Creating Plasma Shockwaves Using A Wireless Energy Tower (ft. Geerling Engineering)

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Plasma Channel

Plasma Channel

Күн бұрын

Radio Towers are a marvel, and so is Ground News. Go to ground.news/pl... for a data-driven, objective way to stay fully informed on physics and more. Save 40% on Ground News’ unlimited access Vantage plan.
Thanks to Jeff and Joe Geerling, I was able to use a 12kW AM radio tower to create a massive plasma speaker, and, I built an RF energy receiver which converts radio signals into usable electricity. It was an incredible time.
Check out Jeff's video here: • How dangerous are radi...
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Пікірлер: 1 300
@PlasmaChannel
@PlasmaChannel 17 күн бұрын
Thanks to both Jeff and Ground News! Go to ground.news/plasma for a data-driven, objective way to stay fully informed on physics and more. Save 40% on Ground News’ unlimited access Vantage plan. View Geerling Engineering's video here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/raundnx4pcd_iM0
@swashed.
@swashed. 17 күн бұрын
you missed the link to jeff's channel in the description, can you please update it so I can watch the original video haha
@MAGA-T_HUNTER_De
@MAGA-T_HUNTER_De 17 күн бұрын
So are birds are safe to land on the tower unless they ground themselves?
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 17 күн бұрын
@@swashed.still working on the edit! Had a baby arrive a little early so our video is delayed. It'll be later this week.
@Wolforce
@Wolforce 17 күн бұрын
i've wondered if youtubers who say "i've used for years" are actually telling the truth.
@swashed.
@swashed. 17 күн бұрын
​@@JeffGeerling Oh the man himself, Congratulations on the new addition! Thanks for the info re the video, much appreciated
@ricky4673
@ricky4673 18 күн бұрын
So when my radio station blips and stops transmitting, I know whats happening. Some one is cooking hotdogs.
@timodecuba5137
@timodecuba5137 18 күн бұрын
i think so 🤣
@GilaBert-sq4hj
@GilaBert-sq4hj 18 күн бұрын
The exact reason 👌😁
@lassefiedler3542
@lassefiedler3542 18 күн бұрын
Or some poor bloke (or animal) is being cooked like a hotdog…
@RaymenNumerals
@RaymenNumerals 14 күн бұрын
Not even medium rare😪​@@lassefiedler3542
@noobhero6661
@noobhero6661 14 күн бұрын
I was thinking the exact same thing xD
@GeerlingEngineering
@GeerlingEngineering 18 күн бұрын
It was so fun having you out at the tower site! We're still working on our video about the effects on the broadcast and transmitter, but it's great to see all the RF magic going on here!
@MikinessAnalog
@MikinessAnalog 18 күн бұрын
I remember seeing one of your videos where you had pulled the charred remains away from the output that was effecting signal strength.
@MeppyMan
@MeppyMan 17 күн бұрын
I’m curious if cooking food on the tower impacts the audio for listeners? 😂
@MikinessAnalog
@MikinessAnalog 17 күн бұрын
@@MeppyMan Yes, it weakens the RF output because anything containing moisture touching it would be seen as a "short" or close to a dead short.
@bradhafichuk
@bradhafichuk 17 күн бұрын
@@MeppyMan I would think it does! But I also would think it's only folks on the fringes of the station that would really be impacted enough to matter and they probably would change the tuner somewhere else. What do you think?
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 17 күн бұрын
@@bradhafichukwe will see... :)
@HawksHillFarm
@HawksHillFarm 18 күн бұрын
YES PLASMA CHAD! BUILD IT!!!
@brlinrainf
@brlinrainf 17 күн бұрын
YES
@Damicske
@Damicske 17 күн бұрын
Build the rectifier part with mosfets ;) use high voltage capacitors / make it so it auto disconnects from the coil :)
@AarushA.S
@AarushA.S 16 күн бұрын
Ya
@techno_john
@techno_john 14 күн бұрын
DEW IT!
@wurstelei1356
@wurstelei1356 10 күн бұрын
@@Damicske Also maybe use high voltage diodes, since those blew up at first.
@davidgekler
@davidgekler 17 күн бұрын
One cold day, here in Southern California(HA) I went with the chief engineer of our AM radio station to the antenna site. We weren't broadcasting. Walking up to the transmitter building we could see a line of something burnt going all the way to the building door, whatever it was, it was totally incinerated. Inside the burnt line continued, all the way to the Transmitter cabinet. Turned out ... ANTS had made a trail from one leg of the tower to the actual transmitter!
@tedoptional-p8l
@tedoptional-p8l 11 күн бұрын
When lighting hits one of those towers, ants aren't necessary, it will get you. I have seen it melt aluminum. The reason it doesn't take down the tower is that it travels on the outside of the conductor and it is brief.
@Socaltransit
@Socaltransit 10 күн бұрын
Out of curiosity, could you say what the station was?
@chauvinemmons
@chauvinemmons 10 күн бұрын
​@@tedoptional-p8lso you would be saying that the resistance of the conductor itself it's too high for the voltage penetrate more than skin deep
@bwfvc7770
@bwfvc7770 9 күн бұрын
Fire Ants? They're attracted to electrical energy.
@tomsmith6513
@tomsmith6513 8 күн бұрын
@@tedoptional-p8l is that the skin effect?
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 18 күн бұрын
Any time you're back in St. Louis, we'll do some more Midwestern science experiments! 😂
@justinbanks2380
@justinbanks2380 18 күн бұрын
As a Midwesterner just south of STL, that 'midwestern science experiment' statement can go a lot of ways. From actual experiments, to ones soaked with Busch Light and sunburns, lol
@matthewjohnson9746
@matthewjohnson9746 18 күн бұрын
Please tell me you got Jay the St Louis classic: Ooey Gooey Butter Cake?
@justinbanks2380
@justinbanks2380 18 күн бұрын
@@matthewjohnson9746 or toasted ravs as apparently that's not a thing other places? (The butter cake I knew was local, but toasted ravs? Still blows my mind.)
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 18 күн бұрын
@@matthewjohnson9746we tried!! Unfortunately the place we stopped was out - Bike Shop in St. Charles. He got some gooey butter/brownie but it's not quite the same. He'll just have to come back. And we'll do T-ravs too.
@Eternally-Oriented
@Eternally-Oriented 18 күн бұрын
Come create a plasma twister in nado alley, at Tulsa Ok!
@gormauslander
@gormauslander 18 күн бұрын
"Take it from a guy that's seen the remains of a guy that...eugh" Yeah, that's sufficiently terrifying, will do.
@stevengill1736
@stevengill1736 11 күн бұрын
It made me wonder what the heck those high voltage gloves are made of....
