In 1894, Nikola Tesla filed a patent that should have changed the world. A device so powerful it could multiply any electricity source — slashing the bills of every household on the planet.
It never reached the public. Within a year, his laboratory burned to the ground. The invention was declared lost.
"For every 100 watts consumed, he was able to generate at least 500 free watts."
What the energy companies didn't know was that Tesla had already shared his complete blueprints with the villagers of his birthplace in Croatia — where residents still pay a fraction of what everyone else pays for electricity today.
Those blueprints have now been turned into a simple, step-by-step system that any homeowner can build in an afternoon using parts from any hardware store.