When I was a kid I read in the newspaper about a guy that lived only a few
hundred yards from a 50KW AM radio transmitter. He had lived there since
before the transmitter was built and had protested unsuccessfully to the city
about his unhealthy exposure to excessive RF power. So he built a power
collector in his attic and used the power he collected run his incandescent
lights and electric heaters (no fancy power converters are required to do
that). His attic power collector made a huge hole in the transmitter's
radiation pattern (since energy is always conserved, the power he collected
wasn't getting out to intended radio receivers) so the radio station finally
bought his property at a more-than-fair price.
----- Original Message -----
From: Brad Franks
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [email protected] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, June 21, 2008 1:39 PM
Subject: Re: NPC: NMC: Drill Here. Drill Now. Pay Less - Petition
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jerry, I'm not following your fixation on radio waves, et al. Wouldn't
radio waves have to come from somewhere? Don't they have to be generated by
something? Wouldn't that something have to consume energy? Please point me to
some links on this newly discovered FREE energy source.
Radio waves are generated by advertising revenue paid to radio and television
broadcast facilities across the globe; with the exception of the BBC of course,
which are instead paid for by the tax pounds of the citizens of the United
Kingdom.
Radio waves carry enough energy to excite a crystal tuned to the specific
frequency of the wave. That energy is then fed into an amplifier and passed on
to your speakers. If a "super crystal" could be made that oscillates at all
frequencies simultaneously it could generate enough energy to do "something."
Until such a system exists it would be hard to tell how much energy it could
generate. And even then, see my caveat in the next paragraph.
The problem I see with this technology is that if I were driving through a
canyon and lost all reception to RF my car would stall, at which point I would
have to push it out of the canyon to get reception again. Most canyons are
pretty deep, that would make a hell of a push!
However, I think that there is actually some merit to the idea. The energy
could be stored in a battery in a similar fashion to brake regenerating systems
in use on todays hybrid cars. Would it generate enough power to compensate for
the energy required to move weight of the equipment?
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