Easy Power Plan Review: “Inside the Members Area” Tour

Easy Power Plan Review

You’re here because you’ve seen the ads for the Easy Power Plan. You know the promise: a simple, sub-$100 device you can build in an afternoon that slashes your electric bill to zero and provides total energy independence.

But you’re smart enough to know that most things online, especially in the “free energy” space, are overhyped fluff, pseudoscience, or outright scams. You’re right to be skeptical.

I decided to buy it, log in, and tear it apart so you don’t have to guess. I’m not here to sell you a dream. I’m here to show you the actual PDFs, the real video tutorials, and the exact component lists behind the paywall. I’m here to tell you, based on the laws of physics and practical DIY experience, what this system actually is, what it can and cannot do, and whether it’s worth your time and money.

Spoiler Alert: The product, as delivered, is legit in the sense that you receive a detailed set of plans. However, the core premise of a self-sustaining “overunity” generator is scientifically impossible. What you are actually building is a fascinating—and potentially dangerous—pulse motor experiment. It will not power your home for free. If you understand that going in, there is value here for a specific type of person.

Who is Ryan Taylor?

Forget the emotional story of the flooded home and the shivering daughter. That’s copywriting. Let’s talk credentials.

Ryan Taylor presents himself as a 45-year-old geography teacher from Memphis. There is no verifiable public profile for a “Ryan Taylor” as a notable figure in electrical engineering, physics, or sustainable energy innovation. The narrative is a classic, empathy-driven backstory common in direct-response marketing for digital products.

More importantly, the technical work is attributed to his late uncle, a “pioneer in the electric car field,” and his uncle’s friend, Jason Newman, a supposed engineer. These individuals are not cited, referenced, or verifiable. The authority is transferred to unnamed, unverifiable experts.

Conclusion: Ryan Taylor is likely a persona. This product is not the brainchild of a publicly accountable engineer or scientist whose reputation is on the line. It is a product of the ClickBank/digital info-product ecosystem. This matters because when you have technical questions or the device doesn’t perform as the sales video claims, you are not emailing a PhD in electromagnetism. You are likely emailing a support desk for a digital product company.

The Verdict on Authority: The credibility comes from the detail of the plans, not the creator’s biography. You are buying a set of instructions, not mentorship from an expert. Adjust your expectations accordingly.

 

📂 Access Member’s Area:

⬇️ Download Easy Power Plan

Click above to access the Easy Power Plan member’s area.

✅ Use the 60-day guarantee as your safety net to review the plans in full.

The “Over-The-Shoulder” Walkthrough (The Core Content Exposed)

I’m logged in. The “Gold Member’s Area” is a simple portal with download links and a video series. Let’s dissect exactly what you get, module by module, PDF by PDF.

Primary Digital Product:  (28 Pages)

Module 1: The “Secret” Revealed & Core Concepts

  • The Agenda: This isn’t a video module; it’s the introduction of the PDF. It immediately introduces the term “Overunity” (Page 2). It claims the design allows a small current to be “multiplied 6 times… without losing amps or volts.”

  • The “Golden Nugget”: The explicit statement of the core (flawed) principle. It tells you exactly what they think the device does: create more energy than it consumes.

  • The Application: None. This is purely conceptual pseudoscience.

  • Critique: This is the first and biggest red flag. The First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics state energy cannot be created or destroyed and systems move toward disorder (entropy). Claiming 600% efficiency isn’t revolutionary; it’s impossible. The PDF literally says, “Without going into scientific details furthermore…” This is the oldest trick in the “free energy” book: dismiss established science to sell a miracle.

Module 2: Schematic & Component Breakdown (Pages 3-8)

  • The Agenda: Detailed circuit diagram, list of electronic components.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: Specific part numbers. They don’t hide behind vague terms. They list:

    • MIC4422 & MIC4421 MOSFET Drivers: These are real, fast-switching driver chips.

    • IRFP460 N-Channel MOSFETs: These are the power switches.

    • A1120-LUA-T Hall Effect Sensors: These detect magnet position to time the pulses.