@Shinzon23
@Shinzon23 11 күн бұрын
They used to be made out of asbestos ​@@stevengill1736
@alexcrow2905
@alexcrow2905 10 күн бұрын
@@stevengill1736 Yes, that sausage certainly gives me the willies ;-) The gloves are just a failsafe, the sausage is connected to the ground of the antenna at the other end, so any power goes down the ground cable and not via the stick to the person. If you put your own "sausage" against the tower, even when standing on an insulating platform, you'd still get horribly burnt as the capacitance of your body to ground would be enough to conduct a fair bit of current. At these frequencies, you'd not really feel a shock as such, and there is some "skin effect" in play (higher frequency travels over the surface rather than inside a conductor) but the huge power levels will cause serious external and internal burns. High conductivity paths such as nerves and blood vessels will carry most of the non-surface current, so think of the blood boiling in your veins and arteries and your nerves exploding like overloaded wire fuses. I remember a story of a chap in the cadet force at my school holding on to the whip antenna on a vehicle while it was transmitting, probably less than 100W. He had some blistering on his hand, but more painful were the deep pinprick holes where the arc had charred tiny paths deep into the living tissue, nerves and all. Needless to say he was sent back home to recover.
@shubus
@shubus 18 күн бұрын
I remember reading a few years ago where some guy in the vicinity of one of these towers setup a massive resonant coil/capacitor circuit to siphon off power from the transmitter. In a nearby town folks were complaining about low signal quality. So of course the guy got caught and to take done his system. Have always wondered exactly how much power he was able to draw.
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 18 күн бұрын
We actually run into that when some less scrupulous tower builders don't detune their nearby towers appropriately. It can really suck down the signal in that direction!
@FLPhotoCatcher
@FLPhotoCatcher 18 күн бұрын
Here in middle Tennessee, the local radio stations have become much less clear in recent years. I wonder who is rednecking their hotdog picnic.
@float32
@float32 17 күн бұрын
@@JeffGeerlingI assume it effectively “shadows” everything behind it, if it’s in the far field?
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 17 күн бұрын
@@float32yep, exactly
@Buzzhumma
@Buzzhumma 14 күн бұрын
1.21 gigawatts is what the doc needed!
@ashercorbett8089
@ashercorbett8089 18 күн бұрын
YES PLASMA CHAD! BUILD IT!!!
@AdMan-The-LabRat
@AdMan-The-LabRat 16 күн бұрын
YES PLASMA CHAD! BUILD IT!!!
@Ma_X64
@Ma_X64 13 күн бұрын
I knew one old man who lived near the AM tower in USSR. It was old private "estate". He needed quite an amount of firewood and coal in winter to keep the house warm. He made a huge flat coil of copper wire on a wall and just connected his electric heater to it. It was an old infrared heater with open heating coil. And it worked. Not that stable but for free.
@970357ers
@970357ers 18 күн бұрын
9:03 Never thought I’d hear a sausage speak, but here it is.
@GilaBert-sq4hj
@GilaBert-sq4hj 18 күн бұрын
Sausage, pickle and corn dog. They all speak 😂
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 16 күн бұрын
@@GilaBert-sq4hjand more... we have a couple more tests to post on Geerling Engineering lol
@FedeG86
@FedeG86 13 күн бұрын
​@@JeffGeerling very funny way to roast food. 😂👍
@wowalamoiz9489
@wowalamoiz9489 9 күн бұрын
It's an ordinary sausage
@8546Ken
@8546Ken 13 күн бұрын
A 60 Hz arc is actually buzzing at 120 Hz, because both the positive and negative peaks conduct.
@PlasmaChannel
@PlasmaChannel 13 күн бұрын
Yeah, I shot that sequence and did voiceover for that sequence at 4am in the morning, after editing all night. I cant believe I missed that....it's literally electronics 101. I was sleeeeepy
@roadkillavenger1325
@roadkillavenger1325 18 күн бұрын
Mud daubers are extremely docile. It's rare to get stung by them. They're a completely different type of wasp than paper wasps.
@mfree80286
@mfree80286 18 күн бұрын
Still shouldn't have them in the transmission facility, their nests are a royal PITA even when they aren't bridging conductors (as anyone who's ever had to dig one out of a blind hole in a metal casting and clean the threads can attest).
@rdw6156
@rdw6156 18 күн бұрын
Mud daubers are not docile I can speak from experience they suck their stings hurt and they are not my friend...I was only 12 years old and all bees can suck an egg
@oversecus833
@oversecus833 18 күн бұрын
Haven't Mud Daubers caused like 3 airplane crashes?
@roadkillavenger1325
@roadkillavenger1325 17 күн бұрын
@mfree80286 But that wasn't the issue. The issue was that he has an irrational fear of something that wasn't going to hurt him. Fun fact: Most snake bites happen during attempts to ķìĺĺ snakes. Irrational fear causes more problems than it's worth. Lots of people get stung because they have a habit of flailing their arms around in hopes that it will magically ķìĺĺ whatever they're trying to hit.
@roadkillavenger1325
@roadkillavenger1325 17 күн бұрын
@@oversecus833 They sure have. They get in the pitot tubes.
@Osc-Mod
@Osc-Mod 15 күн бұрын
When I was in high school we had a Nasa Engineer substitute math for us. He talked about making something similar to your LED circuit. He used these for LED lights in house. (before the led was commercially available. He talked about using the radio waves from the nearby tower to feed the receiver coils he kept on his roof. I never personally put eyes on it but the idea never has left my mind.
@timesurfingalien
@timesurfingalien 17 күн бұрын
I used to build these towers. No am but plenty of FM and television. That took me all over the world.
@DallasTaylor
@DallasTaylor 17 күн бұрын
I'm in Riga Latvia and swear I can feel the ambient energy coursing through the area. Recently, I found an old project where I soldered together 3 batteries in parellel from ecigs/vapes like a ladder with small brass strips on the side and a blue led connected to one of the suction switches instead of the heating element. When I made it it would only come on when I blew on the switch, which was the intention, but after about 2 years I found the blue led glowing and it hasn't stopped. Not a flash. I tried to recreate it without the suction switch and a white led, it's been glowing for a few weeks but dimming and could just be normal discharge. When I asked the computer about it it was saying the led could be rectifing ambient ac. I think the batteries are acting as coils and collectors from the brass strips, etc. I'd love to host a visit to see if it could be measured, documented, etc.
@xjekwkfhzodudidkne
@xjekwkfhzodudidkne 14 күн бұрын
Those switches are just microphones, literally any noise will set them off, plus passive discharge over time etc
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 12 күн бұрын
LEDs can already glow visibly but dimly on microamperes of current. This means that if the switching FET in the vape is ever so slightly leaky, you'll see the LED glow in the dark. And because it's microamperes, and there are about 7500 hours in a year, it will only draw 7,5mAh from the battery. If the battery is 250mAh, in theory it could power the LED for more than 30 years, excluding self discharge.
