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Archie Blue's Water Energy Invention

Archie Blue was a 73-year-old electrician from Christchurch, New Zealand who claimed to have invented a device that would make petrol stations obsolete. Local newspapers reported that Arab oilmen had offered £500 million for the patent rights to his invention. The article provides little information about Blue's background or the actual device. It notes that Blue had invented an audio recording wire that was turned down by RCA Victor and that in 1977 the Daily Mail reported on a van powered by electrolytic gas from a modified carburetor, though the powering motor eventually failed. Despite some successful patents, Blue failed to earn significant income from his inventions and his family later discarded his work without knowing its significance.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
149 views2 pages

Archie Blue's Water Energy Invention

Archie Blue was a 73-year-old electrician from Christchurch, New Zealand who claimed to have invented a device that would make petrol stations obsolete. Local newspapers reported that Arab oilmen had offered £500 million for the patent rights to his invention. The article provides little information about Blue's background or the actual device. It notes that Blue had invented an audio recording wire that was turned down by RCA Victor and that in 1977 the Daily Mail reported on a van powered by electrolytic gas from a modified carburetor, though the powering motor eventually failed. Despite some successful patents, Blue failed to earn significant income from his inventions and his family later discarded his work without knowing its significance.

Uploaded by

Aleksa Rancic
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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---Archie's Answer---

Brief review by Peter Lowrie


The Sunday Times. May 14, 1978. Page 8
Journalist: Graham Ingram

Caption: ARCHIE BLUE at work...He thinks he's onto something big.

Heading: H2O's his solution !


FROM time to time inventors come up with “solutions” to the world's future energy
shortages. There have been people who have despaired through trying to create
perpetual motion, designing motors which will run on anything...men who say it
doesn't matter that the world's oil wells will soon run dry. The answer, some say, is
in your nearest tap, river or lake. Water. Will it do the trick? Even in New Zealand
there have been several who have replied with an emphatic “yes”. Christchurch
electrician Archie Blue is the latest. Headlines in local papers1 the other day
suggested Arab oilmen had offered 73-year-old Mr. Blue 500 million pounds2 for the
patent rights for his device, an appliance which would make petrol stations obsolete.

The article outlines Archie Blue's background, education and vocational


training providing scant information about various inventions and less
about the actual device of interest. Being a tabloid paper the surface is
only-just skimmed as would be expected from a Sunday read that fails to
challenge the reader, vernacularly limited and thus targeted to primary
reading abilities without so much focus on any particular pursuit the result
is disappointing to anyone seeking new knowledge about his ideas or goals.

Mr Blue was born in Christchurch, New Zealand and began a career as an


electrician. He invented a means to record audio signals onto a piece of
wire that was presented to RCA Victor and turned down by that company
due to difficulties with the format. Had he persisted then he may have
stumbled upon magnetic recording tape.

The article refers to another publication namely the Daily Mail and he was
published on August 19, 1977 in the motoring section. There is mention of a
blower that directed electrolytic gas into a stripped down carburettor fitted
into a van that ran around the island of Guernsey in traffic. Eventually the
electric motor powering the blower expired but not before attracting the
interest of one David Hooper of the islands' Royal Automobile Club.

Notwithstanding successful patents in U.S.A, England and New Zealand


and accolades from those who came to know of his work, Mr. Blue failed to
attract any significant income from his inventions.

Mr. Blue was a sportsman in his younger days winning trophies for his
athletic prowess. When he departed this life the family tossed out all of his
work without knowledge of it's significance.

He should have taken the money!

1 {ed} Christchurch Star, April 29, 1978. Page 1.


2 {ed} $1,000,000,000 (one thousand million dollars (phew))

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