    • The “MMG-041” Control Board: This is the mystery. It’s not a standard off-the-shelf board. The schematic shows you how to build it, but they present it as a component you might seek.

  • The Application: You can take this list to DigiKey or Mouser and buy every transistor, resistor, capacitor, and diode needed.

  • Critique: The schematic reveals the truth: This is a pulse motor circuit. It’s a well-known hobbyist design (similar to a Bedini motor). It uses a battery to send timed pulses to coils, which repel magnets on a rotor to keep it spinning. It is not a generator schematic. It’s a motor driver schematic.

Module 3: Mechanical Assembly – The Rotor & Stator (Pages 9-18)

  • The Agenda: Step-by-step instructions for building the physical device: cutting the Plexiglas rotor discs, gluing them, attaching 12 Neodymium magnets, winding 8 coils with 500 meters of copper wire, building the wooden frame.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: Extremely detailed mechanical instructions with dimensions. They show you exactly how to space the magnets, how to mount the bearings, and how to align the coils.

  • The Application: If you have a workshop (jigsaw, drill, epoxy), you can follow these steps and build a very clean-looking pulse motor rotor assembly.

  • Critique:

    1. Safety Hazard: Gluing heavy neodymium magnets to a Plexiglas (acrylic) rotor is dangerous. Acrylic is brittle. At the high RPMs needed to generate any meaningful power, centrifugal force could cause a catastrophic failure, shattering the rotor and turning the magnets into high-speed projectiles. This is a serious, unaddressed risk.

    2. Labor Intensive: Hand-winding 8 coils with 300+ turns each is a massive, tedious undertaking. It will take hours.

    3. Cost: The materials list is not “$106” unless you have most of this in a junkyard. New magnets, copper wire, Plexiglas, bearings, and lumber will easily cost $200-$300+.

Module 4: Connecting to Generation & The “Test Panel” (Pages 19-25)

  • The Agenda: How to connect your spinning pulse motor to an automotive alternator. Instructions for wiring the output to a bank of light bulbs via a “test panel” to demonstrate power generation.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: The plan to integrate a standard alternator is the link between the “motor” and the “generator” claim.

  • The Application: You could, in theory, bolt an alternator to the frame, connect it via a belt to the pulse motor rotor, and wire the alternator output to some 12V light bulbs.

  • Critique: This is where the physics collapses.

    • An automotive alternator has significant magnetic cogging torque (resistance). It takes substantial mechanical force to spin it.

    • The weak, battery-powered pulse motor you just built will struggle immensely to turn that alternator, especially under the load of light bulbs.

    • Lenz’s Law: When the alternator produces current, it creates a magnetic field that opposes the motion spinning it. More load (more lights) = more resistance.

    • The Result: The system will either stall, or your 12V battery (powering the pulse motor circuit) will be drained extremely quickly as it fights to keep the alternator spinning against this load. The lights will come on, but the energy is coming from the rapid depletion of the battery, not from thin air.

Module 5: Video Tutorial Supplement – The “Over-The-Shoulder” Build (The Actual Core Instruction)

Video Tutorial Supplement

Forget everything you just read about the PDF being the core product. The PDF is a reference manual. The video series is the program. This is where Ryan (or the actual builder) takes you by the hand and shows you, in real-time, how to assemble the device. The PDF has the theory and diagrams; the videos have the dirty hands, the mistakes, the sounds, and the tangible reality of the build. This is the most valuable part of the offer.

Here is a forensic breakdown of every video module:

Video 01: Tools And Components

Tools And Components

  • The Agenda: A physical showcase of every single item you need. You see the actual jigsaw, the specific spool of 20-gauge enameled copper wire, the exact bearings, the pile of lumber, the tub of epoxy, and all the electronic components laid out on a table.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: Visual confirmation of scale and quality. You see that the “500m of copper wire” is a massive, heavy spool. You see the neodymium magnets are substantial, dangerous chunks. This video immediately corrects any illusion that this is a “small” project. It also shows you the real-world versions of the schematic symbols from the PDF.

  • The Application: Use this as your definitive shopping list. Pause the video and match each item. It eliminates the guesswork of “is this the right kind of bearing?”

