Bruce Varley
Guest
Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:47 am
Mr Teslas vision seems to have surfaced again, in a smaller form maybe. See
www.witricity.com. They're claiming a power capture of 60 watts at a
distance of 2 metres from the source, there isn't much technical detail
provided but they do state that the system's based on resonant coils, and
operates at a frequency of 9 MHz. They also state that it's 'safe' (Mandy
Rice-Davies springs to mind).
Any thoughts on this? Based on work I've done on underground communications
using near field equipment, it doesn't look totally kosher to me. Unlike a
microwave path, near fields can't be focussed to any degree AFAIAA, If
there's 60 watts available at 2 metres, then there could be significant RF
energy available around the source in many directions. Lower frequency than
mobile phones, but tens of watts rather than milliwatts involved. And if the
geometry is over a couple of metres, there would be a significant amount of
RF radiation as well, the regulatory people may not be too impressed with
one in every second home.
Alan
Guest
Thu Oct 13, 2011 3:27 am
Have a look at the work of Konstantin Meyl on longitudinal waves
(scalar waves) by using two Tesla coils (one transmiter and one
receiver) . Year: 2003
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuJPz88jUbM
I think he's a professor at some German University.
Also some work by Eric Dollard from years ago:
http://www.borderlands.com/dollardandtesla.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YhuSn6sc7sc
Be interesting to know if this new mob have patented the prior
knowledge?
Alan
On Wed, 12 Oct 2011 10:47:59 +0800, "Bruce Varley" <bv_at_NoSpam.com>
wrote:
Quote:
Mr Teslas vision seems to have surfaced again, in a smaller form maybe. See
www.witricity.com. They're claiming a power capture of 60 watts at a
distance of 2 metres from the source, there isn't much technical detail
provided but they do state that the system's based on resonant coils, and
operates at a frequency of 9 MHz. They also state that it's 'safe' (Mandy
Rice-Davies springs to mind).
Any thoughts on this? Based on work I've done on underground communications
using near field equipment, it doesn't look totally kosher to me. Unlike a
microwave path, near fields can't be focussed to any degree AFAIAA, If
there's 60 watts available at 2 metres, then there could be significant RF
energy available around the source in many directions. Lower frequency than
mobile phones, but tens of watts rather than milliwatts involved. And if the
geometry is over a couple of metres, there would be a significant amount of
RF radiation as well, the regulatory people may not be too impressed with
one in every second home.
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