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A Heater Made for Wind Power

Patented in 2006 (Patent No. US7133604B1 and Canadian Patent 2535305), Haser (Heat Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation) is my indoor digital air heater. The only moving part is a fan. It has the ability to run all the time from October to May on 2.2 kilowatts. Haser heats a 2,000-square-foot home for an average of 25 cents per hour. This advanced heater can also warm up a house measuring 16,000 cubic feet or a workshop up to 20,000 cubic feet enough to work in.

How Haser Works

I built it inside of a cylinder, which is the ideal geometric shape conducive to electrical, optical, and thermal energy emissions, and added infrared heat lamps inside of a reflective enclosure. When you have a good hollow conductor, you also have a good electrical conductor optically, electrically, and thermally.

Once the heat lamps are at the proper focal length, they create a real and virtual image of the lamp to almost double the amount of heat. A perfect holographic image of the lamp is generated inside the hollow conductor. This doubles the amount of energy you have to work with to produce the best heat sync.

Filaments in the 375 watt heat lamps never heat up completely, because there is air constantly being blown over them. This is why the lamps can last over 27,000 hours, which is 5 times the rating.

Large Home Space Heated by Haser

Different Designs Available

My smaller version uses high-output,  infrared LEDs, while the other 2 designs contain infrared heat lamps. The primary model contains 6 lamps at 375 watts and is ideal for solar and wind energy sources. For people operating on wind generators, it requires around 20 photovoltaic panels to run the larger versions.