@krbruner
@krbruner 18 күн бұрын
I was a radio alignment tech for UHF and VHF two-way radios, such as those used for police and such. One day I was working on a 20 watt handheld and got a little too close to the final (the transistor that drives the power to the antenna). Wow. Now I have been shocked before, a number of times, including from a 30kv neon transformer....and non hurt as much as that RF burn. It honestly felt like taking a glowing hot needle, sticking it into your finger, driving it into the bone. I told my boss, and he said that if I had gotten hit by one of the 100 (or more) watt car-mounted ones, I'd be going home for the day. My finger had this little dark tinge around the spot it happened, for quite some time. I misspoke on the transformer...I recalled the numbers incorrectly. I remembered 15 and 30 but transposed the value they were attached to. It was a 15Kv 30mA max...I mistakenly remembered 30Kv 15mA. It did make for quite a good Jacob's Ladder. It struggled at first to restrike the arc, but I found an article about what was called a Gabriel's Anode, which is just a high resistance resistor connected to one post, with the other side floating near the other post. The arc strikes from the free leg of the resistor, then the arc reaches to the other leg, avoiding the resistor, then travels up the arms.
@contomo5710
@contomo5710 17 күн бұрын
thats something that always gets quickly lost, and something i had to learn myself tinkering with RF electronics... being used to pumping kW of power into a resonant tank at 100khz, thats only resonating at 300V or so... lower impedance and all, at those frequencies no matching needed. Skin effect... capacitance still too little to cause any pain when touching a resonator. But at the almost all the time used 50 ohms in the RF bands (13.56MHz where i was playing :P) even the lower voltages cause quite some current to flow because of the higher frequencies. i can only imagine VHF and UHF bands to cause any capacitive reactance a fingering guy presents to shoot close to 0
@jeffreyyoung4104
@jeffreyyoung4104 14 күн бұрын
I got my RF burn from a cavity oscillator in an aircraft transponder! Same thing happened to my finger, a burn that went deep into the finger, and took a long time to heal. Afterwards I was even MORE careful around the output components.
@mernokimuvek
@mernokimuvek 14 күн бұрын
Neon transformers are 15 kV max.
@jeffreyyoung4104
@jeffreyyoung4104 14 күн бұрын
@@mernokimuvek With RF burns, it isn't the voltage, but the frequency that gets you. VHF and UHF radios are bad, but microwave frequencies, up into the 10 GHz range are nasty. In my case, the voltage was 7KV, but magnetron voltage could get up into the 25KV range, higher with military radar. And they put in many interlocks to prevent accidents.
@mernokimuvek
@mernokimuvek 14 күн бұрын
@@jeffreyyoung4104 I know, but the guy mentioned a 30 kV NST. Which simply doesn't exist.
@RonLaws
@RonLaws 14 күн бұрын
It's worth noting that early Crystal radios lacked any form of amplification circuit, the power to drive the loudspeaker came purely from the energy captured by the antenna.
@justinbanks2380
@justinbanks2380 18 күн бұрын
I love how you say, don't touch anything or you'll die. And your response is, looks like I'm in the right place 😂
@justinbanks2380
@justinbanks2380 18 күн бұрын
12:55 faster than our eyes can see... I think that is an idea for a video. Collaborate with someone with an insane high speed camera and see if you can record the plasma expanding and contracting to make the sound
@DanielCook-h6r
@DanielCook-h6r 17 күн бұрын
@slowmoguys
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 16 күн бұрын
@@DanielCook-h6rthat's a collab I could get behind
@SpydersByte
@SpydersByte 14 күн бұрын
@@DanielCook-h6r ^
@mannys4539
@mannys4539 11 күн бұрын
real talk... I can't see anyone with a phantom or equivalent camera trying to film this... the chance of breaking $100,000 camera is too high... sure would be cool tho
@justinbanks2380
@justinbanks2380 11 күн бұрын
​@@mannys4539​ I'm sure there is someone. Alan Pan drove a car through a Tesla coil and arc attack films electricity in high speed. I'm sure if they put behind thick insulating plexiglass and the rest a faraday cage. IDK, just an idea
@Durang0318
@Durang0318 17 күн бұрын
Side note, the mode FM does not only work on line of sight. It's the typical FM frequency range (88-108mhz) that is line of sight.
@8546Ken
@8546Ken 13 күн бұрын
Actually broadcast FM uses 88-108 Megahertz, not millihertz.
@stevengill1736
@stevengill1736 11 күн бұрын
So it's the capital M that makes it mega? Thank you.... Hmm, a micro hertz would be pretty darned slow!
@PlasmaChannel
@PlasmaChannel 11 күн бұрын
Lol priceless
@PlasmaChannel
@PlasmaChannel 11 күн бұрын
Good info, thank you
@zombieregime
@zombieregime 13 күн бұрын
HEY! Thats Geerling Engineering's RF engineer dad person guy!!! As odd as he finds it I could listen to Geerling sr. ramble on about radio infrastructure all day. Yes, nerds like us exist. Yes, we are fun at parties.....if we would get invited to them.....
@maccurtis730
@maccurtis730 17 күн бұрын
Radio Tower: "I will greatly increase your pain." Hotdog: "I felt that!"
@MeppyMan
@MeppyMan 17 күн бұрын
My first AM radio I built as a kid, was powered from a single wire running from outside my window to the garage a few meters away.
@8546Ken
@8546Ken 13 күн бұрын
I once saw a Popular Electronics AM radio project using a crystal radio plus a transistor amplifier. It was powered by a resonant circuit tuned to a local high powered AM station while the receiver was tuned with a second tuned circuit to a weaker station.
@MeppyMan
@MeppyMan 10 күн бұрын
@@8546Ken this was a crystal radio. It just had a little earpiece so didn’t need much power. I think we tuned the antenna to one of the local stations. At night I could pick up stations further away.
@8546Ken
@8546Ken 10 күн бұрын
@@MeppyMan I had two crystal radios when i was a kid. i stretched a long wire antenna from the roof of the house to the roof of the garage. The tricky part was adjusting the cat's whisker.
@ojonasar
@ojonasar 17 күн бұрын
I remember back in 89 when I was on a business trip and we visited the Empire State Building on an off day. I kept having weird problems with the video display on my SVHS camcorder and at first thought it was to do with the cold. Later I realised what it was - the radio antennas above me. When I got home, I realised the audio was completely trashed - just radio stations bleeding over each other.
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 16 күн бұрын
We'd love to visit that tower site someday! One of the more interesting urban towers!
@JCtheMusicMan_
@JCtheMusicMan_ 18 күн бұрын
My favorite demonstration of using plasma to play music is the nerdy Tesla coil scene in the Sorcerer’s Apprentice! 🥰
@dresdenvisage
@dresdenvisage 18 күн бұрын
Thanks for your recommendation! That was so cute and cool!! And I always love me some Jay Baruchel!
@leonsivils1494
@leonsivils1494 18 күн бұрын
YES PLASMA CHAD! BUILD IT!!!
