Autonomous Power Nodes · Pre-Commercial Validation Stage at TRL 5–6

Autonomous Power Nodes for Remote and Weak-Grid Environments.

VENDOR.Max is an Armstrong-type nonlinear electrodynamic oscillator operating in a controlled discharge-resonant regime, designed for off-grid and weak-grid power applications. A discrete startup impulse initiates the regime; the regime is then maintained by the regulated feedback path under BMS control with continued external electrical input flowing through the AC interface. Pre-commercial validation stage at TRL 5–6.

Governing Equation · Complete Device Boundary
Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt

Governing equation at the complete device boundary. η = Pload / Pin,boundary; η ≤ 1.

Interpretation · Two-Level Frame

The system organizes energy transfer through a controlled discharge-resonant regime. Within the spark gaps, gas serves as the interaction medium; the field is the mediator that structures energy transfer. At the complete device boundary, classical energy conservation applies at all operational states.

1,000+ h
Cumulative Regime Runtime · Validation-Stage
532 h @ 4 kW
Sustained Load Segment
6 Jurisdictions
Patent Family · EU, US, CN, IN, ES, PCT
TRL 5–6
Pre-Commercial Validation Stage
Deployment Status
  • Operational Record 1,000+ h cumulative regime runtime, including 532 h sustained at 4 kW (~4 MWh cumulative delivered energy observed under validation-stage measurement at the AC interface, within calibration tolerance)
  • First Field Deployment Q3 2026 target — subject to successful completion of validation milestones (TRL 6 progression)
  • Engagement Pathway Validation-stage partner engagement open

Industry context: in many off-grid telecom deployments, diesel logistics can account for up to 30–60% of OPEX. See cost comparison

Reference Patent-Based Physics Note
Step 01Boundary-level input

The operating regime is initiated by externally supplied electrical input. A portion is temporarily stored in capacitive elements (C2.1–C2.3) before regime formation:

EC = (1/2)CV2
Step 02Resonant excitation

Stored electrical energy is coupled into the active contour, where it circulates between electric and magnetic field components:

Etotal = (1/2)CV2 + (1/2)LI2
Step 03Townsend avalanche process

Avalanche multiplication increases charge carrier density and current amplitude:

n(x) = n0 · exp(αx)

Each accelerated electron gains kinetic energy directly from the electric field (W = eEλ per electron per mean free path). Same principle as every vacuum tube, magnetron, and klystron.

Step 04Output and balance

Output power is delivered through the load path via the tertiary winding (10) of the patent description. The complete energy balance at the device boundary is unchanged:

Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt; η ≤ 1

Patents: ES2950176B2 (granted, Spain) · WO2024209235 (PCT). Regional examination: EP4693872A1 · US20260088633A1 · CN119096463A · IN 202547010911. Priority: 05.04.2023.

Strategic Context · Why Autonomous Power Matters

Where the Grid Ends. And Where Diesel Cannot Reach.

Off-grid and weak-grid environments require power infrastructure that operates without grid connection or fuel logistics. Current solutions — diesel gensets, solar+battery hybrids, micro-grids — each have structural constraints. VENDOR.Max addresses a specific class of deployment: long-duration autonomous operation at infrastructure scale, where fuel logistics dominate OPEX or where grid extension is not commercially viable.

Context 01

Off-Grid Telecom Towers

Diesel logistics in remote telecom deployments can account for up to 30–60% of total OPEX. Battery-only systems require daily fuel-based backup. Solar+storage configurations face seasonal degradation in mid-latitude and high-shade zones.

VENDOR.Max vs Diesel
Context 02

Water, Pipeline, Border Security

Remote pumping stations, pipeline monitoring, and perimeter security systems require continuous power without on-site fuel refilling. Operational interruption from fuel supply gaps has direct mission-critical consequences.

Water Utility Solutions
Context 03

Mining, Construction, Field Operations

Industrial off-grid operations face escalating fuel costs and emissions compliance pressure. Autonomous power nodes reduce dependence on diesel supply chains during multi-month deployment cycles.

Industrial Solutions
Context 04

Backup Power for Critical Sites

Hospitals, data centers, and emergency response facilities require fuel-independent backup power that operates beyond single-shift duration. Conventional UPS+diesel combinations depend on fuel logistics that may fail under crisis conditions.

Critical Infrastructure
Deployment Niche

VENDOR.Max occupies a specific deployment niche — defined by long-duration autonomous operation, infrastructure-scale power (2.4–24 kW range, modular configuration), and pre-commercial validation stage at TRL 5–6 with CE/UL certification pathway defined.

