Baldinelli Article
Baldinelli Article
by
Richard Connolly
Staff Reporter for the Boston Evening Globe, December 4, 1974
When Anthony Galluccio talks about the little black box and what he claims is its amazing contribution to the field of energy, his description bridges the gap between Thomas Edison and televisions "Mission Impossible". Galluccio, a lawyer and former Cambridge School Committee member, says he and his partner, Fred A. Baldinelli of 135 Atherton St., Milton, are developing what he describes as a dual relay charger, capable of creating AC power from a 12-volt battery. Both Galluccio and Baldinelli, the inventor, claim that the device, unlike anything on todays market, can power an automobile or provide 1000 to 1500 watts --- enough to illuminate a house. "Essentially it is a battery charger that has AC power", Galluccio explains. You can use it any place you use electricity. The device is solid state, Galluccio says. It has no moving parts. No chemicals, no batteries or fuel cells. The materials and parts are readily available and the output can be varied by changing the size of the device. Galluccio describes the present model of Baldinellis invention as about the same size as an automobile battery. He says the Ford Motor Company and Raytheon Company have expressed interest in the device. Investigators in the office of Attorney General Robert H. Quinn also are interested in the invention and reportedly are prepared to present information to a Suffolk County grand jury next week.
State detectives assigned to the Criminal Division reportedly have investigated the Galluccio-Baldinelli venture as a result of claims made by persons who said they invested in the invention. While Galluccio declined to say how much has been invested, investigators reportedly have estimated the figure at $100,000 or more. They reportedly have been told that a Medford man invested $23,000, a Wakefield man $100,000 and a Springfield businessman $120,000. But the big question involves the source of energy. Nobody seems to know what it is. Galluccio says he doesnt know. He lives at 86 Buckingham St., Cambridge, is counsel for the State Dept. of Labor and Industries and was secretary to the late John F. Kennedy when JFK was a congressman. Galluccio says his partner, Baldinelli, whom he describes as a genius, an electronic genius, isnt sure of the source of energy either. I cant tell you, Galluccio says. We dont know the source of energy. Mr. Baldinelli doesnt know either. Hes a raw inventor. He doesnt know why it happens. He doesnt have a theory. He knows what you have to put together. He knows it happens, Galluccio says of his partner. But he is quick to point out that even if they did know the source of energy they wouldnt say because they consider the invention so valuable. In fact, Galluccio says, Baldinelli has been developing a self-destruct mechanism for the device so that it would ruin itself if anyone tried to open it for inspection during testing by engineers. Galluccio says the self-destruct model should be completed by tomorrow. The Harvard graduate says he became interested in Baldinellis inventions about 11 years ago when he represented Baldinelli as a lawyer. Baldinellis device developed through his attempt to improve the automobile alternator, according to Galluccio. Recently he equipped a Volkswagen with the device and it powered the vehicle without depleting the battery in a test which Galluccio says was witnessed by Ford engineers.
Baldinelli, who says he also invented a burglar alarm that fits in a doorknob, claims to have illuminated his home with power from his device on the night of the great Blackout. The lights in his home drew so much attention in the darkened neighborhood, Baldinelli says, he decided to extinguish three spotlights which illuminated his backyard. When the lights of the Northeast went out a few years ago, Baldinelli says, he merely plugged his invention into a wall socket and his lights went back on. Galluccio says he used the device to feed electricity to a building daily for several months. Getting sufficient money for research and attempting to sell the invention to such firms as Ford and Raytheon has been a struggle, according to Galluccio. He says none of his friends who invested has been dissatisfied with the progress of development but he was told that some individuals who purchased an interest in the device from another person complained to the attorney generals office. Baldinelli, who says his primary experience in electronics dates back to employment in an auto radio shop, holds a patent on the device. Baldinelli has discovered what engineers have described as a very extraordinary thing, according to Galluccio. What stuns the engineers is that it looks like there is no power depletion in the battery, Galluccio says. The engineers go crazy. They dont believe it. They say it cant happen. They say you cant do this (draw power from a battery without depleting it) and here he (Baldinelli) is doing it. They said we couldnt fly to the moon. We flew there. When the Volkswagen was used in a test, Galluccio says, Fords engineers placed meters on the battery and noticed no power depletion. Galluccio is apprehensive about the effect the attorney generals investigation may have on his venture with Baldinelli. But someday, he says, the invention will be recognized. Someday, he says, theyll pin a medal on me and the inventor will get a Nobel Prize.
3
File copied and corrected from: http://www.rexresearch.com/articles/baldineli.htm Rex Research, PO Box 19250, Jean, NV 89019 USA Copy of original article: