In the summer of 2009, a state-funded energy consultant discovered a completely off-grid power system on an Amish farm in Ohio. It was producing 2.3 kilowatts of continuous, usable energy using no silicon, no batteries, and no inverters. The total cost to build it was $100. When he submitted his findings, his report was quietly pulled from the state record. Two years later, electric utility companies successfully lobbied the federal government to effectively ban the technology nationwide.

The Amish never stopped developing it. While the rest of the country was sold on $30,000 photovoltaic panels that die without the sun, they perfected the thermodynamic solar engine. It works using single-pane window glass, a wooden frame, and basic thermal dynamics to spin a turbine. It costs $100 in salvaged materials. It requires zero electrical wiring. The battery storage required — none.

The modern residential solar industry is a machine that demands up to $35,000 to power an average home. In 2011, a coalition of electric utilities petitioned the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to classify this $100 Amish alternative as a “regulated distributed generation facility.” They claimed a wooden box spinning a mechanical shaft was a “grid stability risk.” That was not about protecting the grid. That was a calculated, administrative decision made without public comment to ensure you kept paying $30K for solar panels instead of $100 for true energy independence.

This video shows you exactly what it is, the science behind how it works, and the exact dimensions and materials needed to build your own thermodynamic solar engine using salvaged glass and farm paint.

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