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Szczepan Bialek November 1st 10 08:44 AM

Antenna materials
 

Uzytkownik "K1TTT" napisal w wiadomosci
...
On Oct 31, 6:29 pm, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:

Everybody know that Tesla coil is pumping the earth's charge (pulsatory

flow). The same do yours 6 transmitters.

Stop writing and try to detect it in your ground cable. In the Warshaw LW

mast it would be easy. But it collapsed.
S*


i have tried, i can't detect it... how much does your theory say

should be there so i know if i am not reading sensitive enough meter.
theories that can't make measureable predictions are not very useful.

You have 1500W, LW transmitters 1500kW. But the biggest is the Sun.
Planets have the excess of electrons. Receiver antennas close to transmitter
should also have.
But everywhere are an exeptions (materials dependent). Like with the Hall
effect.

In a ground cable is the pulsatory flow of electrons.
A current meter has the resistor and voltmeter. Try an osciloscop instead of
voltmeter. The voltage should not be symmetric. But I am not an expert.
S*


Cecil Moore November 1st 10 11:56 AM

Antenna materials
 
On Nov 1, 3:44*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Planets have the excess of electrons. Receiver antennas close to transmitter
should also have.


Electrons are blasted away from the sun by the atomic fusion reactor
at the core. How many RF transmitters run on atomic fusion?
--
73, Cecil, w5dxp.com

Szczepan Bialek November 1st 10 05:04 PM

Antenna materials
 

Uzytkownik "Cecil Moore" napisal w wiadomosci
...
On Nov 1, 3:44 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Planets have the excess of electrons. Receiver antennas close to
transmitter

should also have.


Electrons are blasted away from the sun by the atomic fusion reactor

at the core. How many RF transmitters run on atomic fusion?

Again a school physics.
The Sun attracts all solids body. They are reworked into plasma.
Oscillations is a by product.

Not only planets. Everything has excess of electrons.
http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question/design/q0234.shtml

And what with your receiving antenna?
S*


K1TTT November 1st 10 09:35 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Nov 1, 8:44*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Uzytkownik "K1TTT" napisal w ...
On Oct 31, 6:29 pm, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:



Everybody know that Tesla coil is pumping the earth's charge (pulsatory

flow). The same do yours 6 transmitters.


Stop writing and try to detect it in your ground cable. In the Warshaw LW

mast it would be easy. But it collapsed.
S*
i have tried, i can't detect it... how much does your theory say


should be there so i know if i am not reading sensitive enough meter.
theories that can't make measureable predictions are not very useful.

You have 1500W, LW transmitters 1500kW. But the biggest is the Sun.
Planets have the excess of electrons. Receiver antennas close to transmitter
should also have.
But everywhere are an exeptions (materials dependent). Like with the Hall
effect.

In a ground cable is the pulsatory flow of electrons.
A current meter has the resistor and voltmeter. Try an osciloscop instead of
voltmeter. The voltage should not be symmetric.


my voltage is symmetric on the oscilloscope as closely as i can
compare it... give me your calculation, 6x1500w with a single ground
should cause how much asymetry?

But I am not an expert.
S*


that is the only true thing you have said so far.


Cecil Moore November 1st 10 09:35 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Nov 1, 12:04*pm, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Everything has excess of electrons.


Sorry, you are wrong. A normal helium atom does not have an excess of
electrons (hint: it is inert).
--
73, Cecil, w5dxp.com

K1TTT November 1st 10 09:36 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Nov 1, 5:04*pm, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
Uzytkownik "Cecil Moore" napisal w ...
On Nov 1, 3:44 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:

Planets have the excess of electrons. Receiver antennas close to
transmitter

should also have.
Electrons are blasted away from the sun by the atomic fusion reactor


at the core. How many RF transmitters run on atomic fusion?

Again a school physics.
The Sun attracts all solids body. They are reworked into plasma.
Oscillations is a by product.

Not only planets. Everything has excess of electrons.http://www.aerospaceweb.org/question/design/q0234.shtml

And what with your receiving antenna?
S*


i just want one of those fusion driven plasma antennas, that should
make some real noise during contests!

Szczepan Bialek November 2nd 10 08:34 AM

Antenna materials
 

"K1TTT" wrote
...
On Nov 1, 8:44 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:

In a ground cable is the pulsatory flow of electrons.

A current meter has the resistor and voltmeter. Try an osciloscop instead
of
voltmeter. The voltage should not be symmetric.


my voltage is symmetric on the oscilloscope as closely as i can

compare it... give me your calculation, 6x1500w with a single ground
should cause how much asymetry?

So your electrons only oscillate (no Stokes drift)?

But I am not an expert.


that is the only true thing you have said so far.


So it takes a time for me to find the method of measure the Stokes drift in
your stations.
Try also to do your best.
S*


K1TTT November 3rd 10 09:59 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Nov 2, 8:34*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
"K1TTT" ...
On Nov 1, 8:44 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:



In a ground cable is the pulsatory flow of electrons.

A current meter has the resistor and voltmeter. Try an osciloscop instead
of
voltmeter. The voltage should not be symmetric.
my voltage is symmetric on the oscilloscope as closely as i can


compare it... give me your calculation, 6x1500w with a single ground
should cause how much asymetry?

So your electrons only oscillate (no Stokes drift)?

But I am not an expert.

that is the only true thing you have said so far.


So it takes a time for me to find the method of measure the Stokes drift in
your stations.
Try also to do your best.
S*


no drift that i can measure... but you haven't told me how much i
should be looking for so i may not be measuring properly.

Szczepan Bialek November 4th 10 08:55 AM

Antenna materials
 

"K1TTT" wrote
...
On Nov 2, 8:34 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:

So your electrons only oscillate (no Stokes drift)?


But I am not an expert.

that is the only true thing you have said so far.


So it takes a time for me to find the method of measure the Stokes drift
in

your stations.
Try also to do your best.

S*


no drift that i can measure... but you haven't told me how much i

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.
S*


K1TTT November 4th 10 10:48 PM

Antenna materials
 
On Nov 4, 8:55*am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:
*"K1TTT" ...
On Nov 2, 8:34 am, "Szczepan Bialek" wrote:



So your electrons only oscillate (no Stokes drift)?


But I am not an expert.
that is the only true thing you have said so far.


So it takes a time for me to find the method of measure the Stokes drift
in

your stations.
Try also to do your best.

S*
no drift that i can measure... but you haven't told me how much i


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.
S*


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?


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