@nommy8599
@nommy8599 16 күн бұрын
@PlasmaChannel You may've made a video supporting a fraudulent company, Helion. Could you please do a follow up or look into this (see comment in the video I'll link in reply below)? The CEO apparently setup equipment at another KZbinrs place and 'demonstrated fusion' which is obvious a hoax. If you ignore this you may be unwittingly supporting scamming. Not sure if that's important to you.
@nommy8599
@nommy8599 16 күн бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/pWeykHSYgappY5Ysi=anWyt00KRXIfA92h
@Brother_In_Christ
@Brother_In_Christ 17 күн бұрын
I did it Morty, I received AM radio frequencies through a pickle, Morty. **Burbs**
@mnikpro
@mnikpro 18 күн бұрын
5:10 "don't touch any of those stuff because you'll die." 😂
@Happ1ness
@Happ1ness 16 күн бұрын
He said calmly
@boutrosboutrosboutrosboutros
@boutrosboutrosboutrosboutros 8 күн бұрын
My uncle was a ham radio guy, and built his own amplifiers. He built a 14,000 W amplifier that had a huge vacuum tube in it! It was very cool. (and illegal!) He would have me go out after dark and hold a fluorescent light tube up in the air near the antenna, I was probably 12 feet away, and the fluorescent light would light up bright! He also showed me some other cool stuff, he built a long wire antenna, which was a wire that ran about a half an acre across his property. He showed me that he could key his microphone and a couple seconds later we would hear that sound again. He explained it was his signal, skipping all the way around the planet off of the atmosphere and coming back to his radio! I learned a lot from this guy!
@Blackwing2345635
@Blackwing2345635 16 күн бұрын
For me there was a great (and safe) demo of how powerful radio transmission is - you can build a passive radio receiver. It drives speaker only with the energy it receives from a transmitter.
@alexandergmzx
@alexandergmzx 18 күн бұрын
YES PLASMA CHAD! BUILD IT!!! Jokes aside, when I was a boy in junior high school we had an strange physics laboratory professor who brought a project of an AM power-less radio with a shitty antenna design. The process of building was so long and confusing and I guess it is still getting build in some schools over the world. It is nice to see an easy project that can actually use the AM signals to power a simple LED
@dresdenvisage
@dresdenvisage 18 күн бұрын
Yay! It's back! It was deleted before i got to your explanation! 😅
@kokopelli314
@kokopelli314 14 күн бұрын
I worked at a VLF 500kW transmitting station in the 80s. We bounced signals around and through the planet using 100ft arrays and 5ft vacuum tubes. It was the cold war and everything was overkill!
@madrigo
@madrigo 17 күн бұрын
I believe in 11:10, when you say that sounds like 60Hz, that actually sounds like 120Hz. That's because what makes the sound is the arc ionizing this path of air in front of it, and every time it reforms the arc, a new wavefront is formed. I might be wrong, but I believe that's a 120Hz fundamental with a lot of harmonics in there. When you have an Amplitude Modulated signal forming an arc, then you will hear the modulated signal and not the carrier, so the effect is not present here.
@jackodd8284
@jackodd8284 17 күн бұрын
One time i was using an antique Bug Detector during an investigation into a Lawyer's office. We kept getting this one beep. Then with the Microphone set it would pick up Signals. Turns out, there was a pipe going straight to the top of the building where you could get radio reception. Powerful stuff, Miles away from Stations.
@mikescholz6429
@mikescholz6429 15 күн бұрын
You discovered the perfect video title to get me to click within milliseconds of reading without needing to think about it. This even better than click bait.
@anthonymonroe852
@anthonymonroe852 17 күн бұрын
6:30 that's a mud-dauber I believe. Generally non aggressive, unless threatened. They are in the wasp family but are only a mild annoyance as they build mud structure on walls. Their stings are also much less painful as they don't kill their prey so much as paralyze it to eat later. You can usually tell by their abdomen that thin part at the waist. Where wasps have the same narrow connection it is more like an hourglass instead of a thin straw between.
@DeusExWolksvagen
@DeusExWolksvagen 11 күн бұрын
A wasp hands typed this post.
@jimmyrustler8983
@jimmyrustler8983 18 күн бұрын
At 8:20, Joe's 100% right. I used to freeclimb a lot of stuff, cathedral spires, bridges, and other assorted tall stuff. No towers though. They're rather zappy. Not that falling from great height isn't any less dangerous 😅
@raphaelfranzen9623
@raphaelfranzen9623 18 күн бұрын
One might argue with that last part. You can't be sure which parts of a tower are energized, but you can learn how to prevent falling while climbing.
@jimmyrustler8983
@jimmyrustler8983 18 күн бұрын
@@raphaelfranzen9623 Funnily enough, only ever had one close call in regards to falling, never had any issues after that. Liquid chalk helps a lot too 🤙
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
@@raphaelfranzen9623 I knew exactly what was energized on my radar towers.
@jamesromanoski7292
@jamesromanoski7292 17 күн бұрын
This is the first time I've seen an ad that interests me. Thanks for choosing your ad sponsor as methodically as you do your experiments and projects.
@MrBrandoncal
@MrBrandoncal 18 күн бұрын
Yes! Go bigger!
@1.4142
@1.4142 17 күн бұрын
That's actually a mud dauber wasp that is solitary and very docile and demur. They build mud homes for their children who they bring paralyzed spider to feed on.
@graeme.davidson
@graeme.davidson 15 күн бұрын
My rule is ignore it and it'll ignore you.
@sakelaine2953
@sakelaine2953 11 күн бұрын
@@graeme.davidson Good rule
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
Except they fill up every 1/4" jack hole with mud.
@FelanLP
@FelanLP 18 күн бұрын
"Transmitting electrical power via towers and antennas through air" wasn't there something about a lost invention from Nicola Tesla, which could be describet the same? Yet we say that it's ether unclear what his implementation would have looked like or that it wouldn't be a wise tech to use, since we know which way energy uses. I mean, we know lightnings and stuff, so... Yeah, that's just something this reminded me of.
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 12 күн бұрын
His idea is mostly identical to this. But the big difference is that his 'tesla coil' was a big spark gap transmitter, and a nasty one at that. Those things have reasonable average power levels of let's say 50 to 100kW, but the impulse power is properly enormous - tens or hundreds of megawatts. That means it's pretty easy to get sparky things and lighting discharge tubes everywhere. But not to get any sort of usable power out of it. It would also bulldoze any radio reception in a wide range. Tesla's invention adheres to the inverse square law of field strenght too. So while you can inefficiently transfer real usable power over a couple meters, it's near impossible to do it over hundreds of meters.
@FelanLP
@FelanLP 12 күн бұрын
@@mfbfreak no, I meant this big mushroom structure made out of metal beams where we don't really know what exactly his intentions were. If I'm not mistaken it's still unclear what telsa realy wanted to achieve. But I wouldn't be surprised it this tech portraied in the video is the unintentional perfection of Teslas initial idea, which made him thinking about these towers in the first place.
