Using the Air As a Wire-Was Nikola Tesla Right?

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  • čas přidán 13. 09. 2024
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @NexxuSix
    @NexxuSix Před 2 lety +848

    Well, in a way amateur radio operators have been doing this for some time now. I was able to transmit 20 watts of power using CW (Morse code) and was picked up 5,590 miles away at a receiving station. Granted, it’s microvolts by the time my signal got that far, but the concept is the same and it does indeed work.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Před 2 lety +21

      That's cool. Was that a field day?
      Antennas and radios are pretty cool, considering megawatt FM antennas don't go even close to that far.

    •  Před 2 lety +13

      If we can use 1.5 km perpendicular lasers that detect gravitational waves caused by merging black holes light-years away with a detector that detects changes in laser position that's smaller than the full surface of a proton, imagine what else we could do with that.

    • @rer9287
      @rer9287 Před 2 lety +45

      its not the same actually. Tesla was very loud and clear about this - his "ideas" do not follow the inverse square law and would suffer no loss at any distance. In short, he is overrated.

    • @NexxuSix
      @NexxuSix Před 2 lety +21

      @BuildGUY 20w to microvolts = not very efficient

    • @viraj1304
      @viraj1304 Před 2 lety +8

      The efficiency of this transmitter made me rethink that's if it's worth using or not

  • @ncs1999
    @ncs1999 Před 2 lety +280

    Something really interesting happened to me at 1:47.
    When I first watched it, he talks about how the spark grows but I saw nothing but complete darkness in the tube.
    When I replayed 1:47 again, however, I saw the spark grow despite seeing nothing there previously.
    I knew the video wasn't frozen because I could see the blue part at the left side of the screen still flashing.
    After a lot of trial and error, it turns out that the sparks are flashing completely in sync with the framerate, and because I was watching the video at 2x speed, CZcams was skipping every other frame, so depending on which frame you start on, you either only see the frames where there are no sparks at all, or only the frames where there are only sparks.
    Go ahead and try watching 1:47 at 2x speed multiple times to see the difference!

    • @oogaooga0000
      @oogaooga0000 Před 2 lety +8

      interestnig

    • @jacobgable3163
      @jacobgable3163 Před 2 lety +34

      Interesting. I wonder if it has to do with the fact that AC current from the wall operates at 60 Hz (same frequency as the refresh rate of this video).

    • @thunderlord1263
      @thunderlord1263 Před 2 lety +3

      Very interesting

    • @qwerty_qwerty
      @qwerty_qwerty Před 2 lety +9

      hmm well I watched on 2x speed and it was normal 🤨

    • @oogaooga0000
      @oogaooga0000 Před 2 lety +2

      @@qwerty_qwerty its only the part where he says look at how it grows or something

  • @paulkocyla1343
    @paulkocyla1343 Před 2 lety +350

    From what I understood is that Tesla wanted the capacitance between the ionosphere and the Earth to form a resonant tank circuit with the tower´s coil.
    He thought that the same setup with the same resonance frequency anywhere else on Earth would pick up the energy efficiently.

    • @PhysicsHack
      @PhysicsHack Před 2 lety +55

      Thats exactly what I've read also. Not many people are aware of this detail.

    • @ГеоргиГеоргиев-с3г
      @ГеоргиГеоргиев-с3г Před 2 lety +20

      As a way to leech energy from lightning, yeah maybe, as a transmission carrier, both towers would need to be at the poles to interact with "aurora borealis" or be (~5) hundreds of kilometres high to be inside the ionosphere and at that point just use lasers as energy carrier to send energy over the ground level horizon, because you will have line of sight to half the globe (more like an eight), but why use towers then, when you have satellites flying that high. With some really good targeting computers you can use them as high power relays just as currently we have satellite communication, it does relay power but it is less than the energy lost due to air scattering it and also, a megawatt laser is effectively a point and destroy weapon(if 10W one already is, by burning stuff). Melting buildings one laser width (^3) per minute (could calculate a more precise value knowing 1L warms to boil in 2-4 minutes at 1KW and rock melts at 3000 ⁰c so 1KG of cement in like 6 minutes shorthanding heat loss, reflectivity,thermal capacity difference and air)

    • @cognitivedissident9825
      @cognitivedissident9825 Před 2 lety +13

      Then Wardenclyffe was destroyed to protect it from the Nahzees.. Now we have wires, nicely metered

    • @thunderlord1263
      @thunderlord1263 Před 2 lety +6

      @@KastorFlux great explanation

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před 2 lety +8

      And the resonance he assumed was longitudinal, as resonant sound. However, EMF doesn't do that.

  • @Bobble84
    @Bobble84 Před 2 lety +83

    The concept of the tesla coil is misunderstood. The atmosphere is a capacitor and the ground is the wire and in a best case scenario the transmitter would not leak any coronal discharge but instead just cause the ions in the atmosphere to oscillate at the frequency of the coil in order for it to be received anywhere on earth. The key is grounding and tuning through capacitance.

    • @PhysicsHack
      @PhysicsHack Před 2 lety +5

      Great comment! He did write about this.

    • @Mannwhich
      @Mannwhich Před 2 lety +11

      Best explanation I've heard! One of Tesla's experiments (if I recall correctly) involved plugging dozens of lightbulbs onto a hillside. With nothing connecting them except dirt.

    • @TheSbd13
      @TheSbd13 Před 2 lety +3

      The truth!

