🎥 About This Video Collection
This archive contains a selection of older experiments, early prototypes, and exploratory projects captured on video tape throughout the years. Many of these recordings were originally filmed using analog equipment — long before high-definition and digital cameras became standard tools. The footage has since been carefully digitized, restored where possible, and grouped into themed video albums to make it easy to browse and revisit key moments from our past work.
These videos offer more than just a look at technical setups — they serve as a documentary record of ideas being brought to life, often with limited resources and lots of creativity. You’ll see devices in action, test rigs running, magnetic configurations being adjusted, and various trial-and-error attempts that played a vital role in shaping later breakthroughs. Some clips capture spontaneous thoughts or design insights that occurred mid-build — the kind of details that rarely make it into formal documentation.
While video quality may vary due to the original recording formats and conditions, the content itself remains valuable and inspiring. Every recording represents a moment in time where a new idea was being tested, questioned, or refined. In many cases, these videos show foundational concepts being explored for the first time — seeds that would later grow into more advanced systems featured elsewhere on the site.
We view this collection as a window into decades of creative exploration, hands-on engineering, and problem-solving. It’s an evolving historical archive that reflects not only the development of our energy projects, but also the mindset of continuous learning and experimentation that drives them. Whether you’re a researcher, a builder, or simply curious about alternative energy development, these videos offer an authentic, unpolished look behind the scenes.
Take your time browsing through the albums. Each one offers a different angle on our journey — from early-stage builds and rough prototypes to working concepts and even the occasional unexpected result. There’s much to discover here, and we’re continuing to add more material as older recordings are digitized and sorted. Stay tuned — the past has a lot to teach us.