@xpump876
@xpump876 13 күн бұрын
Amazing that the AM sound was audible in the room w/ the large capacitors! Years ago, I found a discarded Dental X-Ray Transformer - a 28" tall heavy, circular can with an insulated 8"tower and many input taps. A 9v battery was enough to generate a +1"plasma arc. (when I moved, I left it in the apt cellar)
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
Magnetostriction is a bitch. I had a problem with it in a 140 KW radar transmitter. I switched solenoid to toroidal chokes in the power supply, and the noise went down many dB. You can sometimes hear it in computer power supplies if the coils aren't gooped up with silicone or something.
@Mrjobe_
@Mrjobe_ 7 күн бұрын
@@jamesvandamme7786 oh is that what i'm hearing from one of my pc's.. cool. i can fix it now
@bradhafichuk
@bradhafichuk 17 күн бұрын
I feel like Integza would appreciate a sacrificial tomatoe to the tower on your next visit!
@SHjorvar
@SHjorvar 18 күн бұрын
Didn't expect to see the master of Ansible on the plasma channel! My worlds are colliding and I'm all for it.
@vk2zay
@vk2zay 18 күн бұрын
You might want to add a variable coupling loop to the receiver so you can adjust the amount of coupling of the rectifier to the resonator... this would let you tune the entire system for very high efficiency and you'd probably be quite surprised how far away it would work - calculator or watch or something similar with a transreflective LCD screen and low current demands... Alternatively a neon bulb may be a better choice for the display device (although adding a series resistor to the LED would probably save it from damage - true for the diodes too, maybe add a clamping zener etc, lots of ways to make it tolerant of severe overdrive). So close to a high power MW transmitter you should be able to easily get the 80 volts or so needed to ionise the neon bulb, and used in a relaxation oscillator circuit its flash rate would be a good indicator of received signal level. This could also be done with the LED too just require a bit more complexity in the circuit than the basic RC NE-2 flasher. Also consider adding a small piezo speaker to make a click for each discharge to make it usable in direct sunlight. Heck with a switch you could select between ticking rate proportional to signal, or listening to the radio program just as a crystal set. Thinking about it I am kinda tempted to just build this myself for fun... We are both in Seattle right? There must be some MW stations around here we can get close enough to - not that I don't have enough radio transmitters to do this in the lab with a couple of watts.
@policedog4030
@policedog4030 17 күн бұрын
Another usecase for the principles in this video might be figuring out how to detect the anti-personnel type directed energy weapons (the still classified ones). I think they are combining different energy types (RF, Millimeter, Microwave, UV and Ultra or Infrasound) with a 5 or 6 GHz Mesh Network and beamforming Phased Array or Plasma Antennas to carry out the imaging surveillance, 3D hyperspectral Image capture, and the remote, deniable, invisible touchless torture weapons. Conventional handheld detectors such as GQ Electronics only show spikes in the EF detection circuit from the nominal less than 5 volts per square meter to very rapidly or instantaneously up to over 100 volts per square meter when the victim in the surveilled and attacked interior building space moves his body physically, such as standing up from a sitting position with the meter on a nearby table. Tried the neon bulbs by themselves hoping the legs would act as antennas but they do not light up so will need to try a few circuits and your ideas appear helpful.
@brine80
@brine80 16 күн бұрын
I wish I knew what you two were talking about because I am fascinated by this type of thing, unfortunately I don't very little about radio, AM, FM, etc.... but you two are clearly what I would consider radio geniuses lol. Anyway, thank you for your ideas and input here, maybe someday I will learn and I destiny some of what you guys are referring to here. At the end of the day, its really cool just to see these towers ability to produce so much juice remotely, and I felt like a little kid again when I saw the sausage get smoked against the tower.
@YodaWhat
@YodaWhat 14 күн бұрын
@vk2zay - Megawatt transmitters? I thought those days went out with Analog TV. Apparently the modern Digital TV transmitters use lower power, like hundreds of kW. Now if you are talking about PEAK power, some radars are likely to do that, but they are only short pulses, and are panning all around the sky.
@josephlieberman3027
@josephlieberman3027 12 күн бұрын
Indeed, and amazing broad and comprehensive comment. My electronix comprehension is imperfect and eratic, yet i try to be aware and i have observed speciffic individuals whom might have been recipient of hi tech covert harasment, it is mainly in hind sight and from reflecting on the behavior changes and extremes compared to the events happening in the persons life at that time,, the insanity and behavior ups and downs correlation with certain interactions this person had attempting to cause fbi, sheriff and police to actual follow through on specific crime reports made. Electronic detection tool would be great,, currently i just avoid being or causing trouble, but i so watch to recognize what undue influence or methods might be actively and covertly employed upon anyone in my observable realm.
@TravelnGeek
@TravelnGeek 18 күн бұрын
very cool to see the Nautel gear in the field! I have driven by the factory in Nova Scotia so many times over the years.
@BenjaminAster
@BenjaminAster 18 күн бұрын
1:11 HECK YEAH SALZBURG LET'S GOOOO
@RideGasGas
@RideGasGas 11 күн бұрын
Nice :) Enjoyed this and will look for Jeff's video. Radio communications engineer with 45+ years of experience and this stuff never gets old!
@mikeladd5880
@mikeladd5880 18 күн бұрын
1 thing you said was incorrect.. "fm signals are line of sight".. its the frequency that makes it line of sight. You can use fm at any frequency, its just the way the transmition is modulated.
@greenaum
@greenaum 17 күн бұрын
I think he was referring to FM broadcast radio and it's usual frequencies.
@BlackMasterRoshi
@BlackMasterRoshi 17 күн бұрын
congratulations, you've learned that electrocuted pickle is in the top 3 worst smells ever. a lesson i never forgot.
@lifeinmotion3339
@lifeinmotion3339 18 күн бұрын
Could you build a drone that could power itself and have altitude hold .? That would be cool. You could have infinite flight times. Until it burns the motors out🤔. Or have an override to control and land.
@krabbend8
@krabbend8 16 күн бұрын
or a car
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 12 күн бұрын
That would be very hard. In theory, if you'd have a loop antenna that weighs next to nothing, you could hover within one or two meters of a large transmitter tower, but that's about it.
@evilMaid1984
@evilMaid1984 18 күн бұрын
Had no clue about this channel, suddenly Jeff shows up. Only thing that could make it better is his dad joining, too? Boom! Nailed it :)
@Powertampa
@Powertampa 18 күн бұрын
That's the sound of @franzolielectronics making music with plasma. You should talk to him if you wanna show off the musical capability of plasma!
@alexandredevert4935
@alexandredevert4935 17 күн бұрын
I had no idea a radio tower could be this dangerous. The story of the fried guy is very convincing, will never approach a radio tower.
@mirskym
@mirskym 11 күн бұрын
I'm a ham radio operator and I got a burn on my finger touching the antenna wires from my transmitter at only 150 watts!
