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Do you have the patent number by any chance?

No but it should be available from Lovell's site (in the hyperlink)) online. What excited me about this version of the technology is that it wouldn't require patents since the materials are too common and the construction process too simple. In the missing video, RMS says it is very difficult to figure out how to remake the device from the patent, but if you understand the principle, and how the special properties of each material can be used together to optimize the flow of electrons being released by the heat, then either getting resistance or easy flow (conductivity). I don't pretend to fully understand (patent would do nothing for me) but I think of it like a slide. The heat causes you to go down the slide (you being an electron) you slide down, but instead of reaching the ground, you reach a water slide that you land on, causing you to slide faster and more easily. Instead of landing in a pool of water, you land on another slide but with say, sunflower oil or ferrofluid or something much more slippery that causes you to go even faster and so on. instead of getting to land in a pool of anything, you are swept off to do work in a circuit or stored in a battery. Anyway, I'd check the site, might be able to explain it better than my guesses. Cheers @ecoknowme

No but it should be available from Lovell's site online. What excited me about this version of the technology is that it wouldn't require patents since the materials are too common and the construction process too simple.

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