The story of the vitality meter
According to George Egely the Egely Wheel should have been developed at least one hundred years ago, even if not in this electronic form. Everything was available at that time to do so and to know this phenomenon well. Naturally, it did not happen, the Egely Wheel remained to be invented and many other things went about the same course not only the Egely Wheel. For example, the liquid crystals have been forgotten for over eighty years, as was penicillin for ten years. Nearly the same happened to Egely Wheel as well.
It was by chance that I started to work in this field of para phenomena, the invention of Egely Wheel of course was not even a dream then. I graduated as a mechanical engineer specializing in heat engines, at the Technical University of Budapest. I had studied energy transfer for years, the knowledge I had obtained here was extremely useful later on during the Egely Wheel experiments. Then I started to do research on energy transfer problems and hypothetical accidents of nuclear power plants in a research laboratory of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. There are many complex energy and momentum transfer processes to be studied here, so researchers must know the characteristics of the movements and transfer of all kinds of energy, of course the Egely Wheel is based on diferent methods of energy transfer. I later received a Ph.D. degree in this subject. To understand the Egely Wheel these experiences did not seem to be enough, however the Egely Wheel is based on energy transport as well. With a proper research carrier in front of me, I won a scholarship to the International Atomic Energy Agency at the beginning of the 1980's. I then worked in the Brookhaven National Laboratory, in the United States, for one and a half years.
It happened there, during an evening chat, that the subject of paranormal phenomena and the energy transport measured by Egely Wheel came up. Like every scientists I only believed in facts that my own eyes could see or that were written in scientific records. I did not believe in the so-called paranormal phenomena. I said that it was just a hallucination. Untill the start of the creation of Egely Wheel even myself had doubts of the existence of bioenergy. I was surprised when my wife, who was a newly graduated mathematician (she had an important roll in the creation of Egely Wheel) and was just writing her Ph. D. thesis, told me that she saw a table tipping during her years at the university. Her fellow students had tried it several times at a student's hostel. She claimed that nobody was cheating, the phenomenon seemed to be real. So I had the choice not to believe my wife or not to accept the laws of natural science. I was not sure which one to choose. I was a bit confused because both choices would have painful and unpleasant consequences in the long run. Now at this stage looking back the past I am glad I decided pro the Egely Wheel. Still I could not accept the existence of heretic things like those. My colleague H. Bruce Stewart, an American mathematician said something really important once: "A real scientist should never reject something till he is one hundred per cent sure that the subject in question is true or false. He personally has to take the trouble of objectively controlling the facts, doing scientific experiments, collecting data." I owe Bruce for the road that led to the creation of Egely Wheel.
Probably it was Bruce's inluence that pushed me towards bioenergy experiments and the creation of the Egely Wheel later on. As most scientists I also refused to accept the existence of paranormal phenomena, although I considered myself to be open-minded. Probably due to the fact that at the university you were pressurized into not believing in things like these. I have to admit if I had met anything like the Egely Wheel back then I would have rejected it off hand. Being confused and wanting to find out the truth I started to do some research by collecting experimental data, and descriptions of observations available in this subject. I thought I would find numerous contradictions among them, so I could reject the existence of these phenomena without bad feelings. To my surprise I found out that experimental data and observations of the different phenomena from different times and places were the same or similar to each other, researchers and collectors of experiences met the same phenomena in similar circumstances and came to the same conclusions, although they did not know about each other's work, plus a divece similar to Egely Wheel was not available for them. There is a need for a device that can precisely and easily measure the bioenergy. This captured my interest, I began to think that there must be some truth behind this. The data proved that the phenomenon could be true. But of course, if there was a phenomenon like this then there is now and there will be in the future, too. That was when the idea of a device similar to Egely Wheel came to my mind.
So, I have worked out a simple model on the basis of the collected observations to make things more understandable. According to this model this energy is very similar to electricity, but of course, it is not at all the same. Diferent types of energies like this move the Egely Wheel too. There are many fundamental differences between electricity and this energy (shall we call it bioenergy). All materials conduct this energy while from the viewpoint of electricity some materials are good conductors and others are insulators. This was an important fact concerning the creation of Egely Wheel. That's why a glass or a plastic bell functions as a Faraday cage, i.e. if we place the objects under a closed bell of any material, it is extremely difficult to make them move, because all of our energy flows on the surface of the bell, it can not get inside.
From this simple model, I constructed an experiment that no one has ever done before. I discovered that a rotating movement in liquid would cut down friction, thus smaller power would be needed to move something. Naturally financial concerns also played a role in designing this experiment, it had to be inexpensive enough to carry out with many people. The simplest experiment to do was with a cup of water and a shallow dish. According to my simplified physical model, I thought that if I filled the dish with water it would start to rotate as we put one of our hands around it. I placed small objects, or thin aluminum foils on the surface of the water that would show its movement. It worked, the water rotated. But being uncertain if it was due to the heat radiating from my hand, I put on gloves, first a thin one then thicker ones, which would considerably reduce any heat transmission. Being an expert in the field of heat transfer I knew this could be caused by heat transmission, but this way there was almost no temperature difference between the surface of the glove and the air. The experiment was perfect, the water rotated without the possibility of any heat transmission.
In the mid-80's I started an intensive research and tried out this energy flow measurement on dozens of friends with more or less success. I decided to construct a device (the Egely Wheel) that can measure this effect. Most of them were able to rotate the water and the Egely Wheel too. The speed of the rotation depended on how tired or fit they were and how much they could or could not concentrate. This can be observed with the Egely Wheel as well. The temperature and size of their hand did not influence the speed considerably. This is true for Egely Wheel too, because it is not only our hand where we can measure the bioenergy. Then I made hundreds of control experiments with hand-shaped metal tanks. I could fill them with warm water and see if these warm tanks placed around the dish could make the fluid move. With these hand-shaped tanks, I could only experience an angular speed at most 10% of the good results with men. Even if the temperature of the water inside the tank reached 113 F, the body temperature of 113 F is not possible. The temperature on the surface of the hand is very seldom more than 95 F but usually it is around 90 F. So, the effect of heat transfer could be excluded. The experiments later on conducted with the Egely Wheel still under test were the same as well.