    • @taylorwestmore4664
      @taylorwestmore4664 Před 2 lety +5

      Have you read Thomas Bearden's theory on Tesla discovering phase conjugation, also called 4-wave mixing? He describes using the Earth and Ionosphere as a self-pumped phase conjugate mirror. The idea was that in a medium or circuit, 2 equal and opposite incoming waves may provide a "pump" to establish electrical Non-linearity in the medium, like the Earth-ionosphere gap, or between a grounded Tesla coil and the thermoelectric currents in the center of the Earth. If you can phase conjugate ambient waves in the environment you can confine them in the system like a resonant cavity of extremely high Q factor, which is also automatically phase locking. Phase conjugated signals are said to be "time reversed" because the phase angle is rotate 180 degrees and the momentum vector is exactly the opposite vector in space to any incoming waves. So these pairs of waves become locked together between Tesla coil and source, building up over many cycles without dissipating by normal reflection or other distortion. A kind of automatic parametric resonance which can cohere noise signals into power with minimal losses. This could explain Tesla's claims of collecting "radiant energy" from the environment in excess of the energy which was transmitted from his coil.

    • @thunderlord1263
      @thunderlord1263 Před 2 lety +1

      All of these are all cool theory's but stupid if you don't expiriment.

  • @JD-pi2ce
    @JD-pi2ce Před 2 lety +16

    This is easily one of the coolest experiments I've ever seen. Absolutely awesome.

  • @basseldahdouh8736
    @basseldahdouh8736 Před 2 lety +59

    Bro i fell in love with this channel ever since i first saw it. Keep up your work man❤️ you really helping alot of people learn interesting stuff ❤️

    • @RexGalilae
      @RexGalilae Před 2 lety +7

      Im in love with the guy since I first saw him too
      The channel's aight ig

    • @westonding8953
      @westonding8953 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah. His videos never cease to amaze me. They always generate more questions than they answer!

    • @batman81022
      @batman81022 Před 2 lety +2

      @@RexGalilae lmfao bro

    • @gabemac_FJB
      @gabemac_FJB Před 2 lety

      Me too! All this information is so fascinating!🥲
      Even for me! And I already have 2 associates degrees in EET!😄 Although, I know a lot of stupid people that "have degrees".

    • @gabemac_FJB
      @gabemac_FJB Před 2 lety

      @@thunderlord1263 No no no, Im not trying to brag at all! Im sorry if it seemed that way. I was just trying to express how much I enjoy the channel.

  • @jerotoro2021
    @jerotoro2021 Před 2 lety +191

    If someone did make a "wire" in the upper atmosphere to transmit electricity, how would that interact with the static electricity already in the atmosphere? Would it make lightning more frequent, or less? Change where it hits?

  • @chris993361
    @chris993361 Před 2 lety +15

    Granted it has been sometimes since I researched this, but my understanding was it wasn't about setting up a low resistance to plasma. My understanding was when the tower was big enough. It set up an electromagnetic wave that traveled through that atmosphere with the other half traveling through the ground at a frequency that was in resonance with the planet. I don't remember all the details but I don't think what you show here was as it all what he was trying to do.

  • @pdxmusl1510
    @pdxmusl1510 Před 2 lety +10

    About 15-20 years ago.... there was a group working on this. I forget who. But I saw a live demonstration. It was a several 100s sqft room. I forget how big. I think it was around 500. It was large but not massively larege. It was powered through wireless power. Lamps. Vacuums. Tvs. Etc. Everything in the room. They were trying to scale up. But they got it to work with reasonable power loss in a normal size room or smaller house.

    • @joeybuddy96
      @joeybuddy96 Před 2 lety +1

      Hmm, the room itself was probably specially made, I assume.

  • @termiterasin
    @termiterasin Před 2 lety +15

    I like how you reinvented wires, and also fluorescent lighting, worse, in the same tool! Fascinating video!

  • @srinjayshrinivasshankar3811

    This video literally shocked me. Your videos are more intriguing and exceptional. Waiting for more Nikola Tesla videos.

  • @xulum1299
    @xulum1299 Před 2 lety +10

    There is another thing, if you use a sharp top load you loose more energy. If you use a ball shaped or toroidal shaped top load it could go even further.

  • @pirobot668beta
    @pirobot668beta Před 2 lety +8

    Earth was the wire, the atmosphere an insulator and the ionosphere was the outer conductor.
    He was trying to make a giant coaxial cable with his coils being either feeding elements dumping energy into the air or as resonant taps drawing energy!
    Do you guys even read his patents?
    The down-side would be the total elimination of all radio-communications...his system would have been the perfect 'radio jammer', dumping megawatts of RF into the air.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před 2 lety +2

      and he assumed, incorrectly, that EMF could be set up with resonant standing waves the same way sound can be, and EMF doesn't work like that.

  • @markdavis1338
    @markdavis1338 Před 2 lety +40

    In addition to the inefficiencies, theres the inherent RF noise that tesla coils are notoriously known for that would have the FCC in all a tizzy

    • @nanaki-seto
      @nanaki-seto Před 2 lety +7

      Yeh most communications would be toast telephone even copper wire cell wifi cable and arial tv signals sats com all it it would not function

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 2 lety +4

      That's spark gaps, not the Tesla coils themselves. Tesla coils are by themselves just a particular transformer topology, and if _correctly_ used won't throw off any sparks... but most hobby users like them _because_ of the sparks, and those sparks (or more particularly the wideband signals they produce) are the problem.

  • @zachcrawford5
    @zachcrawford5 Před 2 lety +76

    This is an extremely brute force approach to wireless energy transfer and I'm fairly certain it's not what Nikola Tesla had in mind. I think his idea was closer to the idea of using tesla coil like devices to convert electricity to a specific high intensity radio frequency that an antenna could receive and convert back into electricity to power a device (kind of like how a crystal radio is powered) but I think he wanted to use just the right frequency so that it not only resonated with the atmosphere but was also internally reflected by the atmosphere so the transmission wouldn't be impeded by the horizon (and wouldn't be lost to space ethier). He wanted to have many of these devices in specific places around the world and have them synced up in such a way that each device's signal generated constructive interference with the signals of the others, basically converting the entirety of Earth's atmosphere (or at least the troposphere) into a lased radio resonance cavity the anyone, anywhere could siphon power from.