  • Critique: While comprehensive, it glosses over the total cost. Seeing all these high-quality components laid out together subconsciously reinforces the investment you’re about to make—an investment the sales video downplays.

Video 02: Building Coil

Building Coil

  • The Agenda: A real-time demonstration of winding one of the eight stator coils. You see the builder create a simple jig from wood, methodically count turns, and secure the coil.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: The winding technique is everything. The tightness, the layering, and the direction of the wind are critical for coil efficiency. Seeing it done slowly is invaluable. You also see how tedious this process is for a single coil, driving home the 8-10 hour commitment for this step alone.

  • The Application: You replicate this jig and process exactly. This video alone prevents the most common beginner mistake: loose, messy coils that kill performance.

  • Critique: The video shows one coil. It doesn’t show the monotony of doing the remaining seven. It’s a snapshot of a marathon task.

Video 03 & 04: Building Rotor & Finalizing Coil and Rotor

Building-Rotor-Finalizing-Coil-

  • The Agenda: Cutting the Plexiglas discs, gluing them together to form the thick rotor, marking precise magnet positions, and epoxying the powerful neodymium magnets in place. Followed by securing the finished coils into the wooden stator frame and preparing the rotor shaft and bearings.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: Magnet placement precision. A few millimeters off and the magnetic pulses won’t align with the coils, causing the motor to stutter or not run. The video shows the careful measuring and the use of a guide jig. You also see the substantial use of thick, high-strength epoxy to hold the magnets—a tacit admission of the immense centrifugal forces at play.

  • The Application: This is the heart of the mechanical build. You follow the measuring and gluing steps to the letter. The visual guide is essential for aligning the rotor and stator.

  • Critique: The safety warning is insufficient. The narrator mentions “being careful,” but does not explicitly state: “If this epoxy bond fails at high RPM, these magnets will become deadly projectiles. Wear safety glasses and consider a protective shield.” This is a major omission.

Video 05: Coils And Rotor Assembling

Coils And Rotor Assembling

  • The Agenda: Mounting the rotor into the frame bearings and positioning the stator coil assembly around it with perfect, even air gap clearance on all sides.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: Achieving the perfect air gap. The builder uses non-magnetic shims (like plastic cards) to ensure the spinning rotor magnets don’t scrape the coils. You see the painstaking adjustment process. This gap is critical for reducing drag and preventing catastrophic failure.

  • The Application: Teaches you the final mechanical assembly and fine-tuning before any electronics are connected.

  • Critique: This is where the project starts to look impressively professional. The danger is that this polished look can seduce you into believing the underlying principle must be equally sound.

Video 06 & 07: Control Board Assembling & Coil Connection

Control Board Assembling & Coil Connection

  • The Agenda: Soldering all the components from the schematic (MOSFETs, driver chips, resistors, capacitors, Hall sensors) onto a perforated circuit board. Then, connecting the eight bulky coil leads to the correct terminals on the board.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: You see the “MMG-041 Control Board” come to life. It’s not a mysterious black box; it’s a hand-soldered hobbyist circuit. The video clarifies the wiring order for the coils, which is confusing in the PDF diagram. You see the Hall sensor being positioned and adjusted to trigger the pulses.

  • The Application: This is your soldering guide. You match your board to the one on screen. The coil connection sequence is vital; getting this wrong will prevent the motor from starting.

  • Critique: This reveals the project’s true nature: a complex electronic hobbyist build. There is no magic chip. It’s a standard pulse motor circuit. For an electronics novice, this is the most intimidating and error-prone part.

Video 08: Final Assembly

Video 08: Final Assembly

  • The Agenda: Connecting the control board to the 12V battery, linking the alternator to the rotor via a belt, and making all final electrical connections to the “test panel” (the light bulb board).

  • The “Golden Nugget”: The moment of truth—startup. You see the builder connect the battery. The rotor begins to turn, slowly at first, then faster. The distinctive click-click-click of the Hall sensor and MOSFET pulses is audible. The belt drives the alternator.

  • The Application: Your final wiring checklist and startup procedure.

