Stubblefield Electrical Battery Replication
Uploader Comments (morpher44)
Video Responses
All Comments (18)
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Nice effort. See Lasersaber's videos for some great Stubblefield replications. He has surpassed my efforts.
Bill
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@morpher44 Don't forget Antonio Mucci he was also an early telephone experimenter aswell as Elisha Gray.
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micro is 10 to the minus 6 I believe.
The cap I was using is physically quite small. A Farad is a huge value.
Interesting bit about the tertiary. I'll have to investigate more on that.
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@morpher44 "3300uF is approx 1/300th of a Farad."
I think you are thinking of nano farads, but 3300 uF is 3.3 whole farads. Micro, nano, pico.
Good luck with your stubblefield! Remember he had HV-HF on a tertiary winding that I belive was some earth frequency, that he used to entrain up the currents. Once he had them entrained, I think he stopped using the tertary.
Keep up the good work!
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3300uF is approx 1/300th of a Farad. Watts are a different concept altogether I'm afraid. Watts are a measure of power. Yes wire will corrode over time. Guys in the late 1800s/early 1900s had earth batteries running for decades, however, to run telegraph systems. They just needed to pour water on them to get them going.
hi, i love your video, i must say though one thing... Nathan wasnt kindof among the first, he was THE FIRST person to invent the telephon, he also invented cell phones basically, which they demonstrated. thank you for this
LiquidChem 1 year ago
@LiquidChem
Bell and Watson had Telephone on 3/10/1876. If you mean "wireless" telephone ... in the 1880s, Trowbridge, Preece, Phelps, and Edison were messing around with it. Edison wanted a system that would work up thru train tracks to the trains.
This was an interesting time. The rush for wireless was very competitive.
morpher44 1 year ago
@morpher44 What should be considered is that the copper wire should be insulated with a fiber insulation which keeps it from touching the iron wire, but allows the water to soak through and contact the copper wire.
abbarue 11 months ago
@abbarue
yes. Very good point. I used plastic covered wire which was not ideal. I find that patents are often lacking important details like this.
morpher44 11 months ago