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drugmanrx

10/01/16 3:11 PM

#58631 RE: PMrz #58630

In all honestly depends on the day.

First, I don't think the patent has been official granted in China. I could be wrong, Just did a quick google search and all I could find was"to be" not "has been" granted. As far as first pass US, and for the sake of argument, passed China, I don't know if China recognizes US patents and whether or not they judge them on their own merit. Meaning there might be patents (Panasonic)that supersede SUNW on file in US but not filed in China. Or US might think the Panasonic tech is too similar to SUNW tedh, while in China they are different enough to be awarded their own patent (just speculating here I have no idea).

Going back to your question.


What is your assessment of Sandridge's claim that the technology is a scam as evidenced by his supposed third party analysis and first pass denial by the US Patent examiner even though the patent was granted in China?



It is so hard for me to believe that if the company really had a cell that was 250% more efficient, than anything else on the market and that could ready fit on a conventional manufacturer line they would sit on. If there were patent issues, manufacturing issues, manufacturing cost issue or functionality issues I could totally understand those type of delays, but so far the only reason we are given is that they can't find a manufacturing partner. IMHO I believe the cell would create revenues 10x greater than the installation business.

I personally find that excuse pure bull. I might even believe that excuses if it wasn't for the fact that so many manufacturing companies have closed their doors since SUNW announced the final prototype was ready to be put into a panel.

So, yes part of me believes that Sandridge claims might have an ounce of truth in them.

Then the question become why stay if you believe it to be a scam?

The truth is I am holding out hope that Sandridge is wrong on his cell claim. I was lucky enough to get in at a very good price (0.02 per split), and while I would not invested in SUNW if it was only an installation company (only because return to investment is low and the stock price will take a long time to appreciate to the levels I was expecting from the cell when it made it to market), by becoming an installation company SUNW has given me the opportunity to wait for the possibility of a game changing cell tech making it to market without having much risk to my investment in the future for doing so.