Thomas Henry Moray (August 28, 1892 - May, 1974) was an inventor from Salt Lake City, Utah.
Moray graduated from LDS Business College, he studied electrical engineering through an international correspondence school course. He later received a PhD in electrical engineering from the University of Uppsala. Moray developed what he termed the "Moray Valve"—a device for extracting "radiant energy" from the "energy waves of the universe", which he thought to be an inexhaustible environmental energy source.[1]. He held several demonstrations of this device.[2]
[...] processes [producing "pure electrical energy"] were explored by Tesla prior to 1900, and by T. Henry Moray, of Utah[3], while in Sweden in 1912. Tesla used aluminum and some Group I elements, while Moray used spudomene or lepidolite—lithium-aluminosilicate rocks—which he called his "Swedish stone", to which he soldered triple-distilled germanium, producing semiconductor devices (which he called "valves") almost twenty years before Shockley, who got the credit.[4]
Thomas Henry Moray is the supposed inventor of the germanium transistor, an alleged alien device which was used in the Philidelphia Experiment. No one has ever proved this to be true or not.
Further information: Free energy suppression
In the 1930s, Thomas Henry Moray reported that he and his family had been threatened and shot at on several occasions and his lab ransacked to stop his free energy research and public demonstrations. The 1975 book The Sun Betrayed claimed solar energy production was being suppressed by the U. S. governmental bureau allocated to help its development
Thomas Henry Moray
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Henry_Moray
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMe_kOl1Z3M
Moray graduated from LDS Business College, he studied electrical engineering through an international correspondence school course. He later received a PhD in electrical engineering from the University of Uppsala. Moray developed what he termed the "Moray Valve"—a device for extracting "radiant energy" from the "energy waves of the universe", which he thought to be an inexhaustible environmental energy source.[1]. He held several demonstrations of this device.[2]
[...] processes [producing "pure electrical energy"] were explored by Tesla prior to 1900, and by T. Henry Moray, of Utah[3], while in Sweden in 1912. Tesla used aluminum and some Group I elements, while Moray used spudomene or lepidolite—lithium-aluminosilicate rocks—which he called his "Swedish stone", to which he soldered triple-distilled germanium, producing semiconductor devices (which he called "valves") almost twenty years before Shockley, who got the credit.[4]
Thomas Henry Moray is the supposed inventor of the germanium transistor, an alleged alien device which was used in the Philidelphia Experiment. No one has ever proved this to be true or not.
Further information: Free energy suppression
In the 1930s, Thomas Henry Moray reported that he and his family had been threatened and shot at on several occasions and his lab ransacked to stop his free energy research and public demonstrations. The 1975 book The Sun Betrayed claimed solar energy production was being suppressed by the U. S. governmental bureau allocated to help its development
Thomas Henry Moray
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Henry_Moray
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMe_kOl1Z3M