Added: 3 years ago
From: tbisho
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  • I need to power up my well pump in my orchard which is 500 feet away from my house. when it will be available under $1000?

  • this is more a demonstration of resonance than anything.. notice how when the coils are side to side it still transmits? thats pretty cool. toroidal vortex action. Teslas version worked better for long distances..

  • And no this has nothing to do with transformers..transformers induce magnetic field which in turn induces current..might i remind you there is no such thing as a magnetic wave and yes this is more of resonance than induction

  • ha! you guys dnt know what is going on here apparently i do, figured it out a while ago trying to build one that can triple their distance. Hint: Fourier, resonance and Kepler.

  • more waves to reduce the life's expectancy, what an evolution!

  • Transferring electrical energy from one piece of coiled wire to another without any physical contact. Isn't that what transformers do? So all he's done is make an air-core'd transformer. OK... Well... his education was money well spent.  lol

  • INTEL going to miniatuize that and integrate in my I7 processor?

  • it is like ordinary transformer. Primary and Secondary Coil.if you takes cover the primary coil in ground. the source power will not give electromagnetic to the secondary coil..

  • This is a very nice display of faraday's law. I was excpecting some demonstration of a new technology however, especially when i saw intel in the title.

    Again, very usefull video for explaining inductance to someone.

  • Cool ! Watch also Tesla tech vids by HorizonDelta ;-)

  • ok.. all tis test bout low power consumption.. can resonance inductive coupling transfer high voltage power??

  • This looks great in concept, but I bet he'll never show what happens if you turn the secondary coil side on to the primary coil.

  • @AV3NG3R00

    LOL only watched the first half of the video. But yeh, the science stands...

    Looks good in a lab environment, but there's no way anyone will consciously think about the spatial positioning of their laptop or phone.

  • hay tell him to put an iron sheet between it man he experiances a new experiment

  • hahaha faradays law :- when magentic flux cuts winding an emf is induced hahaha what an old project man

  • Faraday > Tesla > Intel!?

    WTF... Let's steal projects!

  • Just like if one takes an engine block, wraps wire around it and puts it under high power lines one can -transfer- energy that way. Nothing new here. The losses are great in this system, nothing like wasting power.

  • Move on to SEC already. Stop this inductive crap.

  • Nothing fundamentally new. Search google books for "repulsion coil". I found some old articles from the 1930s. They were using an iron core coil and wall current.

  • Thats amazing!! I hope that this research continues.

  • esta tecnoligia existia desde 1900 y la descubrio nicolas tesla ahora ya es el 2009 y todavia usamos cables ... mendigo gobierno gringo y su afan por el dinero

  • Any thanks to Nikola Tesla for this idea?

  • Why should we thank Tesla for it?

    I thought induction was discovered by Faraday.

  • I've read somewhere that Tesla imagined the earth as a giant resonator.

    I think he assume the energy will have to travel in radiative way.

    However, that's not what happened here. Here we have simple magnetic coupling without the e (electric field component), so there is no radiatiaon. So the apparatus is simply a resonant coupled inductors.

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  • @agungk . Correct. All due to Faraday, not Tesla. But don't try to tell that to the conspiratard tesla-freaks, or you'll receive threatening mails in green ink.

  • @Karma01010 he wont get far with radiant transmission if he wants to get far he better make a Tesla magnifying transmitter

  • @Karma01010 have you received threatening emails?

  • @Karma01010 It is as due to faraday as it is to André-Marie Ampère, Nicholas Callan,James Clerk Maxwell , and more due to Heinrich Rudolf Hertz which is where Tesla improved upon previous work. They had about 5 contributions in the timeline, Tesla had over ten. furthermore if it has resonance in the name, we know where to place credit. Google the master of resonance. I wouldn't reply to a video with a machine that doesn't do shit, however your ignorance is outstanding.

  • I know exactly how this works. Its rather simple, really. Its fucking unholy witchcraft. That man is a witch and needs to be burned at the state.