  • Critique: The video builds dramatic tension and culminates in the device spinning and lights glowing. It creates the powerful illusion of success. What it doesn’t show is a voltmeter/ammeter proving the input vs. output, or a long-duration shot showing the system running for hours without the battery voltage dropping.

Video 09: Testing

Video 09: Testing

  • The Agenda: Demonstrating the output. Different loads (more light bulbs) are connected to the alternator output.

  • The “Golden Nugget”: Visual “proof” of generation. You see 6 bulbs, then 8 bulbs, glowing brightly. The narrator emphasizes the system is “powering itself.”

  • The Application: Shows you what a successful build looks like when operational.

  • Critique: This is the culmination of the sales pitch within the product. It is designed to make you, the builder, feel like a genius who has beaten the system. The critical flaw is omitted data. There is no measurement of the battery’s state of charge before, during, and after the test. The bright lights are compelling, but they are powered by the conversion of battery energy, not by breaking the laws of physics. The video expertly exploits the visceral impact of visual proof over analytical measurement.

Summary of the Video Series’ Real Value:
This is a competently produced, detailed, step-by-step DIY assembly guide. If the promise was “build a fascinating pulse motor,” it would be a 10/10 product. The instruction is legitimate and would allow a determined person to replicate the device exactly as shown.

The Fatal Disconnect:
The videos are instructions for Building Device A (a pulse motor). They are sold under the promise of Device B (a self-sustaining generator). The videos bridge this gap by showing the beautiful, spinning result and the glowing lights, hoping you won’t notice that the fundamental scientific premise was swapped out from under you back in Module 1

The Tech Stack & Tools Required

Buying the Easy Power Plan for $49 is just the entry fee. Here’s what else you absolutely need to build this:

Tools:

  • Jigsaw or rotary tool for cutting Plexiglas.

  • Power Drill & various bits.

  • Soldering Iron, solder, helping hands.

  • Multimeter.

  • Basic woodworking tools (saw, sander, clamps).

  • Safety Gear: Safety glasses, heavy gloves (for magnets).

Materials:

  • Neodymium Magnets (12): $50 – $100.

  • Enameled Copper Wire (500m): $60 – $120.

  • Plexiglas Sheets: $30 – $50.

  • Automotive Alternator: $40 (scrapyard) – $150 (new).

  • 12V Deep Cycle Battery (SLA1160): $80 – $120.

  • All Electronic Components (MOSFETs, Drivers, Hall Sensors, etc.): $50 – $80.

  • Lumber, Bearings, Bolts, Belts, Epoxy: $50 – $75.

Realistic Total Investment: $400 to $700+, assuming you have none of the tools or materials. This is a far cry from the “$106 at Home Depot” claim, which assumes you find most parts for free.

How the Plan “Minimizes” Cost: It suggests scrounging junkyards for alternators and using scrap wood. The component list is precise, so you don’t buy the wrong parts. But the financial reality is stark: this is a significant hobbyist project, not a cheap home fix.

Get The Easy Power Plan »

Click here to access the member’s area.
60-Day Money-Back Safety Net Included.

The “Bonus” Section: A Forensic Audit & Categorical Takedown

Let’s cut through the volume and analyze what these 27 items actually represent. This isn’t a treasure trove; it’s a carefully curated mix of a few relevant guides surrounded by a sea of filler material designed to overwhelm you with perceived value. Here is the unambiguous audit, categorized for clarity.

Category 1: The Core “Free Energy” Archive (The Niche Draw)

The Core "Free Energy" Archive (The Niche Draw)

These are the bonuses that target the true believer or curious researcher. They are digital documents, typically PDFs, detailing other famous and controversial devices from the perpetual motion/free energy community.

 

  • Meyer Magnet Motor – Plans for Stanley Meyer’s infamous “water-fueled” system. Verdict: Historical curiosity. Never independently verified, shrouded in conspiracy theories. For research only.

  •  Power From Smith Generator – Likely another pulsed or reluctance motor variant. Verdict: Redundant. Similar concepts to the main product.

