free energy from air through tower 2
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This video is a response to Utilization of Radiant Energy 1901 Nikola Tesla,My test 4
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@ensaiodeporrada - Search for Coral Castle Code in the Web, and the name DePew. You'll be surprised.
121ego 2 weeks ago
@121ego actually is -273 C which we can never reach, apparently. but, yes i do agree with you
ensaiodeporrada 2 weeks ago
@kukulcangod1 I would say you are reading 'static electricity', yet the term is misleading because it infers it is "static". There is nothing static in electricity. The electrons never stop moving, unless they reach absolute zero (-260C). There is going to be always some kind of potential accumulated in the material, because charges will become stable for some time, until they discharge and the process will continue. With air around, this happens continuously, hence there is 'flow', current.
121ego 2 months ago
@helicopterpilot88 correction .3 amps
helicopterpilot88 4 months ago
@luc59457 with the larger radio towers operating in the 500k-1MW power range. HF is an "earth wave" so there are a lot bouncing around in the atmosphere, freefor the taking also.
helicopterpilot88 4 months ago
@luc59457 true enough. 9000V would be pretty phenomenal, or parallel at 3 amps (not so great), but you apply a load, the IR drop through the source itself would just about use all the power just to cause a current to flow, not including the load itself. Hopefully there is revelation to be had that could change everything. I would think it would be easier to just rig up a bunch of 1/4 wave antennas at an HF resonant frequency and amplify the output. Most FM transceivers output like 5w-10w.....
helicopterpilot88 4 months ago
@helicopterpilot88 100 is a lot of hanging open wires! Lets say you can do it all for 1000$, so 10$ each setup. Not a bad price but you forgot something. Resistance. Not an that idea most will find practical
luc59457 4 months ago
@cyberdems Doesn't matter how you convert it 27w is not much
luc59457 4 months ago
@luc59457 link 100 of them in a more refined version in series.
helicopterpilot88 4 months ago
sp 90V at 300mA... with the right circuitry to regulate, you could hook that up to a transformer to bring down to 12V and you'll have 2.25 amps. 2.2 amps of 12V from thin air? sounds like a bargain to me :)
cyberdems 7 months ago