I made the circuit of the dutch guy that King talked about him. I made a copper wire rapped aerial to earth in my basement with the circuit between. When monitored with MM 0.01v was the result.
After a while 0.02v and after an hour 0.07v.
I will monitor it tomorrow.
Thanks
Quote from: guruji on July 08, 2011, 02:58:44 PM
I made the circuit of the dutch guy that King talked about him. I made a copper wire rapped aerial to earth in my basement with the circuit between. When monitored with MM 0.01v was the result.
After a while 0.02v and after an hour 0.07v.
I will monitor it tomorrow.
Thanks
I started a now long-dormant thread concerning patents involving arial patents that could be used to draw power from. I was in News, but that was awhile ago.
--Lee
This area of technology should use superconductive storage coils not resistive coils.
Jerry 8)
Quote from: onthecuttingedge2005 on July 08, 2011, 07:34:31 PM
This area of technology should use superconductive storage coils not resistive coils.
Jerry 8)
Hi onthecuttingedge what's the difference of these coils?
Thanks
Quote from: guruji on July 10, 2011, 03:45:56 AM
Hi onthecuttingedge what's the difference of these coils?
Thanks
superconductive coils can store a charge without loss and superconductive antenna are far more sensitive to EMF and more efficient. a system that always collects and never loses.
Quotesuperconductive coils
Thought of space and its -459° Fahrenheit temperature. Seems possible to construct a type of generator in space and transmit power down to the Earth using a wireless scheme. If nothing else it could possibly power a space station.
Quote from: IotaYodi on July 10, 2011, 08:44:57 AM
Thought of space and its -459° Fahrenheit temperature.
Someone like WilbyInebriated may come along and insult you by saying that "objects in space have a temperature; space itself is unoccupied, and therefore has no temperature as such." He might think you're dumb not to think like him, but I try and treat people better than he does.
(That last remark was rather aimed at him. He did something similar to me before.)
Quote
Seems possible to construct a type of generator in space and transmit power down to the Earth using a wireless scheme.
Sure, you betcha. Patents exist to that effect.
Quote
If nothing else it could possibly power a space station.
Yep. Especially inside the Earth's magnetic field. Similar to the coax cable 'electret' effect.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electret
--Lee
Quote from: the_big_m_in_ok on July 11, 2011, 03:08:47 PM
Someone like WilbyInebriated may come along and insult you by saying that "objects in space have a temperature; space itself is unoccupied, and therefore has no temperature as such." He might think you're dumb not to think like him, but I try and treat people better than he does.
(That last remark was rather aimed at him. He did something similar to me before.)Sure, you betcha. Patents exist to that effect.Yep. Especially inside the Earth's magnetic field. Similar to the coax cable 'electret' effect.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electret
--Lee
dude you need to grow up and quit your bellyaching... ::) you remind me of a pre-teen.
first off, if i were to come here and post what you said (which i wouldn't, because i don't presume to know if 'space' is unoccupied) it wouldn't be an insult, it would be my opinion... ::)
second, if you are abreast of recent scientific claims you would be aware that 'space' is not believed to be "unoccupied"... apply a little quantum mechanics and special relativity and you will see that 'empty space' has energy, way too much energy. 120 orders of magnitude more energy than is contained in everything we see. now what a terrible prediction that is...
you guys (think you) have all the answers, but you just don't know how to get there... it reminds me or the sidney harris cartoon where you've got this big equation, and the answer, and the middle step says "and then a miracle occurs". and then one scientist says to another, "i think you have to be a little more specific at this step right here"... ::)