  • The Adams Motor – A famous design for a claimed “permanent magnet motor” by Robert Adams. Verdict: A blueprint for debate. Heavily discussed, rarely successfully replicated as a net-positive generator. Pure theory.

  • Charles Flynn’s Permanent Magnet Motor – Another patented magnetic motor design. Verdict: See above. It’s another entry in the catalog of “could-it-work?” designs sold as blueprints.

Category 1 Summary: This is the “rabbit hole” package. If you’re buying the Easy Power Plan because you’re fascinated by the idea of suppressed tech, these bonuses feed that interest. They have zero practical, buildable value for solving your energy bills. They are academic.

Category 2: Legitimate, Small-Scale DIY Science & Survival (The Actual Value)

Legitimate, Small-Scale DIY Science & Surviva

These are guides for real, physics-based projects. Their scope and output are often wildly exaggerated, but the core principles are sound.

  • Seebeck Generator – Instructions for a thermoelectric generator (heat to electricity). Verdict: Legitimate science, tiny output. You’ll build a device that produces milliwatts, not meaningful power. A great science fair project.

  • Cook From Sun Energy & #9: Sun Heat DIY – Plans for solar ovens and solar air/water heaters. Verdict: The most practical bonuses in the stack. These work, are useful for off-grid living or emergencies, and are based on proven solar thermal principles.

  • Homemade Copper Solar Cells – Creating a primitive photovoltaic cell from copper sheet. Verdict: Educational experiment only. You will not create a functional solar panel. You will demonstrate the photovoltaic effect with micro-amperes of current.

  • Build Your Own Wind Generator – A guide to building a small-scale wind turbine. Verdict: A serious, complex project. This is potentially valuable if you have land and consistent wind. It’s a separate, major undertaking.

  • Make Your Own Light Bulbs – Likely instructions for simple carbon filament bulbs. Verdict: A neat historical experiment. Not a practical lighting solution.

Category 2 Summary: Here is where you find real hobbyist value. These are the bonuses a prepper, homesteader, or science teacher might genuinely use. They acknowledge real-world physics (solar thermal, thermoelectric, wind). They do not, however, compensate for the main product’s flaw.

Category 3: Generic Efficiency & Conservation Guides (The Filler)

Generic Efficiency & Conservation Guides

This is bulk, low-quality PLR (Private Label Rights) content. You could find superior versions of this information for free in 10 minutes on .gov energy sites or YouTube.

  • Reducing Energy Waste

  • 5 cheap or free energy sources for a crisis

  • Common Sense Guide To Heating Your Home

  • Drivers’ Safety First

  • Saving Money On Fuel Prices

  • Save Money And Conserve Gas!

Category 3 Summary: Pure padding. This content exists solely to inflate the bonus count. Its quality is low, its advice is generic, and its relevance to building a power generator is tangential at best.

Category 4: Completely Off-Topic PLR Material (The “Why Is This Here?”)

This content is so unrelated it reveals the bonus section as a scraped-together library of cheap digital products.

  • Electric Lighting History (A brief report)

  • Green House (Generic gardening guide)

  • The Art of Wood Working, Newnie’s Wood Working, Complete Wood Finishing Guide (Basic carpentry)

  • DIY Secrets, : FIX IT, Remodeling Tools and Installation Tips (General home repair)

  • Home Security EXPOSED (Basic safety tips)

Category 4 Summary: This is digital junk drawer material. It is included under the thin premise that “you need woodworking to build the frame” or “a secure home is important.” It has no business in a premium energy product offer. Its presence degrades the overall credibility of the bundle.

Category 5: The Access (Not a Bonus)

  • Gold Members Area – This is not a bonus. It is the product delivery portal. Calling it a bonus is marketing sleight of hand.

Final Bonus Valuation: The Brutal Math

The Marketing Claim: “27 Bonuses Worth Over $2,000!”
The Reality:

  • Core Video Course (The Actual Product): Valued at the purchase price – $49.

  • Useful Category 2 Bonuses (Solar Oven, Wind Gen, etc.): As standalone, low-production-value guides, these might be worth $20-$30 total to the right hobbyist.

