My name is Brendan Eagleton and I am the director of marketing for Nextec Energy out of Houston Texas. We are the soul distributors of the Ortronic system in the U.S. and Latin America. The Ortronic system is a revolutionary technology in the area of energy savings and boasts the ability to cut homeowner and business energy usage by 40-70% without the consumer changing any of their usage habits. With full scale integration this will reduce the U.S. Carbon emissions significantly and help to curb the effects of global warming.
While the range of savings seems substantial it is so because the savings determined depends largely on the types of lights, appliances, air conditioning used and other factors such as the need for backup power by the consumer. The system works by capturing reactive energy previously wasted, and considered unusable, and converting it into usable active AC current. The technology is particularly effective when used with photo voltaic solar panels and can reduce the amount of panels needed by 70%, a considerable cost savings to consumers and solar leasing providers. Uses with wind turbines offer similar results without the need of panels comprised of environmentally hazardous chemical products. I assure you that this technology is real and ready for installation now. This is not something that needs development or financial support for such development, but merely exposure.
In addition to the impressive abilities of the current system, the implication for future use in hybrid cars poses the possibility for a 400-500mpg hybrid, as well as a larger unit for use in power plants. I can provide a full demonstration of the technology for you. You can contact me by e-mail at beagleton@nextecenergy.com or by phone in Austin at 512.733.4537. Thank you for your time and I hope this information finds you well.
Sincerely,
Brendan K Eagleton
Nextec Energy
512.733.4537
1407 Oxford Ave.
Austin, TX. 78704
What kind of solar cells do you use? Standard Silicon base? Also what kind of efficiency do they operate at? I'm just curious. I do research in solar cells.