Sciencemadness Discussion Board

tesla

Solomon - 24-9-2013 at 18:49

I am wondering if the device tesla created here: http://www.nuenergy.org/nikola-tesla-radiant-energy-system/ is possible, I think it is.

bfesser - 24-9-2013 at 19:26

You may be interested in two papers I recently <a href="viewthread.php?tid=25035&page=7#pid300484">requested</a>.

Solomon - 24-9-2013 at 20:40

I am not permited to view the forum.

IrC - 24-9-2013 at 20:57

U2U Polverone for pass.

In the meantime: just stick the files back together. You must download all the files for each pdf and have them all plus the .exe in the same folder before joining. You start with 001 and it will assemble them all.



Attachment: hjsplit.exe (175kB)
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Attachment: TMTT.2013.2258168.pdf.001 (1.9MB)
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Attachment: TMTT.2013.2258168.pdf.002 (374kB)
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Attachment: JSen13_Shigeta.pdf.001 (1.9MB)
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Attachment: JSen13_Shigeta.pdf.002 (1.9MB)
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Attachment: JSen13_Shigeta.pdf.003 (656kB)
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[Edited on 9-25-2013 by IrC]

Finnnicus - 24-9-2013 at 21:45

I deeply apologise on not noting down my source, but I have watched a video in which university students tried to make such a device and were able to record minute amounts of power being -er- received.

The connection between what Solomon is talking about, and what I have watched is the circuit which was either incredibly similar, or identical.

I will go searching now.

Solomon - 24-9-2013 at 23:08

I have a mac so .exe won't help.

IrC - 24-9-2013 at 23:12

I'm sure HJ split has a mac version if you go search for it.

Saved you the trouble.

http://www.pianofab.com/cj.html

http://www.hjsplit.org/mac/



[Edited on 9-26-2013 by IrC]

Attachment: chunkjoiner22.bin (139kB)
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12AX7 - 25-9-2013 at 19:16

Looks like ionic atmospheric currents? Just leakage (from the ionosphere, UV and cosmic rays). It takes an immensely monstrous area, at high altitude, to collect any useful current; even then, it's high impedance DC. Tesla would, of course, convert it with a spark discharge and resonant transformer. Nowadays, there probably isn't much better means; megavolts and microamperes aren't so easy to deal with. (Converters are in practical use today operating off megavolts, but they do kiloamperes as well.)

Tim

Oscilllator - 27-9-2013 at 22:06

I'm not sure how relevant this is, but I once watched a (very old) physics video at school in which an experiment was done my NASA where they launched a satellite that had a long wire dangling beneath it. Once the satellite was in orbit it was of course was moving extremely fast, so an enormous potential difference was induced from the earths magnetic field. From memory, the experiment stopped because the wire broke somehow because of the amount of current induced :o.

Endimion17 - 28-9-2013 at 06:31

Yeah, that was the 1996 TSS-1R experiment on STS-75.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STS-75

I don't know why it broke, though. I doubt it's because of the current. The charges and voltages were probably quite high, but the current must've been quite pathetic. The energy in such systems is very, very small.