  • Category 1 “Archive” Bonuses (Magnet Motors): For a researcher, these compiled documents have a niche reference value of ~$10.

  • Categories 3 & 4 (The Filler): $0. This is free, repackaged content.

Honest Total Value of the Entire Package for a DIY Enthusiast: $79 – $89.
Cost of the Front-End Offer: $49.

The Conclusion on Bonuses: The bonuses do not make this a “mathematical no-brainer.” They provide context and a few legitimate side projects. The handful of valuable ones are for completely different, smaller-scale endeavors like solar cooking.

The only “bonus” that truly mitigates your risk is the 60-Day Money-Back Guarantee. That allows you to audit this entire library—and the core product’s flawed premise—and walk away unscathed.

Do not buy for the bonuses. Buy only if, after this audit, you still want the core video build series for the Easy Power Plan as a complex DIY project, knowing its scientific limitations. The rest is merely backdrop.

Who Should NOT Buy This? (The Filter)

BE HONEST WITH YOURSELF.

DO NOT BUY THE EASY POWER PLAN IF:

  • You believe in “free energy” or “overunity” devices. You will waste money and reinforce a misunderstanding of physics.

  • You need a reliable, set-and-forget power source for your home or emergency preparedness. This device will fail you. Buy a gas generator or invest in real solar.

  • You have zero electronics or mechanical experience. This is an intermediate-to-advanced DIY project with safety risks.

  • You expect a 600% return on energy. You will be deeply disappointed.

  • You are looking for a quick, sub-$100 fix to your power bill. The build is neither quick nor cheap.

BUY THE EASY POWER PLAN ONLY IF:

  • You are a hobbyist, tinkerer, or physics teacher looking for a challenging, educational project to demonstrate electromagnetism, pulse motors, and the practical challenges of energy conversion.

  • You understand and accept that you are building a battery-powered motor experiment, not a magical generator.

  • You have the budget, tools, workshop space, and patience for a complex build.

  • You can approach it with a skeptical, experimental mindset and take appropriate safety precautions.


Pricing, Refunds, & The “Loophole”

  • The Price: The front-end offer is $49 (down from a claimed $149).

  • The Guarantee: 60-Day “No Questions Asked” Money-Back Guarantee. This is processed via the ClickBank platform, which has a strong reputation for honoring refunds.

  • The Safety Net: This is the single most important factor. The risk is technically on them. You can buy, download the PDF, study it, even start buying parts, and if you have a moment of clarity and realize this isn’t for you, you can request a refund within 60 days. This makes a “try and see” approach low financial risk.

Important Note: The sales video and page may feature one-time offers (OTOs) for “premium components” or “advanced blueprints” after you purchase. These are not required to build the basic plan. The core PDF is complete.


Extensive FAQ (The Objection Killer)

1. Is the Easy Power Plan a scam?

It is not a scam in the legal sense of taking money and delivering nothing. You receive detailed digital products. It is, however, based on a scientifically impossible premise (overunity). It’s a misleadingly marketed hobby plan.

2. Does the device actually work?

The device you build will spin and can light up bulbs if connected to an alternator. However, it does so by rapidly depleting the 12V battery that powers its circuit. It is not self-sustaining. It works as a motor, not as a net-positive generator.

3. Is it “saturated”?

The digital product market is full of similar plans. The design isn’t unique. Your ability to build it isn’t affected by how many people buy the PDF.

4. How much time per day do I actually need to build it?

This is a 40-60 hour project for a competent DIYer, spread over several weeks. Coil winding alone can take 15-20 hours.

5. What is the difference between this and a real solar panel system?

Solar panels convert sunlight (real external energy) directly into electricity with well-understood physics. The Easy Power Plan attempts (and fails) to create energy from nothing within a closed system. Solar is a capital investment with a predictable return. This is a hobby expense.

6. Are there hidden upsells?

There are likely one-time offers for related products after purchase. You do not need them to complete the core project in the main PDF.

7. Can I power my entire house with this?

Absolutely not. Even if the physics were sound, the scale shown is for a small demonstration. Scaling it would be monumentally complex and dangerous.