Why Now · Four Converging Forces

Why Autonomous Power. Why This Decade.

Four structural forces converge in 2026 to make off-grid autonomous power infrastructure a critical capability. Each force operates independently; together they define the deployment context for pre-commercial validation.

Force 01

AI Workload Power Density

Edge AI deployments require 5–50 kW continuous power per site

Distributed AI inference and edge GPU compute demand continuous, infrastructure-grade power at remote sites where grid extension is not viable. Diesel and battery-only solutions face compounding logistics constraints.

AI & GPU Power
Force 02

Fuel Logistics Vulnerability

Up to 30–60% of OPEX in many remote deployments

Geopolitical disruption to fuel supply chains has elevated fuel-independent power infrastructure from cost optimization to mission-critical resilience requirement.

Force 03

CO2 Compliance Pathway

EU CBAM, US methane rules, ESG corporate mandates

Off-grid diesel operations face escalating compliance costs. Replacement-grade alternatives that operate at infrastructure scale become economically necessary, not optional.

Force 04

Grid-Edge Power Architecture

Critical-load segments expanding 8–12% annually

Hospitals, data centers, telecom, water utilities, and defence facilities are migrating from grid-dependent operation to grid-edge resilience architectures with multi-day autonomous backup capability.

Validation Context

These forces define the validation context for VENDOR.Max — they do not validate the technology itself. The validation framework (TRL 5–6 internal stage, CE/UL pathway at TRL 8) operates independently of market conditions.

How It Works · Architecture Summary

Engineered Energy Routing. Boundary-Accounted Operation.

VENDOR.Max is built on a controlled discharge-resonant architecture organized as a two-contour functional system with three resonant winding circuits. Energy is structured, redistributed, and delivered through a regulated regime within standard thermodynamic accounting. Classical energy conservation applies at the complete device boundary.

Step 01

Startup Impulse

A discrete startup impulse (~9 V, ~15 seconds, ~0.015 Wh) initiates the electrodynamic regime by charging capacitive elements C2.1–C2.3 in the active contour. After regime initiation, the startup source is physically disconnected from the ignition path.

Step 02

Active Contour Formation

The active contour forms the operating regime through resonant coupling of capacitive and inductive elements at 2.45 MHz primary resonance per Patent Claim 3. Three parallel spark gaps produce overlapping but shifted discharge spectra (Patent Claim 5).

Step 03

Internal Energy Redistribution

The regulated feedback path maintains regime stability by recharging the capacitive elements between discharge events through the secondary winding (7) under BMS control. This is internal redistribution within the formed regime, already accounted for within Pin,boundary.

Step 04

AC Interface Output

Output power is delivered to the external load through the tertiary winding (10) at the AC interface (220 V / 50 Hz). At the complete device boundary, accounting follows Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt at all operational states.

Two-Level Energy Model

Two Levels — Never Collapsed

Mandatory analytical distinction

Level 1 · Device-Boundary

Classical energy conservation applies at all operational states.

Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt

η = Pload / Pin,boundary; η ≤ 1.

Level 2 · Regime Level

Energy is structured and redistributed within the formed regime through controlled discharge cycles, regulated feedback, and load extraction.

Local ratios at this level describe redistribution between sub-blocks; they do not redefine the boundary balance.

Interpretation Discipline

Major misinterpretations arise when these two levels are collapsed into a single model. Boundary-level accounting is the closure layer; regime-level processes are internal redistribution already accounted for within Pin,boundary.

Familiar Engineering Pattern

Transformer Analogy

The architecture follows a familiar engineering pattern: like a transformer with multiple secondary windings, energy that enters at the primary side is distributed across secondary paths through electromagnetic coupling. The complete device boundary remains the closure layer for energy accounting.

Definition + Scope · Engineering Anchor

Engineering Classification. And Scope Boundaries.

Definition follows engineering classification, not marketing positioning. VENDOR.Max occupies a specific category within established pulse-power engineering and electrodynamics literature.

Engineering Classification
  • Category 01

    Armstrong-Type Nonlinear Electrodynamic Oscillator

    Classical positive feedback oscillator topology with three winding circuits — primary excitation, secondary feedback, tertiary output.

  • Category 02

    Controlled Discharge-Resonant Regime

    Operating mode characterized by repetitive discharge events at 2.45 MHz primary resonance with regulated feedback path.