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
@@mirskym I got bit from a CB radio antenna, 4 watts. The thing is, matching circuits and loading coils step up the voltage into a shorter than quarter wavelength antenna so it will match and radiate more. So it can be a lot more than the transmitter voltage.
@extraintelligence
@extraintelligence 18 күн бұрын
Imagine the world we could live in today if Westinghouse hadn't stabbed Tesla in the back . . .
@ZonamaPrime
@ZonamaPrime 2 күн бұрын
@7:23 an iconic scene that always comes to my head EVERYTIME i have to flip a breaker.
@himanshrasal
@himanshrasal 17 күн бұрын
imagine you're burning after touching the tower and there's background music playing.
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 12 күн бұрын
Led Zeppelin - Stairway to Heaven please!
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
Queen's "Another One Bite The Dust".
@postcardshackpostcards2369
@postcardshackpostcards2369 10 күн бұрын
Flight of the Bumblebee?
@marcfruchtman9473
@marcfruchtman9473 17 күн бұрын
Amazing! I missed that you did a video on Plasma Speakers! Going now to watch.
@Raptor_3_fire_37
@Raptor_3_fire_37 18 күн бұрын
4:10 is that a INEOS Grenadier?
@TheGreatVandoly
@TheGreatVandoly 16 күн бұрын
A larger scale version would be awesome to see. Along with a detailed explanation of the whole process for those like me who are not quite up to snuff in this field, yet still enjoy it.
@Thefreakyfreek
@Thefreakyfreek 18 күн бұрын
what you to did here is stupid inrasponsable and not good for the pint on the tower i love it
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
You're lucky the FCC didn't come calling.
@rksg2003
@rksg2003 17 күн бұрын
I love seeing Jeff’s dad in these videos. I wish I knew as much about transmitters as he does..
@itsnotthat_
@itsnotthat_ 17 күн бұрын
It is cool watching people with their dads. I'm still waiting for my dad to get back from grabbing cigs at the gas station in 2003. He always runs late, such a silly dad.
@rksg2003
@rksg2003 17 күн бұрын
@@itsnotthat_ I’ve heard of that happening before seen a few moms do the same thing in my life. Explain that, you give life to them and then abandon them?
@xnavynuc
@xnavynuc 17 күн бұрын
All that power going through the air makes me wonder what it’s doing to our bodies?!
@Max_Chooch
@Max_Chooch 17 күн бұрын
Nothing. Unless maybe if you have a pacemaker lol
@sdjhgfkshfswdfhskljh3360
@sdjhgfkshfswdfhskljh3360 17 күн бұрын
Body is acting like resistor - it is heating. By tiny amount.
@mr.griffe9202
@mr.griffe9202 12 күн бұрын
I read somewhere it can cause cancer. Something along the lines of people who work near powerplants have a higher cancer likelihood
@laus9953
@laus9953 8 күн бұрын
Arthur firstenberg wrote a book about it, called "the invisible rainbow". does a lot more to the body than a lot of people would like to think.
@sparky6086
@sparky6086 8 күн бұрын
In the late 1980's the cellphone service provider, that I worked for, built a steel lattace tower which just happened to be in resonance with a nearby AM station. For cell service, we had UHF antennas at the top of the tower, so cell service was unaffected, but because of the tower's physical characteristics coincidentally, making it in resonance with the AM radio station, our cell site tower drained just about all the radiated rf power from the AM station, severely cutting down on the station's range. We ended up getting a specialist who attached steel cables to each corner of the tower going the length of the tower. He pulled them tight, almost like he was tuning a guitar string, until he'd physically changed the resonance of the tower to where it no longer soaked up all the AM station's power.
@nathan-shearer
@nathan-shearer 18 күн бұрын
The wood rod was held rather close to the body at 8:08. An arc could potentially jump from the wood rod to the body, bypassing the gloves. It looks like the gloves are designed to have deep arm holes to prevent arcs from routing around the glove. Please be careful because high voltage arcs will go *around* your insulator to bite you.
@GigsVT
@GigsVT 18 күн бұрын
Keep in mind it's 800 volts. It can't jump more than a few mm. They were very safe.
@a64738
@a64738 18 күн бұрын
Wood stick... Normally you would use a glass fiber rod that is a good insulator.
@AnonymousAnarchist2
@AnonymousAnarchist2 17 күн бұрын
Well I dont have my engineering handbook uh, handy making it rather useless rn, I do know that wood is an excellent insulator for electricity. Do you know why blank circut boards are called breadboards? Because the first ones where just that, used bread cutting boards, and quite a lot of high powered equipment is still in operation using just wood to insulate. The problem with wood comes primarily from it lighting on fire, and secondarly from it needing an ample safty factor as humidity changes its insulating value but I would say a 2 meter stick is more then ample for a saftey factor.
@nathan-shearer
@nathan-shearer 17 күн бұрын
@@AnonymousAnarchist2 For sure, they took more than enough safety precautions in this video. I just wanted to point out that subtle detail for those who are still learning and have not yet been surprised by a rogue arc taking the long route around insulators.
@AnonymousAnarchist2
@AnonymousAnarchist2 17 күн бұрын
@@nathan-shearer well that is a good point.
@draconightwalker4964
@draconightwalker4964 17 күн бұрын
thats Jeff Geerling's old man with the hotdog on a stick radio. that video was awesome for learning how radio works
@seekbalance6891
@seekbalance6891 18 күн бұрын
at approx 3m20s it was stated that energy delivery drops off exponentially with distance. wouldn't it be more accurate to say the dropoff is geometric? or inverse-square?
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 17 күн бұрын
Inverse square is correct; a bit different but the idea is similar of course-there's a massive drop off as you travel further away from the tower.
@seekbalance6891
@seekbalance6891 17 күн бұрын
@@JeffGeerling thanks for your response. and, i forgot to mention, great idea for an experiment, and nice explanation from the plasma guy about how it works.
@0therun1t21
@0therun1t21 10 күн бұрын
The corndog sounded great! Art Bell made a giant loop antenna in Pahrump that pulled enough power out of the air to freak him out, but he never went into detail about it and that's why I'm here trying to learn. Thank you!
@robbytheremin2443
@robbytheremin2443 18 күн бұрын
I was a broadcast engineer back in the 80s. Even a 1KW AM transmitter feels like a flat iron when you touch the tower. Don't ask me how I know...
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 12 күн бұрын
For a couple of months i had a little dimple on the tip of my index finger from tuning a 144MHz magloop antenna and getting too close to the tuning cap. Smelled it first, felt it a split second later. RF burns go deep! And this was fed with just 10ish watts!
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
@@mfbfreak Stepped up in voltage by the matching network!
@robbytheremin2443
@robbytheremin2443 7 күн бұрын
​@@mfbfreak FYI, I'm W0TTM 😎
@AaranyakBose
@AaranyakBose 18 күн бұрын
Man i saw that what energy of radio tower could do but couldn't find a single detailed video and now i got this thank you soo much 😂❤
@FriesOfTheDead
@FriesOfTheDead 18 күн бұрын
Dude, you need to respect that NST a bit more, I would use a plastic rod when doing that (11:14). If that spark jumps over to your finger, you'll be dead before you hit the floor. That NST looks like 7kV or 9kV, probably 30 mA, and those things are usually center-tapped, making both ends hot.
