Al Wordsworth
Inventor of an overunity electrical generator (3A input / 32A output) and an advanced carburetor, both of which were allegedly suppressed through harassment. His generator design is believed lost after his death.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Al Wordsworth |
| Born | Unknown |
| Died | Unknown |
| Age at Death | Unknown |
| Location of Death | Unknown |
| Cause of Death | Unknown |
| Official Ruling | Unknown |
| Category | Energy Inventor |
Assessment: UNCERTAIN
Al Wordsworth is one of the most poorly documented cases in the energy suppression literature. He is known almost entirely through Gary Vesperman's compilation Energy Invention Suppression Cases, which describes him as an inventor who faced "some type of harassment" related to both his advanced carburetor and his electrical generator. The generator reportedly had an input of 3 amps at 12 volts (36 watts) and an output of 32 amps at 6 to 8 volts (192–256 watts) — a claimed overunity ratio of roughly 5:1 to 7:1. After his death, the generator design was reportedly lost. The lack of verifiable biographical details, death circumstances, or independent documentation makes it impossible to assess whether his death was suspicious or natural — but the pattern of an inventor dying and his technology disappearing with him is consistent with other cases in this project.
Circumstances of Death
No details about Al Wordsworth's death are available in any known public source. The only documented reference states simply: "He died, and it is believed his generator design is lost." No date, location, cause of death, or circumstances have been recorded in the available literature.
Background
The Electrical Generator
According to Vesperman's compilation, Wordsworth built an electrical generator with the following specifications:
- Input: 3 amps at 12 volts (approximately 36 watts)
- Output: 32 amps at 6 to 8 volts (approximately 192–256 watts)
If these specifications are accurate, the device would represent an overunity system — producing approximately 5 to 7 times more energy output than input. This would violate the first and second laws of thermodynamics as understood by mainstream physics, placing the device in the same contested category as the generators of Thomas Bearden, Floyd Sweet, and John Bedini.
No independent verification of these specifications has been found. No patents, academic papers, or media coverage of Wordsworth's generator have been located.
The Advanced Carburetor
Wordsworth also reportedly invented an advanced carburetor — presumably one that achieved dramatically improved fuel efficiency. No technical details about the carburetor are available. The combination of an overunity generator and an advanced carburetor suggests Wordsworth was working on multiple fronts that would have threatened both the electrical utility and petroleum industries.
Suppression
Vesperman's account states that "the details are sketchy and second-hand" but that Wordsworth "had to contend with some type of harassment of both his advanced carburetor and electrical generator." The nature of this harassment — whether legal, financial, physical, or otherwise — is not specified.
Loss of the Technology
After Wordsworth's death, his generator design was reportedly lost. This follows the pattern seen with numerous other energy inventors, including Lester Hendershot (fuelless motor never reproduced), Thomas Henry Moray (radiant energy device destroyed), Floyd Sweet (research materials confiscated after death), and Rory Johnson (Magnatron disappeared).
Why This Death Possibly Raises Questions
- Technology lost after death: The generator design disappeared when Wordsworth died — the same pattern seen across dozens of cases in this project
- Harassment documented: Even the brief account in Vesperman's compilation notes that Wordsworth faced harassment related to both of his inventions
- Dual-threat inventor: Wordsworth worked on both an electrical generator and an advanced carburetor, meaning his work threatened two major industries simultaneously
- No documentation survived: The complete absence of technical specifications, patents, or media coverage after his death suggests either the information was suppressed or never widely disseminated
- Consistent with broader pattern: Inventors of claimed overunity devices have died under suspicious circumstances at a rate that exceeds coincidence — Stanley Meyer, Arie DeGeus, Mark Tomion, John Bedini, Floyd Sweet
The Counterargument
- The details about Wordsworth are "sketchy and second-hand" — even by Vesperman's own admission
- No independent source has verified the existence of Wordsworth or his devices
- Overunity claims (more energy output than input) violate established thermodynamic laws and are regarded as physically impossible by mainstream physics
- The generator specifications could reflect measurement error, unconventional measurement methods, or fabrication
- Without any corroborating evidence, this case cannot be independently assessed
Note on Sources
Al Wordsworth is one of the least-documented individuals in the energy suppression literature. He appears only in Gary Vesperman's Energy Invention Suppression Cases compilation, with no independent verification found in any other source. The account is explicitly described as "sketchy and second-hand." All information in this profile is drawn from that single source and should be treated accordingly.
See Also
- Thomas Bearden — Inventor of the Motionless Electromagnetic Generator (MEG), US Patent 6,362,718
- Floyd Sweet — Inventor of the Vacuum Triode Amplifier, research confiscated after death
- John Bedini — Free energy researcher who died suddenly in 2016
- Tom Ogle — Inventor of advanced fuel vapor system, died of overdose ruled suicide
- Stanley Meyer — Water fuel cell inventor who died suddenly at a restaurant
Other Shocking Stories
- Eric Wang: Headed Wright-Patterson's Office of Special Studies. Died at 54, no cause of death stated.
- Paulo and Alexandra Correa: Husband-wife team claimed overunity plasma reactor. Faced decades of institutional suppression and threats.
- Frederick Hochstetter: Sole passenger killed in a train wreck after debunking a fuelless motor inventor.
- Alistair Beckham: SDI engineer found electrocuted in his garden shed — wires on chest, handkerchief jammed in mouth.
Sources
- Energy Invention Suppression Cases — Gary Vesperman (Supreme Law)
- History of New Energy Invention Suppression Cases — Rense.com
- History of New Energy Invention Suppression Cases — Critical Unity
- Free Energy Suppression Conspiracy Theory — Wikipedia
This information was built by Grok and Claude AI research.