  • Category 03

    Pulse Power Generator on Spark Gaps

    IPC classification H03K 3/537 — recognized engineering category in IEEE PPC and International Pulsed Power Conference literature.

  • Category 04

    Open Electrodynamic Engineering System

    Requires continued external electrical input at the complete device boundary for sustained operation. Open in the thermodynamic sense.

  • Category 05

    Pre-Commercial Validation Stage at TRL 5–6

    Internal validation in controlled laboratory environment. CE/UL certification pathway defined at TRL 8.

Scope Boundaries
  • Scope 01

    Boundary-Accounted Operation

    Classical energy conservation applies at the complete device boundary at all operational states.

    Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt; η ≤ 1
  • Scope 02

    Continued Boundary Input

    Continued external electrical input at the complete device boundary is required for sustained operation. Internal regime processes are internal redistribution already accounted for within Pin,boundary.

  • Scope 03

    Non-Combustion Architecture

    No combustion process. No fuel input. Within the spark gaps, gas serves as the interaction medium; the field is the mediator that structures energy transfer.

  • Scope 04

    Deployment Independence

    Autonomous = deployment independence at the field site, without diesel logistics or grid connection. Deployment independence at the operational level, with continued external electrical input at the boundary level.

  • Scope 05

    Validation-Stage Status

    All performance numbers are validation-stage measurements within calibration tolerance. Certified ratings are defined at the CE/UL certification stage at TRL 8.

Technology Status · Validation Evidence

Validation Data. From Calibrated Instrumentation.

All operational parameters represent validation-stage measurement at TRL 5–6 within calibration tolerance, using calibrated instrumentation under black-box boundary measurement protocol.

Card 01
TRL 5–6
Pre-Commercial Validation Stage

System-level validation in a controlled laboratory environment. Independent verification at the AC interface and ignition port under accredited metrological protocol is the next pre-commercial validation milestone. CE/UL certification pathway defined at TRL 8.

Validation Framework
Card 02
1,000+ h
Cumulative Regime Runtime

Cumulative internal laboratory operational hours. Sustained load segment: 532 hours continuous at 4 kW. Cumulative delivered energy: ~4 MWh observed under validation-stage measurement at the AC interface, within calibration tolerance.

Endurance Test Record
Card 03
6 Jurisdictions
Patent Family · Granted + In Examination

Six-jurisdiction patent family across EU, US, CN, IN, ES, PCT. ES2950176B2 granted in Spain (March 2024); five additional regional/national examinations in progress. Priority date: 05.04.2023.

Patent Portfolio
Card 04
37 States
EPC Designated States

EP4693872A1 published in European regional phase, with examination in progress across designated EPC states.

Card 05
CE / UL
Certification Pathway Defined

Structured roadmap from TRL 5–6 to TRL 8 certification readiness. Independent verification pathways (DNV, TÜV, or equivalent) being evaluated as part of the roadmap.

Roadmap
Card 06
VENDOR.Max
Deployment System · 2.4–24 kW

Modular architecture at validation-stage system level under controlled laboratory conditions. Q3 2026 first deployment target subject to successful completion of validation milestones.

VENDOR.Max Product
Product · VENDOR.Max Architecture

Modular Architecture. Field-Deployable Configuration.

VENDOR.Max is the deployment-stage architecture. Modular design based on 2.4 kW configuration blocks enables scalable deployment from single-tower power (2.4 kW) up to industrial-scale infrastructure (24 kW configurations). All configurations are based on the canonical Armstrong-type nonlinear electrodynamic oscillator architecture currently at validation-stage TRL 5–6.

Specifications · VENDOR.Max

Product Configuration Reference

  • Specification Range / Value
  • Output Power 2.4–24 kW (modular configuration)
  • Output Voltage 220 V RMS / 50 Hz (AC interface)
  • Operating Mode Fixed-regime mode (validation stage) + buffered mode (development pathway)
  • Validation Stage TRL 5–6 pre-commercial
Architecture 01

Modular Configuration

Based on 2.4 kW regime blocks. Field-configurable from single-tower deployment to industrial-scale installation.

Architecture 02

Black-Box Boundary Protocol

Two distinct interfaces: ignition port (startup, disconnected after regime initiation) and AC interface (operational boundary, continuously active during sustained operation).

Architecture 03

Regime Stability Envelope

Operating behavior defined by load-dependent stability envelope characteristic of nonlinear resonant systems. Stability is defined within a load-compatible operating envelope, configured at the regime level.

