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![]() "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 Only in the near field (at the site). Theoretically, there is a limit to the number of receivers for any one signal (swamping), but that number has never been approached. As for the original story, I can verify that it CAN be done, and is done inadvertantly in places where homes are found in the area of an 'antenna farm'. In Portland, for instance, the antenna farm for the high powered FM signals is in a residential shared area. Some homes within that area that use fluorescent lighting still have some light from the tubes with the switch turned off. This is not full light, but neither are they using a tuned circuit. |
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