    • @JohnHaugeland
      @JohnHaugeland Před 2 lety +7

      "I think his idea was closer to"
      it doesn't matter, it's not real

    • @zachcrawford5
      @zachcrawford5 Před 2 lety +17

      @@JohnHaugeland Neither was the airplane or the bicycle until someone made it so.

    • @shotybumbati
      @shotybumbati Před 2 lety +3

      i agree- i think tuning and resonance is a big part of this- like trying to make a motor but you haven't balanced the weight or strength of the magnets- theres alot of efficiency left on the table. If transmission stations and receivers are tuned in a way accounting for distance then transmission rates would be much better.
      Tesla did in fact create a working implementation of this system but his lab might have been burnt down. His main investor JP Morgan, had just invested millions in conventional electric transmission system. He would have been directly undermining his previous previous investments had he bankrolled Tesla's wireless transmission.
      in any case its too late now- wireless energy transmission is pretty much impossible while cars are powered by HIGHLY EXPLOSIVE LIQUIDS

    • @altaccout
      @altaccout Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@zachcrawford5 another thing that isn't real unless someone builds it is my time machine

    • @zachcrawford5
      @zachcrawford5 Před 2 lety +1

      @@altaccout But what if you go back to a time before it was built?

  • @andrewparker318
    @andrewparker318 Před 2 lety +12

    One other thing is that arcs waste energy which is why you typically want to try and suppress them when optimizing for wireless power. Next time try using a much higher frequency wile also avoiding sharp spikes

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před 2 lety

      There's that, there's also the possibility of explosion if there are any combustible fumes in the area. As well as the challenge of ensuring that the sparks jump to and from where you want them to. Not to mention the ozone that this would generate. High up in the atmosphere that would be great, closer to the ground it would do massive damage.

  • @dingus42
    @dingus42 Před 2 lety +4

    Wow the frame rate of the sparks at 2:00 matched exactly twice the playback frame rate (at least on my iphone), so i was just watching a black screen (it was only playing the black frames) until i rewinded and it synced with the spark frames

  • @thecommenter578
    @thecommenter578 Před 2 lety +3

    What was more interesting to me is that the arcs when from the classic erratic lightning shape to basically a straight line. I've never seen a straight lightning so it was cool

  • @0neIntangible
    @0neIntangible Před 2 lety +68

    To Action Lab: How much UV light was generated by this, if any, and if so, did you have to wear UV filtered eyeglasses to look at it, and also any special camera settings to record it?

    • @aaronchristie8940
      @aaronchristie8940 Před 2 lety +15

      I had the same thoughts. High voltage across a vacuum tube can create some nasty rays.

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 Před 2 lety +15

      UV would probably be absorbed by the tube. I would be more concerned about the generated XRays.

    • @mavadoroaster
      @mavadoroaster Před 2 lety +4

      The pyramids were way ahead of Tesla..

    • @DANGJOS
      @DANGJOS Před 2 lety +5

      @@wernerviehhauser94 Longer wavelength UV, above 300 nanometers, may not be blocked much at all. It depends on the type of glass and its thickness.

    • @allstarwatt7246
      @allstarwatt7246 Před 2 lety +7

      ​@@mavadoroaster deranged rambling...

  • @Lampe2020
    @Lampe2020 Před 2 lety +8

    Wow, *The Action Lab* just re-invented the fluorescent tube!

  • @NavajoNinja
    @NavajoNinja Před 2 lety +14

    With the tides on earth, you would think we would have made some tide dams that fill up during high tide and slowly drain and spin tubines till next tide. Or geothermal vents? Or are both of these not viable?

    • @0neIntangible
      @0neIntangible Před 2 lety +5

      Yes, agreed & agreed...we should be doing more of these! As well as deep water thermals.

    • @liamwinter4512
      @liamwinter4512 Před 2 lety +8

      They exist.

    • @WSmith_1984
      @WSmith_1984 Před 2 lety

      Agreed, here's what's been the problem though...... oil. The powers that be want to meter everything and sell it..... the next to be metered is us and our "carbon footprints" They want ultimate control, we just want the peace and freedom to live..... we need to make this happen without them, if we can organise and decentralise our enegry needs these scumbags will have a lot less impact on our lives......
      Old patents and the like have lot's of great ideas, remember when electricity came about it was decentralised so thet had lots of ways to generate power in the home, it was only once the likes of JP Morgan got their hands on it that it became centralised.....

    • @AhmedRazaAli_2009_pk
      @AhmedRazaAli_2009_pk Před 2 lety +5

      They are possible. But others things and methods are simply cheaper, more efficient and more practical.

    • @Unethical.Dodgson
      @Unethical.Dodgson Před 2 lety +4

      There actually are large tidal farms. They're am expensive investment and can't be built just anywhere but in truth. The efficiency is actually really really good.
      Again. It's not something just anyone can do and just anywhere.

  • @TheStackeddeck77
    @TheStackeddeck77 Před 2 lety +2

    Texas Tech University was working on this behind closed doors, my professor's colleague and friend was one of the researchers on the project. We didnt get details but he did say this is what they are working on. That was 5ish years ago.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 2 lety

      Probably won't get any real-world use. The concept is sound, but the economics are just a pipe dream. It essentially isn't useful for anything other than over-the-horizon radar/radio, ionosphere research, demonstrations, and ideas for very different applications. It's too easy to tap into without approval, so you can't use access control to establish the resource stream needed to keep the system running.

  • @Xeno_Bardock
    @Xeno_Bardock Před 2 lety +12

    Tesla intended to transmit currents through the earth and not air. Read "The True Wireless" by Tesla Universe.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před 2 lety

      earth and air as a circuit, otherwise he'd have used a mineshaft not a tower.

  • @crazyjam6551
    @crazyjam6551 Před 2 lety +17

    It was called RC current.
    It required receivers in every device used.
    Each device had a transformer in it at whatever potential needed

  • @edwardblair4096
    @edwardblair4096 Před 2 lety +8

    With all the hysteria over the supposed dangers of 5G cellular networks, I can't imagine the real environmental concerns over pumping lots of bulk energy into the environment would get much traction.

