top of page
Search

Efficiency Viewed from a Higher Perspective

  • Writer: Andy Coppock
    Andy Coppock
  • May 8, 2023
  • 3 min read

ree

Efficiency is a term thrown at all aspects of energy usage and is most often misinterpreted by only looking at the efficiency of the final product. We say our car gets 32mpg or our EV can travel a given distance per kilowatt hour. This is a surface evaluation and is often misleading. True efficiency evaluations need to be assessed from an overall consumption footprint and it forces us to ask counterintuitive questions like “how much electricity did it take to produce that gallon of gas” or “how much gas/coal/oil did it take to make the electricity that I charged my car with just now?” Suddenly the line drawn between these two technologies becomes blurred and somewhat homogenous based on total environmental impact. This isn’t the story you are told, nor the narrative you are led to believe. As in the Matrix, we’ve only been offered the blue pill and are expected to remain content in a false reality.


Now consider the final assessment of efficiency. When you burn gasoline to generate energy in your car, roughly 65% of that energy is lost in heat that’s dissipated through the cooling system or out of the exhaust pipe. This is where EV technology has an advantage, however heat is still a byproduct of generating motion with electric motors.


Each of these examples, these technologies, convert an external stored consumable energy source into an aspect of “work.” In this example you are powering your car down the road, but it could also be powering all forms of stationary equipment as well. Potential energy is stored in your gas tank or your batteries and as you drive it’s consumed until it’s gone. “Refill, drive, repeat.”

Our bia-technology redefines efficiency by harnessing an intrinsically stored energy to create work. This force can be expressed as rotary or linear motion and is created without heat or consumption of an external fuel. In addition, there are no emissions or byproducts generated. The Bia Tech Motor can be safely used in hazardous / flammable environments thus eliminating the possibility of fire or explosions. Cars, Trucks, Boats, and Aircraft could operate with nearly limitless range with zero carbon emissions and a 100% sustainable footprint.

The Bia Tech Motor, like all other physical devices, has raw materials that must be sourced and rendered, components manufactured and assembled. These current processes obviously have an environmental footprint. Bold Earth Scientific is driving new processing technology and methods to also reduce this as close to net zero as possible. One of our goals from the beginning was to recycle what is now considered waste into usable materials of construction. Most of the raw materials for this motor can be rendered from typical recycled materials and plastic waste. Our hope is that this can turn the Pacific Garbage Patch, landfills, and recycling facilities into valuable commodities, areas where we can “mine” our raw materials while simultaneously cleaning up and detoxifying our environment.


Our passionate and dedicated staff at Bold Earth Scientific have indeed taken the “red” pill. Every decision, application, and aspect of creating our products and services is evaluated relative to the environmental and social impact to the best of our awareness. The entire life cycle of the design from raw material selections and sourcing to “end of service” recycling criteria are established during the initial design phase.


-Andy Coppock, CEO/CTO



 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page