  • Ой, трансформатор.. :)

  • I am curious, what will happen if they connect two bulbs in parallel. Will they glow with the same bright? Is there a limit on how many bulbs you can connect? Is it possible that in this case they can lit two 60 Watts bulbs with 75 Watt source?

  • Imagine attaching that coil to my iPod and carrying it round?

  • Sorry, I should probably applaud the work. At least it doesn't look like he'll be burned at the stake. When I said 'through a Faraday cage' I meant exactly what I said. Enclose either end in such a cage. When you can make this work -while either end is completely enclosed- Then I'll be impressed. When that happens there will be some hope information is or will be opened to the public. Then we can talk about going more than a couple of feet without upping the magnetic field.

  • I agree. Any conventional transverse EM wave will be inefficient and useless at any significant distance. Once they resolve longitudinal wave broadcast and reception the device will be useful. Google "Borderland Labs Transverse & Longitudinal Electricity" for more information about longitudinal electric waves.

  • vodpod. com/ watch/ 40604-tesla-transverse-and-lon­gitudinal-electric-waves

    There is a link to the video for those interested in TEM and LMD technology.

  • Yes. I'm familiar with T vs. L. 60 Watt bulb fully lit 100 yards from the 75 Watt source.... This is why I'm not impressed. Wake up folks. What do you think the military is using for mass crowd control now? They can be over 400 yards from the crowd and still inflict wounds. A few cm or m? Inverse square law? Jeez... Get ur' noses outta da books and on da bench!

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  • That is so fake

  • Yeah, and you know like zero physics!

    I came across this while looking for an example. I'm writing up a university lab report on wireless energy transfer for my electrical labs, and my labratory experiment went exactly like that. I lit a 12V light bulb and managed to transfer 13Watts over 2cm. Might not be much, but I only had 3 hours to do it, and that included making up the coils myself as well as making a oscilator circuit as I had to use an DC supply

    Maybe you should go and learn a bit!

  • You stupid fool.

  • how innefficient is it?

  • This method is not inductive coupling. You can tune the frequency to get optimal energy transfer for large distances.

  • No? then what is it?

    Magnetic coupling/inductive coupling, same thing here.

    You can't get it anymore efficient "tuning" into it. Sure, theres an optimal frequency for the AC supply to run at, but your still limited to a few feet. The best you can to is try and make the magnetic field as strong as possible. Nothing more.

  • true, most people counting on how much energy they can extract from the source. This is not the case of large amount energy transfer. The important thing we want is a stable frequency. Resonance doesn't care how much energy you got, it only cares how precise is your frequency. Since most things in nature operate at gigahertz, the only real and ez frequency we can deal with is Mhz or lower, which as to be man made. At perfect resonance with no resistance, a battery can power the world.

  • @ mcintoda9

    The fact that it doesn't work 90 degrees screams inductive coupling! rtfm...

  • Hi Unfortunately the coils distance apart is subject to the Inverse Square Law. Which makes it Impracticable over long distance, without huge amounts of power.

    cheers zeropoint132

  • @ZEROPOINT132 That attenuation only occurs when energy is distributed outward in a spherical or cone-shape. If the energy is projected outward in a perfect, or near-perfect cylindrical shape it won't attenuate.

  • tesla already did it

  • "Now switching over to wireless induction!"-Professor Go, Giant Robo.

  • Faraday cage will stop it 2 or 3 feet, relaying needed (passive or not)? Sorry I'm not impressed. Get it to send power through a Faraday cage in a point-broadcast fashion.Don't spend much effort on it though. MIT did this quite some time ago and arrogantly claimed it their own.

    I suppose that is the way. Figure how it was done in the garages and home benches of others, stick some math on it and publish. It's yours then! Your experiment looks nice. I'm sure you will do well in the establishment.

  • Hmm, thats right a Faradays cage would stop it, if you put the bulb and it's coil in the faradays cage - but what real world situation would that happen in? Putting a faradays cage inbetween the two coils won't affect it much at all, unless its that big that the pillers in the cage are like 4 feet wide.

    Your right, it's been known about for decades, but it's turning it into an efficiant and viable alternative to some wired solutions that's the difficult part, hence the research.

  • great job ;)

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