I'm very intrigued by Tesla's electric car. It has been haunting me ever since learning about it.
I've read on here about an 'invisible antenna' and am shooting this idea off in hopes that someone here has tested something like it. I know many have been able to duplicate free energy tests using Tesla's radiant patent which requires a ground and an atmospheric antenna. But what if we didn't need huge antennas but a simple device which created an invisible antenna shooting up many feet into the air, and many feet into the ground?
So what if those two 3" metal rods Tesla had were the antennas, and he used his bifilar wound coil in series to magnify the size of the little rods? Does this make any sense or am I crazy? This would also explain the need for the 12 volt battery on the car to energize and create the invisible antenna so that it could then suck in the power. I got this idea from Steven Mark who wrote in a letter that he was inspired by a story about an old tube television that was able to release so much energy it pulled nails out of the walls (maybe the ears were aimed just right, and aluminum was also used? I hear a lot about aluminum on these types of devices)
So with the solenoid type coils, the diode wouldn't even be necessary, or would it? Electromagnetic diode?
I've read on here about an 'invisible antenna' and am shooting this idea off in hopes that someone here has tested something like it. I know many have been able to duplicate free energy tests using Tesla's radiant patent which requires a ground and an atmospheric antenna. But what if we didn't need huge antennas but a simple device which created an invisible antenna shooting up many feet into the air, and many feet into the ground?
So what if those two 3" metal rods Tesla had were the antennas, and he used his bifilar wound coil in series to magnify the size of the little rods? Does this make any sense or am I crazy? This would also explain the need for the 12 volt battery on the car to energize and create the invisible antenna so that it could then suck in the power. I got this idea from Steven Mark who wrote in a letter that he was inspired by a story about an old tube television that was able to release so much energy it pulled nails out of the walls (maybe the ears were aimed just right, and aluminum was also used? I hear a lot about aluminum on these types of devices)
So with the solenoid type coils, the diode wouldn't even be necessary, or would it? Electromagnetic diode?
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