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Baja Terras DEl Rey Rally Portugal MotorSports National OffRoad Championship Tavira Algarve

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Algarve Tour Travel Guide, information videos and photos of sports events in Portugal, the Algarve and Alentejo, near the municipality of Loulé, near Vilamoura, Quarteira, Quinta da Ombria, Querença, Quinta do Lago, Vale do Lobo Tavira, Albufeira, Faro and Almodovar

Algarve's Tourist Guide - Portugal National OffRoad Championship Startss in the Algarve: Baja Terras d'el Rei

Algarve's Tourist Guide, Baja Terras D'El Rey with new routes in the districts of Tavira, Castro Marim, Loulé, Vila Real de Santo António, Almodouvar, Mértola and Alcoutim and Vila Real de Santo Antonio, where Autos, motorcycles, quads and buggies are together for the first time on home soil this year.

Baja Terras d'el Rei with open enrollment

Missing two weeks for the next round of the Portugal's cross-country vehicle that meets in Tavira the various aspects of this modality.

Cars, motorcycles, quads and buggies are together for the first time on home soil this year.

Tavira becomes, thus meeting the best in the TT national.

The title match in the file begins seriously at 20 and 21 March with Miguel Barbosa, three-time national debut in the richly with the Racing Lancer which promises to fight the reigning champion.

Filipe Campos continues with the same team in a BMW X3 that has given him many joys.

The competition starts on Saturday with a double pass through an unprecedented super special after the Official Race Start, front of Mercado Municipal de Tavira (Tavira City Market).
The next day, new Tracks in the municipalities of Tavira, Castro Marim, Loulé, Vila Real de Santo António, Almodôvar, Mértola and Alcoutim.



Portugues OffRoad National Motorsports Championship starts in Tavira
The Baja Terras d'el Rei opens the OffRoad Portuguese National Championship of the Motorcycling Federation of Portugal, 20 and 21 March with motorcycles, quads and buggies.
A proof renewed 2010 edition brings changes in all aspects, starting, with the host of the event.

Everybody ready in Tavira to receive this inaugural CNTT (CNTT = Campeonato Nacional de Todo o Terreno, means, National OffRoad Championship) step. The Hotel Vila Galé receives the Secretariat and the Press Office of Baja Terras D'El Rey.

New paths in the municipalities of Tavira, Castro Marim, Loulé, Vila Real de Santo António, Moura, Beja and Alcoutim

The Baja Terras d'el Rei will have a more reduced program than in 2009, passing the checks for Saturday morning, a prologue and go without recognition twice in Saturday afternoon. On Sunday early morning, a selective section of 320 kms with three areas of assistance, complete the sports program.
The Baja Terras D'El Rey Motorsports Championchip podium ceremony and consecration of the winners are held in the early afternoon at the Republic square in Tavira.

Please note eligibility for KTM Trophy.
For the firt time,
the buggies will leave after the autos and not after the quads as usual.
The Baja Terras d'el Rei has the support of Carmi - Cooperativa Agrícola de Reguengos de Monsaraz with wines Terras d'el Rei and Monsaraz, of Camara Municipal de Tavira, Solverde, Vila Galé Tavira Hotels, Porta Nova and the Radio Gilão, as the Official Radio of the Event and XesEquipa - Xerox.

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Magniwork Energy internet scam



Internet fraudsters are raking in thousands of dollars a day with an elaborate scam selling magnetic perpetual motion machines that are claimed to produce infinite free energy.

Since spring this year an operation called Magniwork has been selling a $50 DIY guide to building a perpetual motion device at home. On their web-site the fraudsters claim the materials are available in any local hardware store for less than $100. One estimate puts sales of the guide as high as 5,000 copies a month, making the scam worth up to $3m a year.

The claims for Magniwork are advanced via an extensive Google advertising campaign, and a network of blogs, web-sites and reviews endorsing the product. They are given further credibility by a clip of film from Sky News Australia about plans for a similar product made by a legitimate if optimistic research company called Lutec. Lutec patented its technology in 19 countries in 1999, but the product has still not seen the light of day. Off-Grid has discovered that the clip is over 8 years old.

Perpetual motion machine

Magniwork which describes its product as ‘a magnetic power generator’ claims to have invented a revolutionary off-grid power source that uses magnets to “power itself and create energy by itself, without requiring solar energy, heat, water, coal or any kind of resource.” The web-site promises the device will generate perpetual energy which will “fully power your home for free.”

However even the idea of such a device is dismissed by trained physicists. “The little explanation they give on their website makes no sense to me,” said Gunnar Pruessner, a lecturer in physics at Imperial College London. “For starters it breaks with all we know about quantum physics since Dirac, which says that we cannot tap into zero point fluctuations or virtual particles.”

Priceless IP

He observed that if the claims were true, they would mark the biggest advance in science ever. “It would bring a world-wide socio-economic revolution with incalculable political consequences. So you have to ask why are they scuzzing around selling their priceless IP (intellectual property) for a few dollars?”

Made in Macedonia

The site gives no way of contacting Magniwork -other than to order the guide. But its legal disclaimer reveals that despite the .com web address which suggests a US-based company, Magniwork is in fact located in Macedonia, a tiny republic on the northern border of Greece in Europe. “This Agreement shall all be governed and construed in accordance with the laws of Macedonia applicable to agreements made and to be performed in Macedonia,” it reads. It has similarly proved difficult to identify the individuals behind the scheme. But one researcher claims to have written to the site’s web-master who referred in his reply to a man simply called “Igor”, the manual’s publisher.

Kernel of truth

Angry customers admit that the guide does contain kernels of truth. “Some of the suggestions in the e-book can reduce your home power consumption. For example, checking for air leaks, have better home insulation, servicing your air-conditioning unit or heate etc,”wrote one. But is it essentially amateurish and misleading, they say. “The whole “document” is 57 pages long and looks like something a kid in high school put together. The final “generator” is basically a magnet that is 2″ high sitting on a turntable that is 4″ high! They claim that its output is 24.5 Watts! That is 1/100th of what my house uses when the AC is on. It wouldn’t put out enough power to light up a standard light bulb,“ wrote another angry blogger. Fraudulent

Alternative energy expert Sterling D. Allan founder of The New Energy Congress has examined Magniwork’s claims. “Most of the 50+ page manual contains energy conservation tips that are based on well-established principles,” he said. But he points out that plans for the device are freely available elsewhere, they are based on other people’s work and he claims to have tried to contact people offering testimonials, without success. “The wording on their site still gives the reader the idea that the plans will result in a working free energy device but that is not the case. Such representation is fraud,” he concluded.

Although highly implausible, the idea of somehow harvesting magnetic power has intrigued scientists for over a century. It was first suggested by pioneering physicist Nicola Tesla in the nineteenth century. Australian company Lutec is still trying to perfect such a device. And U.S based based Magnetic Power Inc, headed by Mark Goldes, has claimed to be on the verge of launching a ‘Magnetic Power Module’ for at least six years. There is no suggestion that either Lutec or MPI are part of the scam.