@Sabrinahuskydog
@Sabrinahuskydog 17 күн бұрын
I would imagine that the actual ceritfied professionals in the field would know a lot more about what is safe or isn't safe than you do, random person on the internet who isn't a certified RF engineer.
@FriesOfTheDead
@FriesOfTheDead 17 күн бұрын
@@Sabrinahuskydog Lol, this is exactly why he should be more careful, because then people like you think what he's doing is safe and might try it at home. I'm talking about the bit where @PlasmaChannel has his fingers right next to a 7-9kV arc from a NST. The certified RF engineers are not at his house where this "experiment" is occurring. The fact that I can tell you how many volts and milliamps that transformer is just by looking at it should give you a clue that I know what I'm talking about, but sure, remain ignorant, die young.
@FriesOfTheDead
@FriesOfTheDead 17 күн бұрын
@@Sabrinahuskydog The part where @PlasmaChannel is "experimenting" with the NST he is at home, 2000 miles away from the certified RF engineers. He's holding a wire with 1mm of insulation, and there is about 9kV going through that wire, coming from a transformer that can deliver about 30 milliamps of current and his fingers are an inch away from the arc that he is pulling from that transformer. If that 1mm of insulation happens to fail or that arc jumps over to his finger he wont event have time to regret what he did. You don't need to be a certified anything to know how dangerous those transformers are, just do some basic research before playing with them. The fact that I know what the specifications of that transformer are, just by looking at it, should let you know that I at least know a little bit about the topic. Anyone with high voltage experience should be more aware of the dangers and I would recommend you do some research too. I've worked with high voltage transformers for a few decades, and I would never get my fingers that close to a conductor carrying that much voltage - insulation does fail sometimes, especially at those voltages, and if it does, you'll be lucky to get a second chance. Just play it safe and do what the certified guys did in the video - wear gloves and/or use a non-conductive rod to manipulate the conductors from a safe distance.
@friesofwisdom4399
@friesofwisdom4399 17 күн бұрын
@@Sabrinahuskydog I don't know why yt wont let me reply on my other account, but here is what I wanted to say: The part where @PlasmaChannel is "experimenting" with the NST he is at home, 2000 miles away from the certified RF engineers. He's holding a wire with 1mm of insulation, and there is about 9kV going through that wire, coming from a transformer that can deliver about 30 milliamps of current and his fingers are an inch away from the arc that he is pulling from that transformer. If that 1mm of insulation happens to fail or that arc jumps over to his finger he wont event have time to regret what he did. You don't need to be a certified anything to know how dangerous those transformers are, just do some basic research before playing with them. The fact that I know what the specifications of that transformer are, just by looking at it, should let you know that I at least know a little bit about the topic. Anyone with high voltage experience should be more aware of the dangers and I would recommend you do some research too. I've worked with high voltage transformers for a few decades, and I would never get my fingers that close to a conductor carrying that much voltage - insulation does fail sometimes, especially at those voltages, and if it does, you'll be lucky to get a second chance. Just play it safe and do what the certified guys did in the video - wear gloves and/or use a non-conductive rod to manipulate the conductors from a safe distance.
@anthonyscott9936
@anthonyscott9936 17 күн бұрын
@@Sabrinahuskydognope, it’ll get him..
@xXJerry202Xx
@xXJerry202Xx 8 күн бұрын
Just learned why I always hear that hum coming from a neon sign. Awesome.
@RichardGrigonis
@RichardGrigonis 3 күн бұрын
A year after I graduated from college (1979) I found myself living in Harrison, NJ. The next town north is Kearny. I was made aware of an old "town character" living there named "Bennie" (last name escapes me -- indeed, I don't think it was mentioned). Bennie purported to be the last paid assistant to Tesla. He told a story that explained one of Tesla's "magic tricks." As you know, when visitors came to Tesla's lab, he would reach down into the pocket of his lab coat, pull something out, open his palm and there would be a flickering light. After just a few seconds, he would close his hand and put it back in his lab coat. Sounds mystifying, doesn't it? According to Bennie, one day Tesla was adjusting some kind of device in his lab, which was filling the place with "electromagnetic oscillations." In those days, labs (like Edison's) had shelves of samples of substances from all over the world. Tuning his device to a certain frequency, Tesla noted a flickering light in the lab, coming from the shelf devoted to crystalline minerals. One of the samples was flickering. That's what he used for his trick. Upon hearing this story, my initial thought was that the crystals were somehow impregnated with phosphorus, and so any free electrons in the sample would be moved back and forth by the electromagnetic oscillations, bump into the phosphorus, and glow. Additionally, Bennie was said to do something that seemed quite wacky, based on something he learned from his days with Tesla. In the backyard of his home was a pipe about a foot in diameter going into the ground. A metal fence ran around his property, and each post of the fence was on an electrical insulator. A wire between them completed a circuit. Bennie claimed that, at the proper temperature and moisture in the ground, he could pull up 700 watts of power from the "well" and used it to heat his home...! His explanation was that Kearny was at the edge of the New Jersey meadowlands, a marshy area just across the river from New York. It just so happens that this particular area is home to more radio stations than anywhere in the world, each trying to cash in on the lucrative "New York market." In any case, all of these radio stations are electrically grounded down in the brackish (salty) layers of the meadowlands. Bennie somehow could complete a circuit, with the fence presumably picking up radio waves. (From what I know of Maxwell's equations, however, one would think that the power from that would be very small, however.) Bennie claimed that "the guys at Western Electric know how to do it too" but if everybody did it, the power extracted from the ground would be divided among them and thus be miniscule. So, there you have it. Have a nice day!
@Madsstuff
@Madsstuff 15 күн бұрын
0:51 didn't expect to see my home road (A9 - Scotland) on this channel
@55Ramius
@55Ramius 17 күн бұрын
Great video Jay! Freaky seeing just how powerful those towers are. I had no idea you could die touching one, if there were no signs stating such. I live about 130 miles from St. Louis.
@jamesvandamme7786
@jamesvandamme7786 10 күн бұрын
That's why there are signs.
@patrickrose1221
@patrickrose1221 13 күн бұрын
" You're listening to Sizzle F. M. and this is ' Leaking Squeaking Hot Sausage speaking, we're Hip, We're Hop, and weeeee' re ready to pop" 😎😂
@milespeterson5049
@milespeterson5049 8 күн бұрын
I think putting one of those LED voltmeters on your receiver tool would be cool. The closer you get to the tower, the higher the voltage on the meter.
@Slowly_Going_Mad
@Slowly_Going_Mad 18 күн бұрын
Crazy stuff. I'd never had guessed that it nuke that circuit from that far.
