UPDATE – Where to manufacture Omega Car? “When You Change the World and No One Notices” Politics


Casey Putsch, does an update on the Omega Car and where you could possibly build them. He speaks about the politics of manufacturing, social media, and the Nation. He holds no punches when it comes to the global left, Hollywood, and California. Casey also reads and article about the Wright Brothers entitled “When You Change the World and No One Notices.
Below are figures on Casey’s Omega Car for reference.

Manufacturing (CO2 greenhouse gas emissions in Tons)-
Normal efficient ICE vehicle – 8.5
Current EV – 14.3
Diesel Omega Concept – 4.25

Per 100,000 miles of driving (CO2 emissions in Tons)-
Efficient ICE Car- 27.93
Current EV – 11.765
Diesel Omega Concept – 10.6005

Total CO2 emissions in Tons (manufacturing and driving first 100k miles)-
Efficient ICE Car- 36.43
Current EV – 26.065
Diesel Omega Concept- 14.8505

Cost to drive per 100 miles-

Omega Car on Diesel-
$3.45 (based on national average 2024)

Tesla 3 full electric-
$4.65 (home charge national average)
$6.85 (supercharger station national average)

Range-

Omega Car-
500 miles (5 gallon test tank)
1,500 miles (15 gallon production tank)

Tesla Model 3-
210 miles (standard car real world average)
340 miles (long range version real world average)

CO2 Emissions per 100 miles driving –

Omega car-
21.201 lbs. CO2 (EPA based data on diesel)

Tesla 3-
23.55 lbs. CO2 (data per national average KWH generation calc)
64.61 lbs. CO2 (data per straight coal powered KWH generation calc)

Casey’s next goal is to only burn 1 ounce of diesel per mile or to achieve 128 MPG. The acceleration video was a direct comparison to a Tesla Model 3, a C7 Corvette, and a Dodge Viper RT/10. The fastest readings were- Tesla at 4.60, Omega at 4.61, Corvette at 4.61, and the Viper RT/10 at 4.85. The Omega is the cheapest car to drive per mile beating out the Tesla and is the only one of these cars created with sustainability and affordability as a top priority.

Check out Genius Garage here-

Follow Casey on IG-
Instagram @caseyputsch

Follow Casey on Facebook-

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32 Comments

  1. Contrary to popular opinion…Elon is dirty. The Ohio River is deadly toxic after the "accidental" spill. You need to buy an island and copy the economies of the Chanel Islands. It's a well-known fact that VW diesels in Europe get 75+ MPG – nearly twice that of those here. Canada is over the edge. It is done. Kinda scattered, just a couple observations…FIRST AND FOREMOST AMONGST THEM – IS THAT YOUR OMEGA IS LIBERATING – AND THAT'S ANATHEMA FOR THE POWERS THAT BE. UNLESS YOU CAN HIDE YOUR OPERATION UNTIL THE PROJECT HAS TRACTION AND THE GLOBALISTS CAN'T BURY THE PRODUCT – OR YOU…(CUZ CASEY…YOU ARE AN OUTSPOKEN OUTSIDER). YOUR AGENDA RUNS CONTRARY TO THAT OF THE POWERS THAT BE. Put me on the list of potential customers.

  2. Casey you nailed it
    As a home mechanic… gunsmith and more… trying to open a physical location to actually expand and grow has been a MAJOR hurdle as anythign 2A or "risky" like custom anything or what seems like anything really… Banks say NO and 2A it was never an option cash only…

    So turned to private investors and it was apparent first meeting… if you cannot beat the stockmarket with a total steal gold product that can be mass produced instantly NOBODY will invest into your business…

    this is after 5 years of having door after door slammed on my feet or nose as there is an underlying monster that then says you must pay regaurdless of incomes! which is BS and you then clkosing doors before you even started… TOOLS cost money and are easily recoopable if you take care of them infact sometimes grow in value! but try to tell a bank or loan shark that you and the tools are the money maker… 80-90's where the end of the "home builder grows into big business when koenigsegg and tesla" magically came outta nowhere out of some think tank basement.

  3. Opportunity zone is interesting concept however in practice most of the investment is in restaurants and retail business which change hands and close the doors often. It would be interesting if there was a industry opportunity zone approach that was less corporatized, and more small business and inventive of course the biggest hurdle are the politicians who support it and either want a cut of the action or a accomplish point to keep them in office.

  4. As a Vet, the veteran community is one that is a significant untapped resource. More often than not, the money peeps and political idiots parade us around for attention "look, we are helping!", mention us in passing to ostensibly lend some sort of credence to another scam, or roll the cameras on one of the holidays. The government itself (who often created the problem) then brays about the VA – and pumps a large percentage of us full of mind numbing drugs, or if you reject that… you are left to your own devices.

    It would be great to see someone actually do something with vets at the forefront, as we are the steel in the backbone of this nation. The community has all the trades, higher technology, innovation, courage and willingness that any industrialist could ever hope for – there is literally nothing that couldn't be accomplished. The only drawback, is that many of my fellow vets have got shoved to the side, unheard and alone – that they no longer listen, and often sit suffering- angry at the world. That is a failure of the nation as a whole, and of we as veterans for not banding together and correcting the situation.

    I'd help in anyway I could – I am a consultant for heavy industry and data center construction on the precon side currently. Find somewhere to build and I'd love to assist! Interestingly, there are closed factories and business parks all over the country- if one or more of those could be converted to your needs it might provide significant savings.

    Nevada, Utah and oddly Wyoming come to mind. No hurricanes – milder weather, can get cold – but we used to build cars in Michigan, didn't we? Large open spaces, etc. Wyoming suffers from a population issue however… there aren't a lot of people there. West Virginia, Tennessee also have some things going for them.

