--- Michel 

> Glad I was of some help.

Belated thanks to you, Michel, as you seldom get
enough credit for the little things you do, even if
they had already been underway ;-)
 
> 3V per LED, is this correct?

That is ~ what it works out to, which is slightly less
than the spec for the part, but as I understand it, in
the series loop (or 'plug' as it is called) the
voltage would likely appear to be higher, if the
circuit would tolerate a probe (it won't). DrS appears
to be conservative with the 11 watts.

Meaning Puthoff is probably spying on him as we speak,
or has anyone already claimed the 1 watt challenge?
 
> Surely the emitted power has been taken into account
> too, how much is it, and how far is it?

His site says this: "The lab is located in close
proximity to a 50kw AM transmitter operating on a
frequency of 1520kHz. Additionally there are high RF
levels from an FM radio station in range of 98mHz. To
the best of our knowledge all internal noise
generation equipment has been identified and accounted
for in the electronics lab."

"Normal 120V/240V service wiring within the lab has
been identified as a ground loop generator and is
accounted for in experiments in which such ground
loops will have an effect."

How close is close, you ask? This is Texas remember,
not France, so it could be within a few miles, but let
me check. The frequency of the AM is significantly
below frequency of the CE7 (~18 MHz). Considering that
wide difference of frequency and the cage, the
possibility of a commercial radio source of power is
slight, but cannot be ruled out to the satisfaction of
all until the device is taken to a more remote spot.
 
> I heard that some people living close to the Eiffel
> tower manage to derive 
> their electrical heating power from its radio
> emitters, but it may be a legend.

EDF should be told about this!-) 

Jones



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