Relative Gravitational Engine Theory

£15,000,000.00

(Used) Relative Gravitational Engine 

Theory by Jack Kerr 

G I Guides

When purchasing this item their is no right to refunds, several documents will be passed to you and the use of this should be used safely in accordance with any regulations of your country and with expert advice scientifically and theoretical science. 

Relative Gravity Engine – Theoretical Design & Concept Package

Available Now – Full Document Download

Unlock access to one of the most ambitious propulsion theories ever developed — the Relative Gravity Engine.

This downloadable package includes the full breakdown of a revolutionary, non-patented gravity-based propulsion concept. The engine is designed around a rotating, magnetised sphere filled with gas that, under controlled compression, produces interaction between opposing mass states. The document explores how this system could theoretically produce localised gravity, light, heat, and even temporal effects — all within a self-contained vacuum environment.

 

🧠 What You’re Getting:
• ✔️ Full theoretical proof of concept written by the originator
• ✔️ Detailed explanation of core mechanics, logic, and intent
• ✔️ Component summaries and visual references
• ✔️ Public domain timestamped theory unavailable for patent
• ✔️ Rights to explore, study, build, and expand upon the idea for non-commercial purposes

 

• ❌ What You’re Not Getting:

• 🚫 No patent, trademark, or IP ownership
• 🚫 No rights to commercialise, redistribute, or rebrand the concept
• 🚫 No exclusive access — this is a public domain release, made intentionally open

 

This is a one-of-a-kind opportunity to study or use a first-of-its-kind concept that merges gravitational theory, electromagnetic interaction, and thermal-photonic energy systems — made public intentionally to keep it free from corporate or governmental lockdown.

 

🔒 Legal Note:

All documents and written content remain © [Jack Kerr / GI Guides]. This download is for personal and educational use only. Any use beyond that (e.g. commercial build, licensing, redistribution, or rebranding) requires explicit written permission from the author.