  • @DragonFire360Media
    @DragonFire360Media Před 2 lety +18

    Well you also have to contend with the inverse square law. It's simply not practical for so many reasons. Some people think it's because it would be about free energy and that's why they won't do it. And although that would be a factor, that is by far not the only factor as to why this won't be done.

    • @Unethical.Dodgson
      @Unethical.Dodgson Před 2 lety +6

      People that believe in free energy really are the flat Earthers of the electronics world.

    • @pleaseletmehavemyprivacy3450
      @pleaseletmehavemyprivacy3450 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Unethical.Dodgson haha true

    • @dannymoneywell
      @dannymoneywell Před 2 lety +2

      @@Unethical.Dodgson not that kind of free energy, if large areas had wireless power how would you keep track of it? You can't really install a meter in every single circuit, so people would have unrestricted access to such energy, it wouldn't be FREE energy but it would be "free"

    • @goodbye8995
      @goodbye8995 Před 2 lety

      @@Unethical.Dodgson define free

    • @vincevvn
      @vincevvn Před 2 lety +1

      @@Unethical.Dodgson but there is free energy. It’s literally everywhere in nature, how do you think solar panels windmills and dams work

  • @CaptnApathy
    @CaptnApathy Před 2 lety +22

    I have heard a few things about this wireless energy idea. one was that teslas coils were going to operate at schumann resonances, natural glabal resonant frequencies in the atmopshere. another thing, and probably part of the same idea, is that the towers would create standing waves of energy in the area.

    • @MirlitronOne
      @MirlitronOne Před 2 lety +4

      Standing waves would mean that you could only extract power at certain intervals.

    • @CaptnApathy
      @CaptnApathy Před 2 lety

      @@MirlitronOne yeah, and where you can do it depends on the frequency. schumann resonance wavelength is the circumference of earth, so I dunno what the whole plan was... would just using it as a carrier for a higher frequency work?

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 2 lety +1

      @@CaptnApathy : There's more than one Schumann resonance, it's a _category_ rather than one frequency. You're thinking of the lowest frequency Schumann resonance, which I think is supposed to be around 1 Hz. Another floats around 60 Hz, and there are more beyond that.
      As for the standing waves restricting where you could get power with this, probably so, though given that you'd expect world-wide echoes there might be enough "basal noise" at some frequencies to reduce the effect.
      Also, as long as you were within 1/2 wavelength of the broadcaster, you would presumably be able to use near-field coupling to get power regardless... I think the near-field footprint for 60 Hz was around 1,500 miles.

  • @vestaarcadia
    @vestaarcadia Před 2 lety +1

    You should look up zenneck surface waves, truly wireless power transmitted across the surface of the earth.

  • @Photomonon
    @Photomonon Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for making science popular and ubiquitous. Should look up the special water and metal base tesla used for his large cools

  • @KaliFissure
    @KaliFissure Před 2 lety +1

    Resonant coupling can improve efficiency as well. A high freq spark gap with consistent freq can then have tuned receiver

  • @OouzyYew452
    @OouzyYew452 Před 2 lety +6

    0:08
    Someone should make a movie based in this reality

    • @andrewsneacker1256
      @andrewsneacker1256 Před 2 lety

      it would be so stupid ahahahah

    • @phildiop8248
      @phildiop8248 Před 2 lety +2

      That would be sick. Teslapunk should be a genre.

    • @OouzyYew452
      @OouzyYew452 Před 2 lety +2

      @@phildiop8248 Telsapunk...
      That's literally the perfect name wtf

  • @Qui-9
    @Qui-9 Před 2 lety

    The problem with wireless power transmission is the spread. At further distances, you can only recover the power available from the total area of reception. The radiation pattern does not focus itself toward random receivers. It can be optimized for fixed locations, but ultimately, distance will still affect the recoverable signal.
    There will be much power loss, and some power unavailable due to lack of coupling, being reflected back into the transmitter. A tuned receiver is just an impedance matching device which transfers the most power possible to a load, but make no mistake, it cannot "suck" more power from an area than is available.

  • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
    @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Před 2 lety +3

    Even if you did this in the upper atmosphere where it could get the range, the energy transmitted to any particular point would drop off as 1/r^2 (and worse due to losses), so it would be really inefficient.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 2 lety

      Tesla's goals were a little special, in that he was aiming at what we today call the Schumann resonances- if you hit them close enough, then most or all of your signal gets reflected back by the upper atmosphere, limiting your inverse-square losses. Unfortunately, the signal will still interact with unintentional resonators, which can result in problems (e.g. fires), and will result in losses.

    • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
      @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Před 2 lety

      @@absalomdraconis Even if you got vertical confinement in the way that you say, you would still have 1/r dissipation, and you still have resistive and inductive losses likely well exceeding those of copper or aluminum wires.

    • @N4CR
      @N4CR Před 2 lety

      Not in a scalar field. It only operates where needed, they also build up and self-sustain after some time for a period too. Totally different to the traditional EM stuff you are taught about.

    • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
      @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Před 2 lety

      @@N4CR The atmospheric electric current isn't going to confine itself to just where you want it.

  • @KiranKankipati
    @KiranKankipati Před 2 lety +1

    this is one of the best videos explaining the possibility of Wireless power transmission. Of course we have vacuum tubes all the times. But this video is fantastic demonstrating live that such a solution is possible, although not practical since it is not efficient.

  • @RonakDhakan
    @RonakDhakan Před 2 lety +3

    Congratulations! It looks like you have invented tubelights. Is this how tubelights work?

    • @PhysicsHack
      @PhysicsHack Před 2 lety +1

      Very close!

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 2 lety

      Funny coincidence that, Tesla was the inventor of the fluorescent tube light (he was trying to get around Edison't incandescent light patents, greater efficiency was just a convenient coincidence).

