Veljko Milković

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Veljko Milković in his laboratory
Veljko Milković in his laboratory

Veljko Milković (Serbian Cyrillic: Вељко Милковић) (born November 13, 1949, Subotica, Yugoslavia) is an inventor from Novi Sad, Serbia. Milković is active in ecological research, as well as amateur archeology and free energy movement, and wrote a number of popular books in these areas. For his work he received several awards, and is also a member of the Serbian Academy of Innovation Sciences from Belgrade, a group of 20 inventors[1].

Contents

[edit] Early years

As a boy,[2] Veljko Milković lived in Telep, suburban part of Novi Sad (Serbia). At that time, life was hard, but social life was highly developed. Children did not have toys, there was no television, and other passive forms of entertainment. Children created their own world. A large number of children gathered every day around toys they made themselves. One day, Veljko also had an idea – that was his first invention – to make a vehicle that would move on its own. He put a small plank on the ground, which leaned on two small and one bigger ball. He put a glass stopper on the plank. When out of balance, the stopper could oscillate for a time, and centrifugal force moved the plank in direction of two smaller balls. The working principle of this machine is the same as with his later invention: “Cart with a pendulum“. In 1954, at the time of his first invention, he was only 5 years old, and the “Cart with a pendulum“ that have wheels instead of balls was invented when he was 43, in 1992. This model was the basis for the books in which he talks about the antigravitational motor. It seems that the event with a plank and balls predestined Veljko Milković to be the inventor.

]</ref> approved patents, some of which have been in use[3] for years. So far he wrote 11 books[4] that were the inspiration for couple feature and documentary films. Moreover, he has received many domestic and international awards[5] for his work spanning over many decades. -->

The research work of Veljko Milković followed a single line since he was five, when, during play, he made a first model of two-stage oscillator. Most of his later inventions, which were technically much more advanced, were based on two-stage oscillators.

[edit] Inventions and research

Veljko Milković has registered around 110 inventions with the Intellectual Property Office[6] in Belgrade (Serbia). He is presently in possession of 22 patents.[7]

[edit] Ecological innovations

He invented a self-heating eco-house and a number of ecological innovations (autonomous battery charger, polythene greenhouses and greenhouses with reflecting surfaces, mushroom gardens, project "Forest for food production", eco objects (eco barns, curing shed for smaller and larger animals etc.), construction, mushroom garden and greenhouse with reflecting surfaces[8] (mushroom gardens for growing bukovače near Čenej and Petrovaradin, Serbia, were built), business and housing objects based on soil protection and reflecting surfaces, facility for purification (distillation) and desalination of salt water and polluted water, innovations for fish ponds, etc.),[9] which also have been in use for a long time. According to his drawings, many such eco-houses have been built in Novi Sad, Sombor, Zaječar, Ljig (Serbia)... He has taken part in about 30 scientific gatherings[10] in the field of energetics and ecology. Some of his engineering and ecological projects are inspired by Petrovaradin fortress he explores.

[edit] Applied inventions

Several of his inventions are related to simple things for everyday use, like an autonomous battery charger or a line of universal tools.

[edit] Free energy

With some of his inventions, Milkovic participates in the free energy movement, which is sometimes classified as a pseudoscience[11].

His basic invention in this category is what he calls impulse-gravitational machine, a kind of pendulum which he claims can produce more energy than it receives (which, if true, would be an effective perpetuum mobile), possible due to his additions to the Newton's laws. Among applications he envisions are pendulum powered machines and carts which should be self-moving.[12]

The invention from 1954 evolved with time. Milković invented "Pendulum with a ball and a weight" in 1963 and "Seesaw with springs and a ball" in 1966. From 1969 to 1971 he was developing the model of the "Pendulum with springs and a ball". The last model connected to the invention from 1954 was the already mentioned patent: "Cart with a pendulum", from 1992.

[edit] Amateur archeology

Among Veljko's interests is exploration of the Petrovaradin fortress in the city of Novi Sad. He claims to have discovered a pattern in its subterranean labyrinth with ”↑”, ”Y” and ”T” crossroads which enables him to examine the fortress safely.[13] For his exploration of the fortress, he received a note of thanks from the Museum of Novi Sad[14].

In 1983, Veljko Milković and Srećko Drk founded ”The club of friends of Petrovaradin fortress” within ”Vladimir Nazor” library in Petrovaradin. In 1997, he announced the book entitled ”Mysteries of Petrovaradin fortress”, which was published as a feuilleton, a script and a book. That was the first time that the gap in our literature about Petrovaradin fortress and its underground has been filled. In his numerous lectures and during short excursions he talked about dangers, but also about great tourist potential of Petrovaradin, Fruška Gora, Srem (Serbia) and the central part of the Danube-basin.[citation needed]

Veljko also possesses various artifacts he found in Danube basin; he relates some of them to a prehistoric civilisation which lived in Vojvodina, which he claims may have even discovered laser[15].

[edit] Awards and acknowledgements

Among various domestic and international awards, he has received ”November charter of the city of Novi Sad”[16][17] in 2002 for the remarkable contribution in the field of ecology and energetics as well as in 2002 a gold medal[18] of Novi Sad fair for the invention hand water pump with pendulum. In 2006 he became the academician of Serbian Academy of Innovation Sciences from Belgrade (Serbia) and academician of Academy of Inventors of Serbia from Belgrade (Serbia).

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Books

  • ”Solarne zemunice - dom budućnosti” (Solar Sod Houses – The House of the Future) (1983)
  • ”Ekološke kuće” (Ecological Houses) (1991 – printed in four unedited editions)
  • ”Šume za proizvodnju hrane” (Forests For Food Production) (1992 – translated into Esperanto the same year)
  • ”Ka antigravitaciji - kompaktna vozila” (Towards Anti-gravitation – compact vehicles) (1994)
  • ”Antigravitacioni motor” / ”Anti-gravity Motor” (1996 – with translation into English)
  • ”Perpetuum mobile” (Perpetuum Mobile) (2001)
  • ”Petrovaradin kroz legendu i stvarnost” (Petrovaradin Through Legend and Reality) (2001)
  • ”Petrovaradin i Srem - misterija prošlosti” (Petrovaradin and Srem – mystery of the past) (2003)
  • ”Svet misterija - novi pogledi” (The world of mysteries – new views) (2004) [19]
  • ”Petrovaradinska tvrđava - podzemlje i nadzemlje” (Petrovaradin Fortress – over and underground) (2005)
  • ”Novi turistički potencijali” (New Tourism Potentials) (2006)
  • ”Petrovaradinska tvrđava - kosmički lavirint otkrića” (Petrovaradin Fortress – cosmic labyrinth of discoveries) (2007)

[edit] Feuilletons and notes

  • "Niskoenergetski život" (Low-energy Life), (1996),
  • "Energetski potencijal rečnog zaliva" (Energetic Potential of the River Bay), (1996),
  • "Prethodna civilizacija" (Previous Civilisation), (1999),
  • "Misterije Petrovaradinske tvrđave" (Mysteries of Petrovaradin Fortress), (1999),
  • "Petrovaradinska tvrđava između legende i stvarnosti" (Petrovaradin Fortress Between Legend and Reality), (1999) and
  • "Nestale civilizacije" (Missing Civilisations), (2000).

[edit] References

[edit] General references

[edit] External links