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Originally posted by aboutface
reply to post by Bedlam
What is the difference between ambient energy and stray electrical pollution? Could the two be the same thing or related to each other?
Originally posted by spacedoubt
reply to post by My.mind.is.mine
I was wondering if by chance they strapped magnets to him, when he was buried.
I mean. If he's spinning.....you get the picture..
Originally posted by Bedlam
Not at all.
Originally posted by Bedlam
All they are doing is using the electromagnetic waves in the air (radio waves) to move the electrons in the antenna, and that is electricity.
That part's sort of true...
Originally posted by Bedlam
That is basically all a radio does. Depending on the size of the antenna, you get a different radio station. When you select a radio station on a radio all you are doing is adjusting the amount of antenna you want to use. Of course, if you wrap the wire around a coil it increases the strength of the signal. Then you add a diode so it only captures half of the wave, then hook up some ear plugs, and you have a radio.
That part's sort of not...
Originally posted by Bedlam
The problem is, you are using energy that is output via radio stations, and cell phone towers, and television transmitters. This has already been deemed illegal because you are stealing energy from the transmitters, and it actually reduces the power of the radio transmissions.
Absolutely incorrect. Inside the near field zone, you can load down the transmitter's output. In the far field, the wave is uncoupled from the transmitter. No amount of loading there will change the loading on the transmitter - you can intercept the part of the field that crosses your aperture, but doing so has no effect on anything else. This is also why near field RFID doesn't work at a distance.
Originally posted by gift0fpr0phecy
All you are doing is selecting how much wire you are using, a.k.a. the length of antenna. The more antenna you use the larger the wavelength.
No, it is not incorrect. The more receivers you use, the weaker the overall transmission is. It does't directly effect the transmitter, but it effects the signal in the air because the antennas are absorbing the waves.
Originally posted by gift0fpr0phecy
The more receivers you use, the weaker the overall transmission is. It does't directly effect the transmitter, but it effects the signal in the air because the antennas are absorbing the waves. If you use a device that is only capturing the waves for energy creation, then you are taking the waves away from people who want to listen to the radio.
Imagine 3 points... A, B, and C.
A is the transmitter, B is some guy with a radio wave capture device, and C was some guy who just wants to listen to the radio. Well, the waves sent from point A will reach point B and some of the waves will be captured and used, and that will make it harder for point C to get a good signal..... That would mean the transmitter A would have to increase the output so C can get a better signal....
Originally posted by alfa1
Changing the length of the antenna doesnt change the radio station that you get. You can try this for yourself right now with any FM radio that has a telescopic antenna. What matters is the makeup of the tuning circuit.
Originally posted by alfa1
And what he said about the difference between "near field" and "far field" is correct also.
Originally posted by gift0fpr0phecy
To explain, here is a really simple crystal radio schematic:
Originally posted by gift0fpr0phecy
Imagine the above video with the tuning forks.
Originally posted by Erongaricuaro
How could this not be good? Broad-banded enough to tap 100MHz to 15 GHz stray RF, and in commonly enough used frequencies where we have an abundance of "pollution", then combined with advanced capacitors capable enough to produce a usable 50 milliwatts from one "printed" antenna.
Originally posted by gift0fpr0phecy
Yes it is illegal.
No, that part is 100% true. That is how antennas work.........
Originally posted by Bedlam
That is basically all a radio does. Depending on the size of the antenna, you get a different radio station. When you select a radio station on a radio all you are doing is adjusting the amount of antenna you want to use. Of course, if you wrap the wire around a coil it increases the strength of the signal. Then you add a diode so it only captures half of the wave, then hook up some ear plugs, and you have a radio.
That part's sort of not...
Do you know anything about radios? Or do you just pretend?
No, it is not incorrect. The more receivers you use, the weaker the overall transmission is. It does't directly effect the transmitter, but it effects the signal in the air because the antennas are absorbing the waves. If you use a device that is only capturing the waves for energy creation, then you are taking the waves away from people who want to listen to the radio.