8. Is it dangerous to build?

Yes. High-speed spinning rotors, brittle acrylic, powerful magnets that can shatter if they snap together, and the potential to wire 110V outputs incorrectly create real risks of injury, property damage, or electrocution.

9. What happens when the battery dies?

The device stops. You then recharge the battery from the grid, a solar panel, or your car—defeating the entire purpose of “energy independence.”

10. Can I modify it to make it work?

Hobbyists have been trying to modify pulse motors into generators for decades without producing a verified, net-positive result. You are welcome to experiment, but you are in uncharted, theoretically impossible territory.

11. Is Ryan Taylor a real person?

Unverifiable. The persona serves the sales narrative. The technical details likely came from a different source, possibly compiled from existing open-source hobbyist designs.

12. What’s inside the “Gold Member’s Area”?

Direct download links for the main PDF, supplementary video tutorials, the bonus reports, and the component vendor list. It’s a simple download portal.

13. Do I need an engineering degree to build this?

No, but you need strong intermediate DIY skills in soldering, basic woodworking, and mechanical assembly, plus the ability to carefully follow technical diagrams.

14. Could this work with a better battery or stronger magnets?

No. The flaw is not in the components but in the fundamental law of conservation of energy. No component upgrade can bypass thermodynamics.

15. Why do the lights turn on in the videos then?

Because the device is converting the chemical energy in the battery into electrical energy for the lights via a very inefficient mechanical process. The battery is being drained.

16. Is this similar to a “Bedini Motor”?

Yes, essentially. It is a pulse motor variant. Bedini motors are also presented as “free energy” devices but are understood by the serious hobby community as battery-conditioning circuits or interesting experiments, not generators.

17. What is the “MMG-041” control board?

A custom name for the pulse motor driver circuit shown in the schematic. You have to build it yourself from the listed components.

18. Is the 60-day guarantee real?

Yes, via ClickBank. It’s a standard and reliable refund policy for digital products.

19. Could this be used as a backup power source?

It is an extremely unreliable and inefficient backup. A $500 gas generator is infinitely more practical and reliable for emergency power.

20. Final, blunt answer: Should I buy this to save money on my bill?

No. You will not save money. You will spend hundreds on parts and countless hours to build a machine that increases your electricity consumption (by charging its battery from the wall).


Final Verdict: Is Easy Power Plan a Scam or a Savior?

Pros vs. Cons Table

PROS CONS
Extremely Detailed Plans: The PDF is comprehensive with clear schematics and mechanical drawings. False Premise: Based on the impossible concept of “overunity,” making its core promise invalid.
Real Hobbyist Project: For the right person, it’s a challenging and educational build. Significant Hidden Cost: Real build cost is $400+, not $106.
Specific Part Numbers: Eliminates guesswork in sourcing electronic components. Major Safety Risks: High-speed acrylic rotor, powerful magnets, high-voltage potential.
60-Day Money-Back Guarantee: Lowers the financial risk of trying it. Extremely Labor Intensive: Hours and hours of coil winding and precise assembly.
Will Not Achieve Stated Goal: It will not reduce your power bill or provide energy independence.

The Final Call

The Easy Power Plan is not a savior for your energy bills. It is also not a scam in the traditional sense. It exists in a gray area: a well-documented, yet deceptively marketed, hobbyist project for building a pulse motor.

If you are sitting on the fence, here is the reality:

You can spend the next 6 months researching “free energy,” watching YouTube videos, and wondering if this is the answer… or you can spend $49, download the PDF, and in one afternoon of reading, understand exactly what it is.

The 60-day guarantee is your safety net. You can audit the plans yourself, see the component list, and make an informed decision about whether you want to undertake this as a pure experiment and learning experience.

Do not buy it to save money.
Do not buy it for emergency backup.
Buy it only if you want a complex, potentially dangerous, and ultimately futile physics project to tinker with in your garage.

The choice is now fully informed.

 

⚡ Download Easy Power Plan

Risk-Free Trial: Use the 60-day guarantee as your safety net to review the plans in full.

How Useful Was This Post?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 5 / 5. Vote count: 1

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.