    Ten years ago I would have said Arizona – but we have had an influx of stupidity from Crackifornistan currently, the state govt is largely blue.

    I doubt you'll ever read this – but the offer stands, and keep doing what you do Casey!

  5. You are a good man Casey. Putting your family first is everything. As a dad of 2 grown daughters being involved in there lives I would not change a thing no cars toys money is worth time lost with them. And having a great wife to support you is everything. Keep up the good fight.

  6. Russia. Hands down. 100%. Russia. I have a friend there so I've learned way more about that country than the NATO media will ever tell you. Russia is a very self sufficient country. They're making their own cars, bikes, and airplanes. They're making their own clothing, food, electronics, wood screws, toasters, and everything else. My friend drives a Russian made motorcycle. His wife just started a company making camping gear. People there do stuff and make stuff and invest in stuff. They care about inventing and making their country better. Why? Because they've all seen what happens when you let socialist, fascist, blue haired ideology be in charge; and they have the body count to prove it. They don't want to ever see that again, so they care. Why do Americans think Russia is evil? Because your phones tell you to, nothing more.

  7. As an asset allocator in Texas, there are a few folks here that share the same ideals as you here. Although you are right about traditional PE looking for a quick flip, there are still many who are looking to make seed investments; not just in the entrepreneur's idea, but in the entrepreneur as well. If you have an email I can reach out to, I would be happy to share additional details.

    My family has been in the jewelry/watch business for the past 30 years and I appreciate your new endeavour around mechanical watches. Wishing you the best.

  8. Never regret doing your YouTube channel. You played a part in giving my family the inspiration to take risks. In the past four years we have started four companies, sold one and my wife and oldest son have advanced their careers to levels that seemed impossible before that.

    “Make the impossible likely”

  9. The Ω car could be built in our garages, by us.
    When I was a kid in 6th grade, late 1970's, oil "crisis" was fresh in our minds, I gave a presentation to the class, just like all the other kids did that day, on the future of energy… My premise was that energy in the future would be sourced and used in many more ways that it was then, and now. I called it "diffused energy" after how the sun and the moon practically bathe the earth in energy but it is so difficult to collect because it's – diffused. Humanity needed to get better at collecting energy from all the different sources and using it in efficient was to prevent power losses caused by conversions. I remember getting something like a D for my project. Not because of my spelling, grammar, or presentation, but because my teacher called my idea "unrealistic". My parents were furious, partly because they believed in my idea, partly because they helped. My Dad was a state licensed mechanical engineer, chief engineer where he worked, and my Mom had masters degrees in psychology and sociology. So… yeah.
    I've wanted to put a small diesel in a small, light, slippery car for decades. Especially since I learned of the origin story of the diesel engine and that it was meant to run on a waste product, peanut oil. To me that meant that it could easily run on two different fuels, more diffuse… There was a company called Frybrid making fuel system conversions for diesel cars and trucks so that they could run on pump diesel and Straight Vegetable Oil (SVO) in the same vehicle. I was in love. SVO is not "bio-diesel" with all the processing and hazardous chemicals. It is just deep fat fryer oil, filtered before it's put in the tank and heated by the waste heat, radiator, of the vehicle before it is injected into the combustion chamber. Unfortunately, Frybrid is no longer with us but there is a book that describes how to do what they did. The title is "SVO" by Forest Gregg. How the book came to be is a bit convoluted but hey, c'est la vie. I've also followed along here and the with the solar powered race across Australia and HPV racing along with a bunch of other stuff like that. The book "More With Less" by Ciotti is also a good read.
    To say that I'm here for this project just doesn't cover it. I just wish I had the $$ to back up how I feel and what I say.
    Keep up the good work.

  10. If they were attacking worthless stuff they wouldn’t be noticed.
    Throwing tomato sauce over chips, not news worthy.
    Throwing paint over a dilapidated fence, not news worthy.
    Throwing weed killer over an unkempt garden, not news worthy.
    I don’t agree with them, but I understand that high value targets are more news worthy.

  11. Your Omega car is actually a good solution.
    But it isn’t disposable, it doesn’t need to be shipped around the world to be built, it is recyclable and it isn’t what a certain Billionaire wants to see.
    That Billionaire is the reason that EVs are the way we are going. This current form of EV is an evolutionary dead end, but it will be flogged to death because Musky boy, AKA Space Karen, wants it.

  12. Left and right?
    From Marx to Hitler?
    They had some similarities.
    Maybe it isn’t a line that goes left to right, but a circle that gets to the same place through different means.
    I want the top third of the circle, leaning a tad to left.
    To me anyone who is on the bottom half of that circle is an extremist.

  13. Man not even Elon thinks EV mandates are a good idea. Just make an EV people actually want to drive in certain super common situations because it yields some sort of competitive advantage that drives actual tangible value to the consumer and you won't need mandates to sell your product.

    There's nothing worse than providing a product to a customer that doesn't really even want to buy it from you plus even if the mandates didn't put the "ED" and "HARD R" in ETARD* the grid infrastructure wouldn't even have the throughput to support all the charging if we doubled the capacity tomorrow.

    That being said Casey any silly jabroni can build a prototype and both of us know it. The hard part is the assembly line engineering and post sales technical support infrastructure.

  14. Look at what the people in commiefornia, moving into the area around race tracks. And they are shutting them down due to noise. Hawaii, are you kidding that state has no metal source.
    Conway is in the Central part of the USA you have I40, train tracks running right through the middle of town. If you want to use water to transport to New Orleans to ship overseas, the Arkansas river goes to the Mississippi river.
    Lots of twistie roads to test your car.

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