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 16 күн бұрын
To be honest we were all pretty surprised!
@SDS-1
@SDS-1 17 күн бұрын
Makes me miss my days of kilowatts of CB radio 💕
@whatitmeans
@whatitmeans 14 күн бұрын
I use to live like a hundread meters away from a 500kV power line, and once riding my mountain bike on a road that passes below the power transmission towers, bike that was like a closed loop of aluminium, I got a electric shock that I was even able to hear in the wired earphones I were carrying, I felt like a pinch in one leg, I think it was due current induction on the bike frame. I even wrote a letter to local authorities and got an answer telling me the tower were within the normated parameters (the road was built after the power lines and they lift the ground a few meters). From that little accident, I am pretty confident that if you place enough wire loops below a high voltage power line, you will be able to steal electricity for free in a wireless way by making a core-less transformer, which you could try for incoming video, but placing the warning that making a transformer below a power transmission line is a very efficient way of getting electrocuted as the sausages of this video.
@RolandKnall
@RolandKnall 14 күн бұрын
Hi @plasmachannel! Just a small side-note. I live about 15km north of the radio tower you used at 1:10 minutes ;-) Thanks for putting our hometown of Salzburg in your video!
@glumpy10
@glumpy10 4 күн бұрын
Brilliant Video. What really stands out to me though is the almost absent level of security around that tower! Not even a 12Ft fence with some barbed wire to keep anyone away from being vaporised. Guess they would only fail to heed those NO trespassing signs once! Very informative and interesting vid. Look forward to more with this.
@HaloWolf102
@HaloWolf102 17 күн бұрын
7:24 Nice Jurassic Park reference!
@JeffGeerling
@JeffGeerling 17 күн бұрын
Haha yes. The scene made an impression on me!
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 12 күн бұрын
17:45 i've done exactly this, with a resonant loop antenna and a 2w 144mhz transmitter. It was staggeringly easy to light a NE-2 neon indicator bulb at more than a meter distance, meaning that the voltage on the loop was over 80v. Of course this was at its resonant frequency. LEDs have a low impedance which didn't match to the loop's super high impedance at resonance, so i had less luck with those despite being happy with a lower voltage. Possibly the added junction capacity also had influence. I recommend doing these two things: hook up a NE2 bulb straight to the resonant loop antenna's tuning cap, or putting two bright red LEDs antiparallel and connect them via a coupling loop to the main loop (for impedance transformation) and see how that works, ignoring the voltage doubling circuit (don't forget the voltage drops) and the capacitors. I only have a 50w AM station locally, so i cannot try it out for you. All large AM transmitters are gone. We used to have 2 300kW towers at 40km away for the national medium wave broadcasts. In their place are countless small, local 1w, 50w and 100w stations (legal, you pay between 350 and 800 euro a year or something). I could hook up an efficient hifi speaker to a crystal radio via a matching transformer, and the music from one of them would be quietly audible throughout the entire living room. I can generate 140w of carrier power on 1800khz myself for short periods of time from my ham radio transmitter, but i have no 'proper' antenna for that wavelength.
@JamesHalfHorse
@JamesHalfHorse 18 күн бұрын
I haven't tried that trick with the hotdog yet with my AM tower. It's only 1KW but I can still hold a fluorescent tube near it and it will flash with the modulation and pretty much anything near it is a crystal radio kinda thing. I have heard the term for the coils and stuff singing is zeusaphone. The ones in my transmitter that is the very baby brother to the one you got hands on sings a bit at full power. Welcome to Missouri and hello from the other end of the state.
@baneverything5580
@baneverything5580 12 күн бұрын
I`ve never lived near an AM radio tower but I designed a very sensitive AM crystal set that could get any daytime station a typical radio could receive. It could easily power a normal small speaker in an area near a tower so everyone in the room could listen. It would have been fun for me to live near a tower because I would have made all sorts of circuits to use the signal`s energy.
@richwilliams5326
@richwilliams5326 14 күн бұрын
Holy shit you were right by my house! thanks for visiting St. Charles.
@mutum1
@mutum1 10 күн бұрын
I remember i used to have a friend I played video games with. For the longest time, very quietly in the background of his mic, was a radio broadcast. It took us so long to realize what it was, originally attributing it to like a TV in the background or something, but it turns out his headset was picking up AM radio waves. When he covered the wire in tin foil, it stopped.
@johnwiebe8581
@johnwiebe8581 16 күн бұрын
Answer is yes, please build a better atmospheric power receiver and see how much you can actually get from your neighborhood. Also a build of plasma radio would be neat to watch as well, especially if it is an easy built it yourself kind of thing! Great video, I love learning more with your videos!
@philliphuffman6222
@philliphuffman6222 10 күн бұрын
Having built a crystal radio when i was a kid back in the 90's, i knew that at least there had to be some level of wireless power transmission available when learning about Nicolai Tesla's plans during high school, this video shows a big reason why it never happened. between safety and making things robust enough to receive the signal.
@SpiralEyesFPV
@SpiralEyesFPV 17 күн бұрын
Yeah that would be an awesome follow up video !
@Aaron48219
@Aaron48219 16 күн бұрын
Neat vid Jay! Years ago when I was into amateur radio, I had a really old 100w tube amp for 10m. It had a tendency to overheat, so I would take the top of the case off when using it. One night, I reached behind it while on one night...and bumped the top of one of the tubes while transmitting (believe it was the anode of a 6LQ6). I came to about 15 seconds later, other side of my living room, against the wall and on the floor. Measured voltage was *only* 660vdc. I'm going to go put a cut grape in my microwave now.
@threeMetreJim
@threeMetreJim 16 күн бұрын
I was building only a 50 watt AM transmitter many years back. You could light a fluorescent tube near the wire antenna, and if you happened to touch it, you got quite a bzzzzt noise followed by the smell of burning flesh. It's pretty much like a solid state tesla coil, designed to radiate rf rather than produce a high voltage for arcs though.
@LyonsDenFarm
@LyonsDenFarm 17 күн бұрын
Yes! Build it!
@REKlaus
@REKlaus 9 күн бұрын
Having held a FCC Radiotelephone/GROL license for over 40 years, I still get a kick out of videos like this. Thanks for the entertainment. I would like to know what the change in return loss was when the items where in contact with the tower. The change in antenna current shows there is a change in the impedance of the tower (I just watched Geerling's video and the transmitter goes into serious foldback (reducing power) during the experiment!) I'm also curious how many on here have heard of a gentleman named Nicola Tesla and his experiments 😁.
@ZiggityZeke
@ZiggityZeke 17 күн бұрын
The shot of you with bloodshot eyes as the kid screams was pretty funny
@lmwlmw4468
@lmwlmw4468 12 күн бұрын
Damn, now I know why station sound like frying things ...... someone is frying pickles and hotdogs against them 😂🤣😂...!!! Yeahp, definitely another episode with a more powerful generator. Great video...!!!
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