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I've heard variants of this story for years, but have yet to see one shred
of real evidence that it actually occurred. The closest I've seen that could be regarded as 'real' evidence was a memo that circulated around PP&L (Pennsylvania Power and Light) back in the summer of 1972 or 73 that mentioned a farmer that ALLEGEDLY got shocks off a coil of fence wire he was installing. (The power right of way went over his pasture and the indication was that he was stringing a fence under one of the then new extremely high voltage lines. 750KV if I remember, but maybe only 500KV.) Even then, I thought the right of ways were 'clear' under the big lines, which makes even this story suspect. Mike "Walt Davidson" wrote in message ... On Sat, 9 Aug 2008 14:35:25 +0100, "Alec" wrote: Back at about the same time the BBC had (and still has) a powerful transmitter on 200khz (now198) a local farmer who lived close to the station built a large tuning coil in the loft and lit his house using fluorescent tubes. He was successfully prosecuted for stealing electricity or something similar. If this is true (and I have no reason to doubt it), did it make the signal weaker for everybody else? 73 de G3NYY -- Walt Davidson Email: g3nyy @despammed.com |
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