Wireless electricity

Using cables is perfectly fine and more efficientm, pointless imo.
 
Is there any particular reason you quoted my post?
 
Yep, known about it for years. Even did a lab with it in physics this year. The only thing new about this is the boosted range.

I am unaware of magnetic fields causing cancer. If they do this is news to me.
 
I can see the "Wifi is dangerous for your health!" crowd coming down on this harshly.
However, these waves are allegedly 10 MHz (I think?), in the HF band, which is much more certain to be safe than the microwave regions of wifi (I think that wifi is perfectly safe, btw, they are too low power to cause any significant heating to the human body).

I'd like to see how they stop people outside your house from stealing power from you. Maybe via some kind of cryptic channel assignment?
 
What I don't get is why it took 100 years to get so noticed, Tesla documented making this work with a power source over 3 kilometers away.
 
I can see the "Wifi is dangerous for your health!" crowd coming down on this harshly.
However, these waves are allegedly 10 MHz (I think?), in the HF band, which is much more certain to be safe than the microwave regions of wifi (I think that wifi is perfectly safe, btw, they are too low power to cause any significant heating to the human body).

I'd like to see how they stop people outside your house from stealing power from you. Maybe via some kind of cryptic channel assignment?

Well the rings are physically built to be exactley resonant with one another. You could have a personalized "key" ring that you could plug your devices into that has the same resonant frequency as the house's ring.
 
That's what Westinghouse got so pissed off about in the 1920's when he found out what Tesla was building his Warden Cliff tower for.

Using this kindof technology he believed he would of been able to use the earth as a giant high frequency capacitor by using his tower to stimulate it, giving it a natural charge. So you could just simply plug an appliance into the earth and you would essentially have free power, and no cookie for someone who can see why that's not in the best interest for the energy business.
 
I've had wireless power in my home for about 10 years.

Cordless toothbrushes.

Also, generators in powerplants, and transformers on the national grid make use of wireless power.

They've managed to increase the range by a couple of orders of magnitude, from centimetres, to metres.

Kilometres? That's three more orders of magnitude.
 
This would play absolute havok with wildlife guidance systems.

Most likely affect humans in some way too!
 
Not at HF( High Frequency radio) frequencies it wouldn't...

HF signals are of a lower energy than the TV broadcasters which operate at VHF or UHF (Very/Ultra High Frequency). The interaction of radiowaves with the human body drops off rapidly with decreasing frequency.

The Crystal Palace transmitter has been blasting out 1 Megawatt of power for the BBC for a long time now.

These wireless power devices are going to be in the region 10s or 100s of Watts, and can only power a lightbulb that is a few metres away.

DNA, biologic tissues or animal guidance systems are not going to coincidentally have the same resonant frequency as this technology.

HF is totally safe, it's been in use for 100 years.
 
I've had wireless power in my home for about 10 years.

Cordless toothbrushes.

Also, generators in powerplants, and transformers on the national grid make use of wireless power.

They've managed to increase the range by a couple of orders of magnitude, from centimetres, to metres.

Kilometres? That's three more orders of magnitude.

The famous light bulb test Tesla did, he documented that he was experimenting with HF electricty using the earth itself as the transmitter. His patents show this, and he wrote down how he took a bulb over 3 kilometers away from the HF power source he was using, jabbed it into the earth and it lit up.

Transforming electrical current into standing waves using HF seems to be the key to transmitting at a large distance.
 
The famous light bulb test Tesla did, he documented that he was experimenting with HF electricty using the earth itself as the transmitter. His patents show this, and he wrote down how he took a bulb over 3 kilometers away from the HF power source he was using, jabbed it into the earth and it lit up.

Transforming electrical current into standing waves using HF seems to be the key to transmitting at a large distance.
Show me the patents, and maybe I'll decide not to label you as a goof ball.

- Pax
 
Wireless electricity isn't hard, you just need a torch/laser and a solar array.
 
what about static electricity buildup, sensitive equipment that will burn up,....

at this stage the technology is too inefficient and poorly researched. i don't want to see this coming public at least some decades after detailed research.
 
ppl with electric hearts (it's called that right?), are gonna get owned..
 
This would play absolute havok with wildlife guidance systems.

Most likely affect humans in some way too!

Then we'll just have to fit them with new guidance systems. Im sure a pigeon cant be that different from a JDAM. :p Though you wouldnt want to get the singals mixed up...
 
I just don't get this whole "Wired electricity works, stick to that" attitude. Your house phone works, but I bet most of you own a mobile phone.

Besides, one of the major obsticles to human mounted technology (Mobile built into your head for example) was that it would have to protrude from the skin in order to be plugged in. With this kind of tech, it can be properly embedded.
 
Show me the patents, and maybe I'll decide not to label you as a goof ball.

- Pax

Initiative much? just goto the Library or download the patents on the net.

But luckily I have the full copies of all his patents in book form.

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i dont think Pax was expecting that one
Actually, I was. Seeing as Clarky is the type of person who goes ahead and actually collects crap like that.

Just wanted to see if he had them.

- Pax
 
they should give this experiment at least 13 years of medical testing before rolling it out to public use.
 
Pax, calling Tesla's work crap just shows how ridiculous your opinion is, he was a genius and he was ahead of his time, he still would be even now.

He is the perfect example that shows us just how little we have developed technologically when it comes to energy, and all thanks to the folks who would prefer to be back in the dark ages aslong as they have you on a meter.
 
Then we'll just have to fit them with new guidance systems. Im sure a pigeon cant be that different from a JDAM. :p Though you wouldnt want to get the singals mixed up...

Jihad one: I hope the marines don't pick us up on radar and bo OMG WTF PIGEON .
 
Pax, calling Tesla's work crap just shows how ridiculous your opinion is, he was a genius and he was ahead of his time, he still would be even now.

He is the perfect example that shows us just how little we have developed technologically when it comes to energy, and all thanks to the folks who would prefer to be back in the dark ages aslong as they have you on a meter.
The Dark Ages were ace; people keeping the world population counter down, interbreeding, paying the church so you can reserve a special spot in heaven. It's like a nonstop party, next to the Victorian age.

Anyway, I'm not calling Tesla's work crap. Hell, I believe he spend a lot of time trying to get his idea's to work. But it's like the guy who got a patent for piping snow and ice balls from Antarctica to irrigate the Australian desert. A patent doesn't say anything, it just prohibits other people from copying the design. It doesn't say anything about if it would actually work. It's a claim that it works and will be useful, some time in the future.

But having an in depth discussion about the possibilities of his idea's actually working is useless, seeing as Tesla seems to be your idol and therefore you're biased beyond sanity.

Let's keep this all on a level of; "It's a shame he isn't here anymore, seeing as he himself could have defended his idea's better. C'est la vie, let's have tea and crumpets."

- Pax
 
It's not an idea or a concept. He actually did make wireless electricity devices. It's documented. He had a lot of crazy inventions. He also had a wacky (and wrong) unified field theory, and was certifiably schitzo
 
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