to work. What then? Will such a person be liable to unlimited charges from the patent holder?

MarkE

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #18 on: May 01, 2014, 04:50:49 PM »
The sad thing is that, if we look at the patent, and Patrick's write-up, there is a possibility that one or both of his two concepts could be made to work. What then? Will such a person be liable to unlimited charges from the patent holder?
Don't worry.  The Magnacoaster has no possibility of working as a free energy device.

SaneOne

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #19 on: May 01, 2014, 05:18:01 PM »
The sad thing is that, if we look at the patent, and Patrick's write-up, there is a possibility that one or both of his two concepts could be made to work. What then? Will such a person be liable to unlimited charges from the patent holder?

There is no magic in having a patent.

A patent that does not do what is claimed can not be enforced.

There appears to be no working Magnacoaster unit anywhere that has ever been independently tested that backs up Willis' claims.

In the past, a working model of your patent was part of your application. Luckily for Willis, that requirement was dropped.

If that ever does change, and after so many years of failure that is a huge if, ask yourself, will anyone put millions at risk in a deal with an "inventor" who can not make his own technology work and who does not live up to his agreements?

Did I mention that his "breakthrough" was actually his ex-girlfriend's idea? I note that he left her name off the patent.

As for Patrick's comments (which I have not read), while we all want to believe in a "possibility" when we buy a lottery ticket, speculation is not science.

Paul-R

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #20 on: May 02, 2014, 01:45:59 PM »
 
Patrick's write up is here, from page 62 (NB: page numbers change as material is added)
 
http://www.free-energy-info.com/Chapter3.pdf
 
I still wonder if some of the concepts could be adapted and made to work. If any such variations were not patented, then there might ber a patenting nighmare. Unless, of course, his patent infringes another one.
 

ramset

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #21 on: May 02, 2014, 02:19:45 PM »
Tinsel
quote
One thing about Willis is known for certain:Fat people definitely _are_ harder to kidnap.
end quote


Nahhh    he got that wrong too
much easier to do...
all you need is a ham sandwich and a big enuff box/trapp !




SaneOne

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #22 on: May 02, 2014, 04:49:31 PM »

Patrick's write up is here, from page 62 (NB: page numbers change as material is added)
 
http://www.free-energy-info.com/Chapter3.pdf
 
I still wonder if some of the concepts could be adapted and made to work. If any such variations were not patented, then there might ber a patenting nighmare. Unless, of course, his patent infringes another one.

Thanks for the link.

Patrick starts by assuming the fact that the system works. His "proof" is Willis' statements. It seems Dickie Willis now says his design has a COP of "3600".

Sorry, Patrick. I was personally there for the test where that 2600 COP "measurement" was made. I have since gained an understanding of the science involved and can assure you that was NOT what was actually measured.

To explain anything more in an open forum might help Little Dickie. While he obviously needs help, it will not come from me.

Remember that Little Dickie was asked to prove his system to Brett Wilson?

Imagine if Mr. Wilson's scientists actually found an increase in POWER. Not an increase in frequency. Not an increase in Voltage. POWER.

If there was ANYTHING there, Mr. Wilson would have made this project happen.

If there was nothing scientifically measurable, Mr. Wilson would politely decline and Little Dickie would say, "The deal was never finalized and discussions are still ongoing" on his website. Notice the word Dickie now uses is discussions, not negotiations.

What kind of "discussions" do you think are going on? "Nice weather in Calgary, Brett?"

Notice Dickie uses the familiar first name as if they are now good buds.

Notice the deal is not done and Mr. Wilson says nothing.

Time to stop wishing.

There is evidence in front of you.

Until Little Dickie shows something more than my ancient videos and misrepresentations of a University test, the conclusion is obvious.

a.king21

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #23 on: May 03, 2014, 12:27:50 AM »
SaneOne: Thank you for your updates on the Willis situation. I  have personally wasted tens of hours trying to negotiate with Willis, Don Kunz and his mother. They could not provide me with a single testimonial re: a working device.

crazycut06

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #24 on: May 03, 2014, 01:39:08 AM »
So can we call him villain now?  ;D

MarkE

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #25 on: May 03, 2014, 02:25:37 AM »
So can we call him villain now?  ;D
There are many ways to describe Mr. Willis.  Considering the money he has taken for promises he has never delivered on, most of the accurate ways are not very flattering.

SaneOne

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #26 on: May 03, 2014, 03:51:30 AM »
SaneOne: Thank you for your updates on the Willis situation. I  have personally wasted tens of hours trying to negotiate with Willis, Don Kunz and his mother. They could not provide me with a single testimonial re: a working device.

My information is ancient history, and not an update in the real sense of the word.

Glad it helps shine light on this regrettable situation.

I am sorry Willis' apparent inability to solve his technical problems has caused so many of us financial loss.

MarkE seems to have a good handle on the situation.

memoryman

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #27 on: May 03, 2014, 03:56:16 AM »
As far as I am concerned, this is a case of deliberate fraud, NOT having "to solve some technical difficulties".

SaneOne

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #28 on: May 03, 2014, 04:18:38 AM »
As far as I am concerned, this is a case of deliberate fraud, NOT having "to solve some technical difficulties".

So you would be in the villain camp I suspect?  ;D

TinselKoala

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Re: Magnacoaster: Hero or Villain?
« Reply #29 on: May 03, 2014, 05:00:43 AM »
I don't think he's smart or classy enough to be a real "villain". He's more like a carnival barker, the guy who promises you'll see a two headed bearded fat lady with tattoos all over her naked body.... but when you pay your money and go inside, it's just his old wife in her nightgown, with some painted-on drawings of whales and roses on her arms and decolletage, and she's only got one head after all. But at least.... the beard was really there.