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Powerefficiencyguide4all.com has a rating of 1 star from 1 review, indicating that most customers are generally dissatisfied with their purchases. Powerefficiencyguide4all.com ranks 158th among Electronic Component sites.

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Top Critical Review

“Mark Edwards has a scam for getting free electrical energy”

Aaron M.
1/14/21

Mark Edwards has edited the scam produced by Ryan Taylor for his own purposes: Ryan Taylor makes some impressive claims: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ad content~~~~~~~~~~~~ This crazy 45 Year-old geography teacher believed he could change the energy world... and many people are saying he did just that... He discovered breakthrough research from M. I. T. That had been suppressed by the energy industry... and built upon it to craft an incredible innovation in alternative energy- that can power an entire house - and save everyday folks shocking amounts of money... Power companies are enraged about it... but normal citizens- couples, seniors, preppers, and people wanting to save lots of money on power bills- are ecstatic... If you want to save money too AND increase your family's resiliency at the same time, its crucial you see the incredible video for yourself now! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ryan's 30-minute video tells an incredible story. His family is caught in a power outage. His children are cold and hungry. He goes to Home Depot to buy a gasoline powered generator. Then he meets someone who explains how, for only $106, he could buy the parts for constructing a marvelously simple system (pictured as shown) that will power his home now and for months to come without paying a cent to the power company. Toward the end of the video, he explains how he has put together step by step instructions that would allow you to duplicate his system and to provide free electrical power to your home indefinitely. Does this seem too wonderful to be true? It sure does. That because Ryan is playing you for a sucker and that the system he built never worked as he said it did. Did I actually pay out the $45 to get his book and to build the free electrical generator for myself? No way. I didn't need to. I have a degree in physics and have thirty years working with electrical circuits. By virtue of the Law of the Conservation of Energy, Ryan's system cannot produce more electrical energy than what he puts into it in the beginning. According to Ryan, his system was able to supply his home with electric power at a time when a storm had downed the power lines. In sum, his system (pictured as shown) was violating the Law of the Conservation of Energy. He was cheating the electrical company and he was cheating the laws of physics at the same time. What? Let's imagine, for a moment, that Ryan's system does produce free electricity. In that case, I would expect that Ryan would reveal his dirty little secret to at least ten of his close drinking buddies. They would spend $106 to build their own system and never have to pay an electrical bill again. You can just bet that his drinking buddies would give him free beers as a sign of their gratitude. But, more importantly, his ten drinking buddies would surely tell ten members of their extended family about Ryan's marvelous discovery. Then we would have a hundred people off the electrical power grid. In just a few months, this number would be in the thousands. In a few years, the number would be well over a million. And the electrical power companies couldn't do anything about this. There is no law against creating free electricity for your home. But this has not happened, has it? And why not? Because Ryan's dirty little secret is that his system never worked for him or for anyone else. What did work however is that the gullible guys who tried to reproduce his marvelous generator paid out $45 each. Ryan shows 140,000 hits on his site. Even if only 2% of his viewers actually forked over $45 for his step by step instructions, his total receipts would be $126,000. So, Ryan's system is marvelously working for him. He not only buys free beers for his drinking buddies, he is even thinking of retiring early and sending his children to Ivy League schools.

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Thumbnail of user aaronm373
14 reviews
44 helpful votes
January 14th, 2021

Mark Edwards has edited the scam produced by Ryan Taylor for his own purposes:

Ryan Taylor makes some impressive claims:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ad content~~~~~~~~~~~~
This crazy 45 Year-old geography teacher believed he could change the energy world... and many people are saying he did just that...
He discovered breakthrough research from M. I. T. That had been suppressed by the energy industry... and built upon it to craft an incredible innovation in alternative energy- that can power an entire house - and save everyday folks shocking amounts of money...
Power companies are enraged about it... but normal citizens- couples, seniors, preppers, and people wanting to save lots of money on power bills- are ecstatic...
If you want to save money too AND increase your family's resiliency at the same time, its crucial you see the incredible video for yourself now!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ryan's 30-minute video tells an incredible story. His family is caught in a power outage. His children are cold and hungry. He goes to Home Depot to buy a gasoline powered generator. Then he meets someone who explains how, for only $106, he could buy the parts for constructing a marvelously simple system (pictured as shown) that will power his home now and for months to come without paying a cent to the power company. Toward the end of the video, he explains how he has put together step by step instructions that would allow you to duplicate his system and to provide free electrical power to your home indefinitely.
Does this seem too wonderful to be true? It sure does. That because Ryan is playing you for a sucker and that the system he built never worked as he said it did.
Did I actually pay out the $45 to get his book and to build the free electrical generator for myself? No way. I didn't need to. I have a degree in physics and have thirty years working with electrical circuits. By virtue of the Law of the Conservation of Energy, Ryan's system cannot produce more electrical energy than what he puts into it in the beginning. According to Ryan, his system was able to supply his home with electric power at a time when a storm had downed the power lines. In sum, his system (pictured as shown) was violating the Law of the Conservation of Energy. He was cheating the electrical company and he was cheating the laws of physics at the same time. What?
Let's imagine, for a moment, that Ryan's system does produce free electricity. In that case, I would expect that Ryan would reveal his dirty little secret to at least ten of his close drinking buddies. They would spend $106 to build their own system and never have to pay an electrical bill again. You can just bet that his drinking buddies would give him free beers as a sign of their gratitude. But, more importantly, his ten drinking buddies would surely tell ten members of their extended family about Ryan's marvelous discovery. Then we would have a hundred people off the electrical power grid. In just a few months, this number would be in the thousands. In a few years, the number would be well over a million. And the electrical power companies couldn't do anything about this. There is no law against creating free electricity for your home.
But this has not happened, has it? And why not? Because Ryan's dirty little secret is that his system never worked for him or for anyone else. What did work however is that the gullible guys who tried to reproduce his marvelous generator paid out $45 each. Ryan shows 140,000 hits on his site. Even if only 2% of his viewers actually forked over $45 for his step by step instructions, his total receipts would be $126,000. So, Ryan's system is marvelously working for him. He not only buys free beers for his drinking buddies, he is even thinking of retiring early and sending his children to Ivy League schools.

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