  • @josephenapay9607
    @josephenapay9607 Před 2 lety +1

    Styropyro made the biggest testa coil/plasma ball and powered big lights from long distances

  • @roberthayes6329
    @roberthayes6329 Před 2 lety +3

    Simply change the frequency of the tesla coil to the resonate frequency of the material your transmitting. Tesla was big on finding the resonate frequency of everything, he had a box he would use to shake an entire building just to show off the power of resonance.

  • @crieliocriel
    @crieliocriel Před 2 lety +2

    now! That is a LIGHT SABER!

  • @galaxyofreesesking2124
    @galaxyofreesesking2124 Před 2 lety +6

    I once made up a superhero that could control energy through his ability to manipulate electricity and the electromagnetic field. I made up this move he could do called "perfect lighting" where he would manipulate the air in a straight beam and create a vacuum for essentially as long as he wanted, and then he would generate electricity and a bolt of lighting would shoot directly through it. The lack of thermal resistance caused the lighting to connect with his target with greater efficiency, I guess. But I didn't know this could actually be possible! Cool video.

  • @michaeldaugherty6826
    @michaeldaugherty6826 Před 2 lety +2

    He wasn’t ever able to tell people how. Lost his funding due to greedy money machines, and was attacked and oppressed by those same people.

  • @Gurkan1
    @Gurkan1 Před 2 lety +3

    You should ask styropyro to test that experient a hit one of his Tesla coils

  • @Myrddnn
    @Myrddnn Před 2 lety +1

    I would like to see you do this experiment again, but use a spectrum analyzer to find out what range of frequencies are actually passing the power to the load. Also, how is the load connected and what is the power used by both the Tesla coil AND the load.

  • @manashsaha2312
    @manashsaha2312 Před 2 lety +4

    Make a vacuum tube Tesla coil for next video.

    • @markdavis1338
      @markdavis1338 Před 2 lety +1

      Plasma globes used to be a thing, which was basically what you propose. Tho they may have also used other gasses instead of just a vacuum.

    • @manashsaha2312
      @manashsaha2312 Před 2 lety +2

      @@markdavis1338 No no you got it wrong,I was saying about something else, a vacuum tube Tesla coil is a testla coil which works using vacuum instead of a the air spark gap in conventional testla coil and this way you can create powerful Tesla coils which don't produce ozone and burst of dangerous ultraviolet light.

  • @luke.skywalker
    @luke.skywalker Před 2 lety

    Without ads these videos are just perfect. Enjoying waching! By the way what is the name of this guy?

  • @AtulVinayakS
    @AtulVinayakS Před 2 lety +4

    I think you should put a flashing light epilepsy warning for this..

  • @pramodpoddar1015
    @pramodpoddar1015 Před 2 lety +2

    "It starts to grow, look at how long it gets."
    -ActionLab

  • @nothinginteresting1662
    @nothinginteresting1662 Před 2 lety +4

    We are living in times when actual experiments are uploaded on youtube while classrooms continue to teach dry theory. And practical sessions are just for measuring academic performance, not to answer curious questions.

    • @mr205live9
      @mr205live9 Před 2 lety +2

      That's where intuitive thinking parents step in n teach their kids that schools a joke.

  • @OouzyYew452
    @OouzyYew452 Před 2 lety +1

    This is one of the best channels on CZcams

  • @Just_Sara
    @Just_Sara Před 2 lety +3

    That's a lot of flashing, you might want to put an epilepsy warning. How cool was that video, man? Thanks!!

  • @sebastianstewart6894
    @sebastianstewart6894 Před rokem

    It's not resistance because of low conductivity but rather resistance from going against the natural flow of electricity. Clouds demonstrate this as they actively contain terawatts of electrical energy and are capable of maintaining its structure as they travel over land or sea using telluric currents. What we do is force electricity into this dense electricity and then say when it doesn't travel that we need more power. Another example of an energy dense phenomenon is flame, it is an electromagnetic field that generates heat.

  • @xpndblhero5170
    @xpndblhero5170 Před 2 lety +3

    Tesla wasn't using the air as a wire, he was using the ground as a wire... I distinctly remember a story of him walking over a mile from his Wardenclyffe Tower and plugging bulbs into the ground and they lit up.

    • @PhysicsHack
      @PhysicsHack Před 2 lety +1

      Yes he did. My understanding was he wanted to use the capacitance between the earth and the ionosphere where he would set up a resonance. That said it isn't clear at all how well that would work on large scales. It's a real shame he didn't get to complete his experiment.

    • @allstarwatt7246
      @allstarwatt7246 Před 2 lety

      @@KastorFlux that makes absolutely no sense.

  • @syedtalhanoor7361
    @syedtalhanoor7361 Před 2 lety +2

    The amount of sounds I heard in this video is insane

  • @therealwillie2024
    @therealwillie2024 Před 2 lety +4

    This is great timing! I was telling my wife about this yesterday. Free power

    • @triberium_
      @triberium_ Před 2 lety +6

      No such thing

    • @douglasharley2440
      @douglasharley2440 Před 2 lety +1

      lol, did you even watch the video?...it's not at all about "free power". smfh

    • @andrewsneacker1256
      @andrewsneacker1256 Před 2 lety +2

      @@douglasharley2440 He must be watching tiktoks too much :D

  • @freezinfire
    @freezinfire Před 2 lety +2

    Ah yes, vacuum tubes. Used to be pretty popular long time ago.

  • @ICRangerT
    @ICRangerT Před 2 lety +4

    The electrical engineers who were working on it 20 years ago came to the conclusion they needed to build a tesla coil the same size as the one he used in Colorado, so they might see what is was that tesla figured out.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před 2 lety

      and engineers have worked out that his assumptions on EMF in standing waves was incorrect and this would never work as he designed it.

    • @wurzelbert84wucher5
      @wurzelbert84wucher5 Před rokem

      @@thekaxmax Your crusade against Tesla is remarkable...