Architecture 04

Field-Confinement Architecture

Engineering implementation localizes the field inside the resonant coupling between three winding circuits. EMI/EMC compliance measurement is part of the CE certification milestone at TRL 8.

Patent Family · Six-Jurisdiction Atomic Reference

Six Jurisdictions. One Patent Family.

Patent protection is structured as a single coordinated family across six jurisdictions, anchored to a common priority date of 05.04.2023. One patent is granted; five are in regional or national examination tracks. Each filing is listed below with its publication number, application number, and direct reference link where available.

1 Granted
Spain · ES2950176B2
5 In Examination
EP · US · CN · IN · PCT
37 EPC States
European Designation Coverage
Jurisdiction 01 · Spain (ES)

Spanish Patent Office (OEPM)

Granted · Mar 2024
  • Publication No. ES2950176B2
  • Authority OEPM · Spain
  • Status Granted (active)

Anchor patent of the family. Granted in Spain in March 2024. Protects the core Armstrong-type nonlinear electrodynamic oscillator architecture.

Jurisdiction 02 · PCT (International)

PCT International Application

Published
  • Publication No. WO2024209235A1
  • Authority WIPO · PCT
  • Status Published · national phase entry

PCT international publication establishing the international filing framework from which regional and national examinations proceed.

Jurisdiction 03 · Europe (EP / EPC)

European Patent Office (EPO)

Under Examination
  • Publication No. EP4693872A1
  • Application No. EP23921569.2
  • Authority EPO · 37 EPC designated states
  • Status Regional examination in progress

European regional phase covering 37 EPC designated states. Examination active across the European Patent Convention member territories.

Jurisdiction 04 · United States (US)

United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)

Under Examination
  • Publication No. US20260088633A1
  • Authority USPTO · United States
  • Status National phase, under examination

United States national phase from PCT WO2024209235. Active examination at the USPTO.

Jurisdiction 05 · China (CN)

China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA)

Under Examination
  • Publication No. CN119096463A
  • Application No. CN202380015725.5
  • Authority CNIPA · China
  • Status National examination in progress

Chinese national examination track. Both publication and application numbers shown for full reference traceability.

Jurisdiction 06 · India (IN)

Indian Patent Office (IPO)

Under Examination
  • Application No. IN 202547010911
  • Authority IPO · India
  • Status National examination in progress

Indian national phase from PCT WO2024209235. Active examination at the Indian Patent Office.

Common Priority Date

05.04.2023 · All six filings share this anchor date

EU Trademark

EUIPO No. 019220462 · VENDOR mark registered

Verification Boundary · Explicit Scope

Verified Internally. Pending Independent Verification.

This table separates what has been verified through internal validation under defined laboratory conditions from what is pending independent third-party verification at the next pre-commercial milestone. Precision matters more than broad claims.

Verified Internally at TRL 5–6
Pending Independent Verification
  • Row 01 · System Operation
    System-level prototype operates under defined laboratory conditions. Validation methodology and raw data: Endurance Test Record.
    Row 01 · Pending Milestone
    Independent third-party verification of those operating conditions, under accredited metrological protocol at the AC interface and ignition port.
  • Row 02 · Endurance Record
    1,000+ hours cumulative regime runtime recorded internally, including 532 hours sustained at 4 kW. Cumulative delivered energy: ~4 MWh observed under validation-stage measurement at the AC interface, within calibration tolerance.
    Row 02 · Pending Milestone
    Accredited certification body confirmation of the endurance record. Independent verification framework: Validation Hub.
  • Row 03 · Output Performance
    Output observed under defined laboratory test configurations. AC interface output at 220 V RMS / 50 Hz across the 2.4–24 kW modular configuration range.
    Row 03 · Pending Milestone
    Commercial-grade output specification. Subject to CE/UL certification at TRL 8. Independent verification pathways (DNV, TÜV, or equivalent) being evaluated.
  • Row 04 · Architecture & IP
    Patent-protected electrodynamic architecture across six jurisdictions. One granted (ES2950176B2); five in regional/national examination. Common priority date 05.04.2023.
    Row 04 · Pending Milestone
    Examination outcomes for the five remaining jurisdictions (EP, US, CN, IN, PCT). Active prosecution at respective patent offices.
  • Row 05 · Field Deployment Path
    Modular architecture at validation-stage system level under controlled laboratory conditions. Architecture canon: How It Works.
    Row 05 · Pending Milestone
    Q3 2026 first field deployment target — subject to successful completion of validation milestones (TRL 6 progression).
Why This Boundary Matters

Verified-internal evidence is the engineering foundation; independent verification is the next milestone, not a missing assertion. This separation is part of the validation framework, not a defensive caveat. All performance figures represent internal engineering records under validation-stage measurement — commercial-grade specifications are defined at the CE/UL certification stage at TRL 8.

