Has anyone ever tried making a tree battery. one tree negative the other positive ;D
I have obtained 1.25 vdc from my little tree out in the front yard. The tree is negative, and the ground (carbon rod into the ground) was positive. I have some photos of my "tree array" posted over at the earth batteries topic. where exactly, I could not tell you. I guess I could rename the photo and post here.
Bill
!
this is too desparate in my opinion !
it is actually opposite of what we want to contribute here -
save life and trees on Earth.
Wiz
what ya think of RMEP ?
Wiz:
I don't know what possible problem you could have against my experiment. The nails only go into the tree about 1/16" and can be removed easily. No harm to the tree at all. Besides, I am way, way ahead of these results with my earth battery. This was only one experiment along the way.
Bill
But Bill, as electrons are removed, chemical reactions occur at the electrode sites within the tree, possibly forming harmful compounds.
I disagree with your assessment. The electrons do not come from the tree.The tree, as I have learned through reading and experimentation, is just an antenna for the earth's teluric currents. That is why I, and the others on the earth battery experiments topic, are now going right to the source...the earth. I am now getting enough power to light 3 leds. And, we have just had a breakthrough which will yeild much more power. Nathan Stubblefield heated and lighted his home with his earth batteries. He also powered a telephone system for Murry, KY with them. All free. No oil, no coal and, this was all done at the turn of the century. I do not believe in man made global warming or any of the other crap that is bantered about. But, I do believe, as did Tesla and Stubblefield, that there is enough free energy in the air and in the earth to power everything we could ever want to power.
Bill
Its an interesting assertion I suppose.
I was under the impression that it was chemical-potential being harnessed by anodes and cathodes of differing types of metals (or possibly identical), like in conventional batteries. I suppose the teluric idea is just as possible.
Well I suppose someone could test it if they really wanted... Take a freshly cut log or limb and stick metal in it, then connect it to another electrode placed in some freshly scooped dirt.
If there's a potential electrical current then it's chemical potential. If not, its the antenna theory.
@Dyamios
neither ....but feel free to visit our earth battery thread