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před rokem

      ​@@wurzelbert84wucher5 Crusade against Telsa????? What? I just stated a known truth: he made a mistaken assumption about EMF that he never properly tested. This is fact.
      Other than that I love the guy. But we all make mistakes. As you just did.

  • @lesimages3dclic
    @lesimages3dclic Před 2 lety +1

    Wow thanks, it sure reminded me those knowledge acquired at college. Teslas was an awesome man. Oh just a little warning here when you use any high voltage generator that produces ions, they also make lots of ozone (O3) which is very toxic at ground level.

    • @ThePinkBinks
      @ThePinkBinks Před 2 lety

      But people love being poisoned for their convenience.

  • @shiba4779
    @shiba4779 Před 2 lety +5

    Nikola tesla had more iq than albert einstein.

    • @zackzimmer7167
      @zackzimmer7167 Před 2 lety +1

      Einstein didn’t know the magnificence of 3,6,9.

  • @fpoddball
    @fpoddball Před 11 měsíci +1

    I like the video. Although towards the end when you said the he “imaged” it isn’t a true statement. He actually got the idea from studying the Egyptian pyramids. The Great Pyramid to be exact.
    After looking at the design of the inside to it. He notice that it was built out of granite and limestone witch are natural conductors of electricity while the white limestone that was used for the outermost layer is a natural insulator. He was the first to say that the pyramids where not tombs but power plants.
    This theory was supported years later when a research team took a closer look at the two shafts inside the queen’s chamber. They found trace amounts of zinc and a type of acid(can’t remember the exact type). When mixed the two chemicals make hydrogen. Add the natural vibrations from the underground chamber(witch was found to have immense water erosion) with the hydrogen and you can make energy.
    Gets even crazier when you add the fact that the kings chamber as granite beams that are tuned to an F# cord. They found that out by adding vibration to them. Also inside the great entrance leading towards the king’s chamber they found evidence that an explosion happened inside the pyramid. The walls are pushed out slightly and they have scorch mark to support the claim.

  • @sohithshanmukh6237
    @sohithshanmukh6237 Před 2 lety +5

    Imagine walking near and getting shock from nowhere

  • @sorin.n
    @sorin.n Před 2 lety +1

    You are also on your way to reinvent the neon / fluorescense lamp. 😅 Also, I hope you were wearing UV protection.

  • @johnbender5356
    @johnbender5356 Před 2 lety +6

    Tesla is the most underrated genius that we ever had

    • @blinded6502
      @blinded6502 Před 2 lety +3

      Nope. Real underrated geniuses are those, that you had never heard of.

    • @allstarwatt7246
      @allstarwatt7246 Před 2 lety +1

      Tesla is not underrated. He is overrated. Most of ideas were complete nonsense.

  • @SaintNjuguna
    @SaintNjuguna Před 2 lety +1

    fluorescent bulbs work in nearly the same principle as the tube you used

  • @TheHuntermj
    @TheHuntermj Před 2 lety +6

    There is no doubt it can be done, the problem is you can't charge people for the electricity they use and who knows what the health effects of long term exposure.

    • @Unethical.Dodgson
      @Unethical.Dodgson Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah it can be done but at many orders of magnitude less efficiently and with more uncertainty.
      It's a TERRIBLE idea but it can be done.
      So in other words. It won't happen but not for the reasons you stated.

    • @TheChrisSimpson
      @TheChrisSimpson Před 2 lety

      This is a common urban legend... the "problem is you can't charge people blah blah blah thats why Teslas investors left, Tesla wanted to give it away for free!". 1000% wrong, Tesla wanted to make money off of it lol, Tesla even had plans for metering it.... Why did it fail? Simply because it doesn't work.... Tesla is way overhyped on the internet these days, he's not nearly as great as modern people make him out to be.

    • @allstarwatt7246
      @allstarwatt7246 Před 2 lety

      Matt Hunter - You clearly know nothing about science.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před 2 lety +2

    Didn't want to offend the Internet by saying Tesla's plans were never going to work?

  • @canadajim
    @canadajim Před 2 lety +3

    YOU ARE X-RAYING YOURSELF!
    Please review the safety concerns about putting high votlage across a vacuum. It is literally how we make xrays.

    • @Electronic4081
      @Electronic4081 Před 2 lety

      I think it’s such a little amount produced that he’s probably fine. He doesn’t have a filament to heat up and he doesn’t have a great vacuum. At least to my knowledge

  • @Sergiuss555
    @Sergiuss555 Před 2 lety

    The sound makes it a perfect fit for lighting a bedside lamp.

  • @vishalpatil-fy2ot
    @vishalpatil-fy2ot Před 2 lety +3

    If Nikola Tesla was funded with money and no one stopped him.He could made it and the world we see today will be at another level. With less harm to earth 🌎. I feel sad that there r few pages in history about him. He is a legend. Today's most of tech r based on his work.

    • @ABaumstumpf
      @ABaumstumpf Před 2 lety +2

      No - cause he WAS funded with money. But he was a tinkerer - he just tried out everything without understanding what those things actually did. Heck - he even claimed electrons were not real despite them having been proven already.
      "Today's most of tech r based on his work." not even close.

    • @allstarwatt7246
      @allstarwatt7246 Před 2 lety

      @@ABaumstumpf most of Tesla's ideas were just complete nonsense. Which is why it comes as no surprise that his typical modern day fans tend to be scientifically illiterate idiots.

  • @sexkrazedpanda
    @sexkrazedpanda Před 2 lety

    Try sending the Sparks down a streak of argon coming out of a glass torch so the stream is sent forward with a laminar flow.

  • @damn6039
    @damn6039 Před 2 lety +2

    *Breathes
    *Gets shocked

  • @sf9000
    @sf9000 Před 2 lety +2

    - 5 minute video on how to conduct electricity through the air.
    - 2:00 minutes in, makes a lightsaber

  • @d97x17
    @d97x17 Před 2 lety +1

    One end of the small light bulb was of course connected to the spark coming from the Tesla coil, but to what was the other end of the small light bulb connected? To the ground?

