Tesla Radiant One Wire system testing, various coils design

Testing for the one wire power transmission now various coils and show in this video standard solenoids in clockwise and counter-clockwise windings with 1:1 ration between primary and secondary copper weight. Follow-up will now be a sequence of videos investigating all the different coil specifications and parameters in the system.

As reference my video showing my RF ground installation for all my experimentations.
Two independent grounding systems, one a network and one a single ground rod. No house ground used.
http://youtu.be/KIvtRZCPCgs

  2 comments for “Tesla Radiant One Wire system testing, various coils design

  1. Anum
    March 30, 2013 at 4:52 pm

    You won’t be able to buy one because these tinghs don’t work. That is the reason why all you can buy are the instructions. Imagine: you buy the instructions, but the device you built from the instructions doesn’t work as it’s supposed to do. Can you reclaim your money from the guy who sold you these instructions, or would he be able to claim that the problem must be with the device _you_ built? Now change this scenario: you buy a finished system. Again, it fails to deliver what was promissed. Can you reclaim your money and possible sue for false advertising, with a good chance of getting your money back? In this case, the seller can’t claim that it’s your fault. And now again switch these scenarios around: in which case would you rather like to be the seller, the first or the second? And btw, there are no cars that run on water. And btbtw, I don’t claim to know the whole truth, I leave that to the philosophers. I’m a physicist and claim to know what is physically possible, what might be possible and what is impossible. Oil companies just sell oil because that’s a (comparatively) easy way to make money. If they could make money from selling tesla generators, they would do just that or simply set up some of these generators for themselves and use theit output to synthesize fuel. Such a generator can’t be more expensive than exploring drilling for oil.

    • admin
      March 30, 2013 at 6:17 pm

      You claim to be a physicist, and you claim these Tesla coils don’t work. How about doing some research before posting such inane comments? There are hundreds of these solid state Tesla coils in operation. How about thinking outside of the box, and not accepting everything the oil companies and government tells you? No where have I claimed this to be a free energy device (not free in the sense of ‘overunity'{a misnomer in of itself}, but it is ‘free’ in the sense of no wires). But it does create a usable electromagnetic field which resonate well with LEDs and Florescent lighting, as demonstrated in the videos. Incandescent bulbs have also been known to light via these coils.

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