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By Russell Ade | August 11th 2008 10:54 PM | 3 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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About Russell Ade

Inventor, Explorer, Hybridizer of Plants and Animals, Advanced Medical Treatments. Started to assist in lab at 11 years old and started soon after working with super computers. At age 14 conducting... Full Bio

We are getting ready to sell all our appliances and house and we want to upgrade to low wattage household appliances. We will be moving into a smaller house I have designed that will be heated and cooled by the natural forces of wind, earth, water and fire solar, in a new design I've created. Our system is 120vac square wave 15,000-30,000 watts and 12vdc. With power generated by wind,solar,hydrogen-water, that just leaves earth hmm I'll get to work on that. Wow think about it water=hydrogen, air=wind, fire=solar, and earth=cold-hot energy.
Back to the post:) If you have upgraded to lower watts please let me know. If you have had problems with a lower watt upgrade please let me know. Knowledge is key. Thank You!!!

Comments

Matthew's picture
That sounds like an amazing house! How much did it cost to build in comparison to building a similar sized house that uses oil/gas/air conditioning/etc?

Matthew

outsidethebox's picture
{Simple Solutions for Complex Problems} Russell Ade Matthew It is very affordable but built better than most anything out there because I did the work myself . I built it Unibody style it is all one piece every seam is fastened and glued with construction adhesives to the next. It's the same the frame and foundation all interconnected Unibody. I had to think it all out I knew I had to do it right one step at a time. I couldn't and wouldn't do it over I had to do it right the first time. As I could get building materials I built. First thing was the solar collector which is the green house around 8 ft wide the length of the house its the lowest point so you would start the roof there. If anyone builds a structure a green house on the southern side is like money in the bank you can heat the house off it and grow plants. When you get it done basically everything is free. No power bill, No water bill, No heating and Cooling bill. I was able to start most all the vegetables there for the outdoor garden. I recycled wood for the green house bench full length, cost was $10. I have polymer crystals in the raised bed it's like have ten thousand gallons of under ground water storage. An Inventor got me the square wave you could run a factory on a few of these or at least 2 very large homes on this one extra power is for the lab. What they have now runs about $10,000-$15,000 the Army is pretty much the only ones that have them they weigh around 750 pounds because they produce so much heat they massive aluminum heat sinks and are only 85% efficient because the loss of energy from heat. The one I have weighs less than 5 pounds is 99.9% efficient, and was built for me for $200. A circuit board could be made and it could be reduced to the size of a pack of cigarettes mass produced and manufactured for a lot less. I started building an ancient ruins, I had always wanted to build off an ancient ruins there's not many out there so I built it on site. To give it an authentic look I put some 800 year old relief tiles in it. I will never build a ruins again It took a long time but I have it now. The rest is very modern almost like a space station with reflective surfaces covered with clear fiberglass. The floors are concrete and marble. It's a very well thought out design very well insulated. Over 35 years ago I designed my first buildings around the standard building materials to reduce waste and cost and It still makes sense today.
Matthew's picture
This sounds amazing! Would love to see some pictures of it if you can post them to the article. I wonder how long it will take for people to start using these kinds of materials in mass-produced houses. Seeing as being "green" is pretty sexy right now, maybe it won't take so long for it to catch on.

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