  • @JeevanSamagar
    @JeevanSamagar Před 2 lety +1

    🔥🔥🔥 These fires came while listening 🎧....

  • @darklogik69
    @darklogik69 Před 2 lety

    Don't forget he was also using the aquifer under the tower as a massive dump (Layden jar) paired with the atmosphere...

  • @sebastian19745
    @sebastian19745 Před 2 lety

    Finally someone who understand the Tesla´s idea and did not discarded quickly as "inefficient". In my opinion, Tesla had two solutions (as far as I know) to increase the efficiency. First one would be choosing a frequency that could make the ionosphere-earth to act as a capacitor and with the plasma´s "wire" inductance to bring the whole setup to resonance. The second one would be to create a network/web of such energy injectors (TC) so the ionosphere could saturate and maybe at a critical point could self sustain the plasma. That way you need only to inject the amount of energy that is lost to maintain the whole grid. And to remember that aurora can contribute too to the ionosphere plasma layer.
    Try doing the same experiment in a 4 vacuum chambers (3 on a triangle shape and the 4th in the middle) connected by tubes like this, with 3 tesla coils and one receiver in the fourth chamber. Another setup can be with 3 chambers, with 2 TC and a receiver (load). If the setup is well tuned, I think you can fill all the chambers with plasma and the receiver can be able to extract energy from the plasma field. That way you can see the influence of the frequency match of the TC.

  • @calebhumphreys6002
    @calebhumphreys6002 Před 2 lety

    The community you cultivated is nothing short of a mass collective of geniuses.. the people in this comment section are exceptionally talented.

  • @MammaOVlogs
    @MammaOVlogs Před 2 lety +1

    can't wait to get my painting

  • @MrBrauza
    @MrBrauza Před 2 lety

    I thought it would explode phew I'm glad this channel showing us really interesting ideas

    • @jerotoro2021
      @jerotoro2021 Před 2 lety +1

      This is garage scientist, not backyard scientist! No explosions lol.

  • @manjulajaiswal8099
    @manjulajaiswal8099 Před 2 lety +2

    2:21 so guys presenting the real plasma light saber (ignor the glass tube)

  • @speedsystem4582
    @speedsystem4582 Před 2 lety

    There was once a time, I wasn't very happy with your videos, but now I must admit that you are really creative and I would have to subscribe you...

  • @aurid6838
    @aurid6838 Před 2 lety

    i read somewhere that the plan had to do with transmitting power through the earth, not air. i forget the details but seemed more reasonable to me

  • @Mikkelltheimmortal
    @Mikkelltheimmortal Před 2 lety +1

    This is a really interesting experiment.
    Does frequency play a factor?

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před 2 lety +1

      yes. and the fact Tesla was wrong in one assumption.

  • @chorton53
    @chorton53 Před 10 měsíci

    That is such a wonderful exercise. Thanks a bunch.

  • @moodberry
    @moodberry Před 2 lety

    Much of the loss in efficiency has to be because a Tesla coil sends current out in all directions. By concentrating it in one direction (as in the tube) it helps, but as you pointed out, inefficiencies happen because of heat and light being generated. If somehow the current could be transmitted without it ionizing the atmosphere, wouldn't that improve the transfer efficiencies? Also, I wonder how it is that we see a plasma in the presence of a vacuum. Would a perfect vacuum make the plasma invisible?

  • @JakubVyoral
    @JakubVyoral Před 2 lety

    I think there is a main misconception here. He was not up to send the energy via air but via ground. The Wardenclyffe tower structure was the cherry on the top of
    massive ground structure which ensured the lowest ground resistance as possible. My understanding of the thing is that he came up from the setup of two tesla coils where
    secondary windings were connected. Tesla coils were finetuned to the same resonance frequency and top parts were capacitors. The setup was supposed to send the current from one
    Tesla secondary coil to the other Tesla secondary coil via single wire because the energy was oscillating between capacitors on the tops. Then he could extract the energy from the
    "primary" coil of the second Tesla coil. Now if the distance is increased between these two coils the single wire will be longer and it can be replaced by some other conductive material such as Earth.
    In case the Earth is used the natural frequency needs to be measured which Tesla did and designed the tower L and C to be tuned to Earth (not just a single wire, it's a dynamic system).
    I imagine it as if the Earth is ball of water (incompresible fluid) and there are two pistons connected to it. One is full of extra water (extra energy) and the other is empty.
    If the piston is pushed the extra water wants to go out and pushes to the other piston (which is finetuned to do exactly this thing) and it does not matter where the second piston is on the ball.
    In case of Earth there would hotspots based on the natural frequency of the system or higher harmonics. The energy of lighting comming out of the capacitors were a loses in the system
    not the actual transmission of the energy. Tesla did not finish his vision because he was a good inventor but a really bad business man. He had a big debt (10000USD which was quite a lot in that time) in the Waldorf Astoria hotel
    he was living in and he lost the land with the tower in execution. He watched the demolition of the tower executed by new owners of his properties. He tried many times to
    get money from J. P. Morgan who Tesla provided >50% ownership to his patents as the act of the trust for the money he lent him. But the guy had a lot of money
    in copper mines and transmission lines so he was not interested in "wireless" technology. Moreover, Tesla didn't deliver him a product he ordered, so he let Tesla fell into the poverty and die in cheap hotel.
    Sad story. If Tesla had a manager our world would be even more advanced by now for sure.

  • @idiotburns
    @idiotburns Před 2 lety

    Thats such a great visual effect

  • @MLBnDeeznutz
    @MLBnDeeznutz Před 2 lety

    This guy blinks 10 times In a second and I love it I love this channel keep it up

  • @jibranbhat8711
    @jibranbhat8711 Před rokem

    The lightsaber.
    This channel is so underrated

  • @fareedezzedeen8017
    @fareedezzedeen8017 Před 2 lety +1

    Tesla was thinking about air defense dome.

