My PG&E Electricity Costs Dropped From $270 to $90 — While My Neighbors Panic About What’s Coming
With Iran’s Strait of Hormuz situation getting worse by the week, I’m glad I stopped depending on the grid. Here’s exactly what I did — and how my electricity costs dropped over $180 a month.
I’ll be straight with you. I’m not a writer. I’m a guy who spent 22 years swinging a hammer and watching energy bills eat more of my paycheck every single year. When my PG&E electricity charge hit $270 last February I sat at my kitchen table for a good ten minutes just staring at it. That was the moment I decided I was done being held hostage by the power company.
This March? $90 in electricity. Same house. Same family. Same Northern California weather. A drop of over $180 a month — and I haven’t changed a single usage habit. Same appliances, same thermostat setting, same everything.
See Exactly How I Cut My Bill by $180/Month
The full breakdown — what the device is, why it works, and step-by-step instructions so you can build one yourself.
How I Did ItYou’ve seen the news. Iranian forces have been escalating pressure on the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow waterway that roughly 20% of the world’s oil supply passes through. Energy analysts are already warning of price spikes across natural gas, heating oil, and electricity generation.
California’s grid is already stretched thin. When energy prices spike at the source, they multiply by the time they reach your meter. Families who depend entirely on the grid are about to find out just how exposed they are.
I’m not. And if you keep reading, you won’t be either.
How I Found This Thing
I’ve been into preparedness for years. Generator in the garage, water storage, the whole nine yards. But a generator means fuel, and fuel means dependence on the supply chain. I wanted something that worked without any of that — something compact, quiet, and completely off-book from the power company.
A buddy who does electrical work sent me a link to a presentation about an energy device built around a principle that’s been documented since the early 1900s — something most engineers know exists but nobody bothered turning into a practical home application. I almost ignored it. But there was something about the underlying physics that clicked for me. It’s not about generating energy from nothing — it’s about what happens when you configure a specific type of coil in a specific way. The output surprised every engineer who first saw it demonstrated.
Someone finally packaged it into step-by-step instructions any regular person can follow.
“I built it on a Saturday afternoon. Parts from the hardware store, nothing exotic. By the next billing cycle, my meter was moving noticeably slower. I’ve since built a larger version and the results keep compounding.”
Here’s How I Did It
Before I tell you what to do, watch this. It explains the actual science behind why this works — and more importantly, why you’ve never heard of it until now. The history alone is worth 20 minutes of your time.
What I Wish Someone Had Told Me First
Look, I don’t know how bad this Iran situation is going to get. Could blow over tomorrow. Could also send energy prices through the roof by summer. Either way, I’m not worried about my electricity bill anymore. My only regret is I didn’t find this two years ago.
The presentation explains the whole thing — what the device is, why it works, and exactly how to build it yourself. If you’re the kind of person who’d rather be ahead of this than behind it, just go watch it.
How I Did It —
Step by Step
See exactly how I cut my electricity bill by over $180 a month — what the device is and how to build it yourself.
How I Did It