Applications · Deployment Categories

Where VENDOR.Max Operates. Defined Deployment Categories.

Six defined deployment categories form the application scope for VENDOR.Max at the pre-commercial validation stage. All deployment pathways are subject to successful completion of validation milestones (TRL 6 progression and CE/UL certification at TRL 8).

Direct Answers · Technical Clarity

Frequently Asked, Precisely Answered.

Seven canonical questions answered through the boundary-accounting framework, scope-bounded to the pre-commercial validation stage.

01 What is VENDOR.Max in engineering terms?

VENDOR.Max is an Armstrong-type nonlinear electrodynamic oscillator operating in a controlled discharge-resonant regime, organized as a two-contour functional architecture with three resonant winding circuits. Engineering category: pulse power generator on spark gaps (IPC H03K 3/537). Pre-commercial validation stage at TRL 5–6. Patent: ES2950176B2 granted in Spain; WO2024209235A1 PCT.

02 Where does the energy come from?

External electrical input flows through the AC interface during sustained operation. Pin,boundary is referenced at the AC interface as an accounting quantity throughout the disclosed validation window. At the complete device boundary, Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt. Internal regime processes (regulated feedback path, BMS coordination, discharge dynamics) are internal redistribution already accounted for within Pin,boundary. The system organizes energy transfer through a controlled regime, within standard thermodynamic accounting.

03 Does VENDOR.Max comply with classical energy conservation?

Yes. Classical energy conservation applies at the complete device boundary at all operational states: Pin,boundary = Pload + Plosses + dE/dt with η ≤ 1. VENDOR.Max organizes energy transfer through a controlled discharge-resonant regime, within standard thermodynamic accounting. Within the spark gaps, gas serves as the interaction medium; the field is the mediator that structures energy transfer. The architecture is fully consistent with standard pulse-power engineering principles.

04 What does TRL 5–6 mean for deployment?

TRL 5–6 represents pre-commercial validation stage with system-level validation in a controlled laboratory environment. Independent verification at the AC interface and ignition port under accredited metrological protocol is the next pre-commercial validation milestone. Q3 2026 first field deployment target is subject to successful completion of validation milestones (TRL 6 progression). CE/UL certification is defined at TRL 8.

05 What does the 1,000+ hour endurance record show?

The endurance test documents regime persistence under sustained load: 1,000+ hours cumulative regime runtime including 532 hours sustained at 4 kW. Cumulative delivered energy: ~4 MWh observed under validation-stage measurement at the AC interface, within calibration tolerance. This is internal validation evidence at TRL 5–6, not certified energy performance or commercial readiness.

06 How does VENDOR.Max compare with diesel and solar+battery?

VENDOR.Max addresses a specific deployment niche: long-duration autonomous operation at infrastructure scale (2.4–24 kW), where fuel logistics dominate OPEX or grid extension is not commercially viable. Side-by-side comparison with diesel and solar+battery is available on the comparison pages. All comparisons are framed at pre-commercial validation stage.

07 What does autonomous operation mean here?

Autonomous = deployment independence at the field site, with continued boundary-level external electrical input for sustained operation. VENDOR.Max provides autonomous power at deployment sites without diesel logistics or grid connection. Continued external electrical input at the complete device boundary is required for sustained operation; this is the fundamental thermodynamic property of an open electrodynamic engineering system.

Three Paths Forward · Engagement Routing

Three Paths Forward. Balanced by Audience.

Three engagement paths balanced by audience: technical evaluation (Engineers), deployment investment (Investors), and field pilot engagement (Partners and Operators).

Path 01 · Engineers

Technical Evaluation

Architecture canon, validation framework, patent portfolio, and complete physics interpretation. Read the full architecture and validation documentation.

Explore Technology
Path 02 · Investors

Deployment Investment

Validation-stage investment opportunity. Pre-commercial investor data room with technical due diligence materials, IP portfolio, and Q3 2026 deployment pathway documentation.

Investor Room
Path 03 · Partners

Pilot Engagement

Validation-stage pilot deployment partner pathway. Field deployment engagement open for qualified infrastructure operators in defined deployment categories.

Pilot Engagement