Farm,
You may find this interesting.
Are you sure that your coils are operating at 1/4 wave?
it seems to me that one of those articles you had from tesla said the transmitter as a system needed to be adjusted for 1/4 wave and of course if you want to get any kind of real power out of it, it wil also need to have a nice standing wave for both your transmitter and rec at the operating freq.
Beyond matching them to be identical resonators mechanically then matching the impedance for a good transverse standing wave, then retune the freq like meyl to match the 1.2 - 1.57 speed I would think that is all the is necessary to get max output aside from raising the voltage and getting them up in the rarified air as tesla put it.
I think you will find this interesting.
Transverse & Longitudinal Electric Waves - Eric Dollard And Thomas Joseph Brown on Vimeo
Tesla's Longitudinal Electricity - Eric Dollard, Peter Lindemann & Tom Brown on Vimeo
Standing Waves Generated by String Vibration - YouTube
Loop antenna resonance measurement with the MFJ-259B - YouTube
Standing Wave Ratio explained - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 12b-8 Smith Chart VSWR, lmin,lmax - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 13b-1 Impedance Matching Intro - YouTube
Homebrew antenna tuners - YouTube
LL-Tuner by PA0LL.mpg - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 6 4 Standing wave ratio - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 30-1 Plane Wave Reflection and Transmission, Oblique Incidence - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 30-3 Plane Wave Transmission and Reflection, Oblique Incidence - YouTube
ECE 3300 Lecture 30-2 Plane Wave Reflection and Transmission, Oblique Incidence - YouTube
You may find this interesting.
Are you sure that your coils are operating at 1/4 wave?
it seems to me that one of those articles you had from tesla said the transmitter as a system needed to be adjusted for 1/4 wave and of course if you want to get any kind of real power out of it, it wil also need to have a nice standing wave for both your transmitter and rec at the operating freq.
Beyond matching them to be identical resonators mechanically then matching the impedance for a good transverse standing wave, then retune the freq like meyl to match the 1.2 - 1.57 speed I would think that is all the is necessary to get max output aside from raising the voltage and getting them up in the rarified air as tesla put it.
I think you will find this interesting.
Transverse & Longitudinal Electric Waves - Eric Dollard And Thomas Joseph Brown on Vimeo
Tesla's Longitudinal Electricity - Eric Dollard, Peter Lindemann & Tom Brown on Vimeo
Standing Waves Generated by String Vibration - YouTube
Loop antenna resonance measurement with the MFJ-259B - YouTube
Standing Wave Ratio explained - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 12b-8 Smith Chart VSWR, lmin,lmax - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 13b-1 Impedance Matching Intro - YouTube
Homebrew antenna tuners - YouTube
LL-Tuner by PA0LL.mpg - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 6 4 Standing wave ratio - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 30-1 Plane Wave Reflection and Transmission, Oblique Incidence - YouTube
ECE3300 Lecture 30-3 Plane Wave Transmission and Reflection, Oblique Incidence - YouTube
ECE 3300 Lecture 30-2 Plane Wave Reflection and Transmission, Oblique Incidence - YouTube
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