  • @ankokuraven
    @ankokuraven Před rokem

    Functionally, wireless power is how radio works.
    The task is to figure out a means of generating a wavelength that can convey that power with sufficient strength and not interfere with other devices.

  • @aaronholcombe2963
    @aaronholcombe2963 Před rokem

    Collecting energy from atmosphere was what ppl think he was trying to do wireless energy. He was collecting + from air - from the ground to have free energy to be received anywhere

  • @LiftPizzas
    @LiftPizzas Před 2 lety +1

    "It's only 5 inches but if you put it in a tube and pump some air out, it gets longer."

  • @OmegaZZ111
    @OmegaZZ111 Před 2 lety

    Nikola Tesla didn't use transvere electromagnetic waves for his wireless power transmission systems, he stated this multiple times, yet people seem to ignore that fact.
    His system generated longitudinal dielectric impulses (also called scalar waves) which are not electric in their nature.
    Transverse electromagnetic waves are lossy because of the magnetic field involved, but these longitudinal dielectric impulses are not lossy because there is no magnetic field involved.
    Statements of modern scientists that the Wardenclyffe Tower wouldn't have worked because of the losses over distance are ridiculous, because they assume Tesla was using transverse electromagnetic waves like we do nowadays in all of our wireless systems.

  • @JsemPO12
    @JsemPO12 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Wait, doesn't it produce x-rays when you make sparks in vacuum?

  • @Faisal1979nasser
    @Faisal1979nasser Před 2 lety

    Finally someone try this , befor 5 years im thinking what about if someone try to use tesla tower in center of home and all lights is neon , pravo friend you created a great job 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @chaorrottai
    @chaorrottai Před rokem

    The idea is that by using high frequency high voltage and the atmosphere and ground a conductor, a tuned reciever becomes a "shortest" current path to ground for the current. Unlike a magnetic field, which will spread out and be lossy for wireless power. A voltage field will seek the path of least resistance. Because of resonance, a receiver coil will resonate with a transmission tower and the voltage gradient between the reciever and the transmission tower will become larger than the gradient between the tower and ground, or the tower and anything else for that matter, even over very large distances.
    Because the power will be transmitted as hundreds of megavolts at pico to micro amps, the power loss over the ionised plasma of the air is relatively small. That's the idea. Wireless electromagnetic power isn't that great because the power spreads out as an emitted magnetic field. Wireless electric power is different it requires super high voltage and resonance and the voltage between the tuned transmitter and reciever becomes greater than the voltage between the transmitter and anything else, so current flow gets shunted to the reciever.

  • @luchotheluchest4951
    @luchotheluchest4951 Před 2 lety

    Here is my thought, the real purpose of the antenna it was not to transmit energy, but to establish a guide wave, a resonance wave that would induce a vortex around the antenna, that vortex would act as a vacuum of "energy states", transforming them into useful energy.
    Right now we think that energy is carried by electrons, but that would be only a perspective of whats really going on.
    Energy is everywhere, like a fluid that composes all. Energy in itself is "stateless", is the infinite power/possibility of states.
    The countable energy we conceive, is the result of interaction between energy states.
    We live in a determinated world, but this "world" is not separated from the indetermination.
    When we take something electrically charged (it has an energy state that deviates from the surroundings) and physically connect it to a different energy state "something", we make them interact so their energy states will change accordingly to the difference between the two things and also the surroundings. So energy in itself didnt change, the energy states changed. Energy didnt move, the states of energy moved.
    What Tesla discovered was a way to tap into this stateless energy which is everythere, static, unmutated, eternal. It seems, that by creating certain patterns, by the right secuence of changes in a controlated "structure" of energy states, we can create this negative entropy vortex (it is negative because it orders the energy states locally). This phenomena is naturally happening all around us, and it is in fact the cause of everything we can see, it is the cause of matter and it is the cause of life.

  • @fyrerayne8882
    @fyrerayne8882 Před 2 lety +1

    what do you think about the plasma universe theory? thunderbolts project?

  • @user-tb5ns7hc5i
    @user-tb5ns7hc5i Před 2 lety +2

    I thought Tesla was using the ground/Earth also in these experiments? There is unlimited electric energy in the ground and atmosphere if we can harness it.

    • @thekaxmax
      @thekaxmax Před 2 lety

      very very low density, though. It's not hard to access, it's next to impossible to access /usefully/.

  • @TheZafootz
    @TheZafootz Před rokem

    I agree with paulkocyla1343 and zachcrawford5 comments Tesla was considering using radio signals and resonance to send power wireless from one tower to another. But there is also the solid state tesla coils or Slayer Exciters is what they are also called. These devices produce a very low pulsating DC signal that makes a high voltage wireless radio signal that is able to power low wattage light bulbs and such. This is more what I think Tesla had in mind was to generate a wireless power radio signal and use resonance to send and receive them at long distances. Now 1 thing I have wanted to try is to take the wireless power radio signal produced by a Slayer Exciter and to use vacuum tube AM radio amplifiers and amplify the wireless power radio signal same as an AM radio station would do with a audio signal that its broadcasting. In other words this would be exactly the same thing as AM radio station sending out a signal and being picked up by a crystal radio receiver without a battery. If an AM radio broadcast signal can send enough power to make a crystal radio receiver work be means of just an audio signal then what would happen if we did the same thing using a Slayer Exciter radio signal amplified to very high voltage and sent out a very large high powered antenna? I think the crystal radio receiver would act as a wireless power outlet if tuned to the same frequency as the Slayer Exciter broadcasting station. Maybe "The Action Lab" could give this experiment a shot, it would seem like they have access to all the needed equipment to try it. I know I would try it if I had the equipment to test it....

  • @drowningin
    @drowningin Před 2 lety +1

    Wouldn't it be just amazing if we got a listen to those popping spark sounds all day If Tesla made them standard use?