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Colorado Springs



Original poster: "Anthony R. Mollner" <penny831@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>

It's nice to hear from a fellow ham.
ae6do

-----Original Message-----
From: Tesla list [mailto:tesla@xxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2007 10:55 PM
To: tesla@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [PHISH] Re: Colorado Springs


Original poster: "BRIAN FOLEY" <ka1bbg@xxxxxxxxxxx>

Hi, i will attempt to give you insite to the antenna. first there have been
yagi's, squalo's, tri-lo's and all proclaimed to be the best(of course)...
as an avid ham radio operator we find there is little mystery about shapes
of antennas. they all work to standard antenna formulea and none are
superior just because of shape. the loop antenna is good for directional
finding, however following the math a square, oval, triangle, rhombic or
random shape has a pretty equal chance of working just as the math say's it
will.
using the correct style of antenna for a particular location will give
better performance. cul brian f.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tesla list" <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <tesla@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2007 9:29 PM
Subject: Re: Colorado Springs


 > Original poster: Davetracer@xxxxxxx
 >
 > In a message dated 4/15/2007 7:55:43 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time,
 > tesla@xxxxxxxxxx writes:
 > Original poster: FutureT@xxxxxxx
 >
 > In a message dated 4/15/07 2:14:11 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
 > tesla@xxxxxxxxxx writes:
 >
 > Anthony, David,
 >
 > Robert Golka built a reproduction of Tesla's colorado magnifier
 > TC back around 1980.  It was more powerful than Tesla's
 > original coil.  It was very close to Tesla's original design
 > with the ~ 50 foot primary, large diameter secondary, central
 > extra coil, etc.
 >
 > Tesla's colorado coil was large, but really wasn't that powerful.
 > It's longest sparks were about 33 feet or so.  Some of today's
 > coils such as Bill Wysock's large magnifier, and Greg Leyh's
 > Electrum TC are actually more powerful than Tesla's
 > colorado springs coil.
 >
 > John
 >
 > Is my memory faulty (always a possibility), or did I not read that
 > Tesla's Colorado Springs coil went to 40 *meters* in spark length
 > (not 40 *feet*) the night he also burned up the C. Springs town
generator?
 >
 > For example, in "Tesla" (Cheney & Uth, Barnes & Noble, 1999), pp.89,
 > "Bolts of man-made lightning more than a hundred feet in length shot
 > out from the mast atop the station. The commotion could be heard in
 > the mining town of Cripple Creek, fifteen miles away." I've read many
 > other accounts of this event.
 >
 > I was born and raised here in Denver; my ex was from Colorado
 > Springs; I've been to C - Springs to take photos of the various
 > different placards put up at Tesla's work site, and all over
 > Colorado, so believe me, it's a bit of a drive up to Cripple Creek.
 >
 > Page 91 of "Tesla" has an interesting photograph. There are three
 > brightly glowing light bulbs between two volt?meters in an otherwise
 > unremarkable weedy field with some snow. Two visible wires lead off
 > to the right and left, laid on the ground. I'll type in what it says
verbatim.
 >
 >      "Caption in Century Magazine, June 1900, reads: "The photograph
 > shows three ordinary incandescent lamps lighted to full candle-power
 > by currents induced in a local loop consisting of a single wire
 > forming a square of fifty feet each side, which includes the lamps,
 > and which is at a distance of one hundred feet from the primary
 > circuit energized by the oscillator."
 >
 >      What I wanted to point your attention to is the square geometry
 > of the antenna and its dimensions.
 >
 >      I am not a antenna theory expert. But does this working example
 > tell you anything that is useful?
 >
 >      -- thanks,
 >
 >      Dave Small
 >
 >
 >
 >
 >
 >
 >
 > ----------
 > See what's free at <http://www.aol.com?ncid=AOLAOF00020000000503>AOL.com.
 >
 >
 >
 >
 > --
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7:39 AM
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 >