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Old November 5th 10, 10:22 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
K1TTT K1TTT is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Apr 2010
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Default Antenna materials

On Nov 5, 8:32*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
"K1TTT" ...
On Nov 4, 8:55 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:



So your electrons only oscillate (no Stokes drift)?


should be looking for so i may not be measuring properly.


At first you must have a radio which do not work without ground. No
chassis

no AC supply.
If you are able to prepare such the rest will be easy.

got it... plastic case, battery powered, only does 5w that that is


easy to measure. *now how much dc current should i measure in the
ground lead when i transmit with 5w?

You know: "more than electron per cycle and less than infinity".

For one you should use an electroscope (in place of ground).
Charge it and check what your radio needs to work (+ or -).

For more, the steem generator should be beest. "At Cramlington Colliery,
Sedgehill, Newcastle on Tyne (Northumberland, England) high pressure steam
broke through the cement around the safety valve of a locomotive boiler. The
Engine-Man held a shovel in the steam and with a penknife in his other hand,
held about 3/8 inch from the boiler, produced electric sparks.".

In such arrangment the shovel has an exces of electrons and the boiler a
deficit.

Close to infinity the DC meter will be enough.

But the experts know that Stokes drift is everywhere.
Stokes drift and longitudinal electric waves in the wires (Oliver Lodge)
were discowered before electrons.It is obvious that the both apply to the
electron gas.

Electrons also travel through a capacitor. AC pulses are never simmetric.
S*


ok, i put my electroscope in place of ground, no movement in the gold
leaf when i transmit. i also borrowed a very sensitive electrostatic
voltmeter and do not see any voltage buildup on the radio when i
transmit.

and my rf waves are as perfectly symmetric as i can measure on a
scope, even taking one and delaying it 180 degrees and subtracting
from the source gives me a flat line that i can not measure any
distortion on.

so, what is your predicted shape of these distorted waves?? i see a
nice sine wave function, you must have some other solution for
harmonic motion and the wave equations, please provide your solution
that includes the asymmetry terms we should be looking for.