Free Energy through Dielectric Field Engineering of the Ether: Clemente Figuera’s Infinite Energy Generator
In 1902, Clemente Figuera introduced a groundbreaking invention that shook the headlines across both American and European newspapers. Journalists—many of whom had little to no understanding of electricity but loved catchy titles—claimed that Figuera had created infinite energy from the air, using a light-spinning motor structure capable of producing energy at will.
In truth, this was a technique based on the dielectric field of the Ether—a method of disturbing the Ether to generate what we call “electricity.” It involved configuring the dielectric field structure of an iron core to emulate the internal condition of a permanently oscillating magnet. To be precise, it wasn’t an actual magnet moving back and forth inside a coil, but rather a simulated oscillating magnetic field structure in the Ether itself, appearing across the generator’s secondary coil.
Transformers are another example of dielectric field engineering, designed to recreate the field pattern produced by moving or vibrating permanent magnets.
Clemente Figuera’s generator is sometimes called a free energy transformer. What sets it apart is that it lacks the usual back-EMF that limits current flow in the coil. Because of this, many argue it’s a legitimate infinite energy machine.
The core principle of dielectric engineering is to direct two opposing polarities from two primary coils into either end of the iron core. This forms the internal structure of a permanent magnet. However, since the impedance leading into each primary coil is imbalanced, the resulting field structure becomes asymmetrically polarized.
The “north” and “south” poles observed on the secondary iron core are, in fact, dielectric vortices. These vortices define a pseudo-permanent oscillating magnet due to the imbalance in dielectric distribution.
Another aspect critical to generating free energy is the sudden disconnection of the primary coil, producing flyback voltage (transient EMF) and simultaneously phase inversion. This results in a rapid shift in the dielectric state—almost as if the dielectric medium has lost inertia. At this moment, a powerful magnetic field is generated, creating high-voltage impulses across the secondary coil.
Figuera’s dielectric field technique challenges mainstream scientific understanding of permanent magnets. Ken Wheeler, a leading Ether theorist, has emphasized this point repeatedly.
Looking deeper, we find that iron is a special element. Its atomic precession can be easily aligned into a spin structure identical to that of a permanent magnet—especially when electric current flows through a coil wrapped around it.
According to Ken Wheeler’s theory, other elements are bonded by dielectric field lines with internal atomic structures less favorable for becoming magnets. Hence, matter and atomic structure must be reconsidered through the lens of Ether-based electrical physics.
If the historical narrative surrounding Nikola Tesla is full of inconsistencies—raising the possibility that Tesla himself may not have existed—then another startling notion arises for conspiracy theorists: Clemente Figuera may also never have existed. Both figures seem to have been reconstructed characters, reintroduced into public awareness between the 1980s and early 2000s.
If that’s the case, then whoever created the figure of Tesla must have recognized historical gaps, and so invented Clemente Figuera to fill them.
So the real question becomes:
Who were the actual masters guiding the scientific minds of the 19th and 20th centuries?
And with hidden technologies—such as those tied to Tesla and Figuera—we must re-examine where advanced science really came from. This becomes a matter of historical investigation, best suited to researchers who work across disciplines and are committed to seeking the truth.
It’s possible that advanced science still exists today, but its origins lie in an older world resurrected during the so-called Renaissance—a world whose knowledge has been deliberately hidden by an unknown group.
This line of historical inquiry is commonly known as the Tartaria hypothesis.
Design and construction of technology on the dielectric field in the way of Clemente Figuera:
Recommended books for reliable Tartarian historical investigation:
- Books by David Ewing Jr
- Books by Fomenko
Technology Labeled as Tesla:
※ Transistorized snap-off tech harnesses energy from dielectric inertia.