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Re: tesla safety?



Original poster: "Alfred Erpel by way of Terry Fritz <twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>" <alfred-at-erpel-dot-com>

Larry,
 
    When this is running in your basement, you have the equivalent of a 1440
Watt heater adding heat to your basement (less losses radiated out). If it is a
small area, you would be able to feel this in a few minutes. To the "free
energy" crowd (me not included) it suggests the experiment of enclosing the
coil in a controlled volume and taking accurate measurements to determine
energy in versus energy out.
 
Regards,
 
Al Erpel
 
 
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: <mailto:tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>Tesla list 
> To: <mailto:tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>tesla-at-pupman-dot-com 
> Sent: March 26, 2002 9:51 AM 
> Subject: tesla safety?
>
> Original poster: "Laurence Davis by way of Terry Fritz
> <<mailto:twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>twftesla-at-qwest-dot-net>"
> <<mailto:meknar-at-hotmail-dot-com>meknar-at-hotmail-dot-com>
>
> I've noticed while running my coil, that even though its in a cool basement, 
> that the apparent ambient temperature seems to climb. 
> even after only running it for 5-10 minutes.
>
> coil: 4x 12kv/30ma nst, 26nf plate cap, static gap, approx 940turns 22awg on 
> 4.5" pvc. (25.5" wrapped length), tapped at turn 5 on pri. 
> inner radius of flat pri: 7.125" using 1/4" refrig tubing on 1/2" spacing.  
> static gap is made out of zinc fender washers on a 2x4 with some nuts to 
> adjust gap.  the fan i'm using doesn't seem to quench the gap much.
>
> is this an affect of a high dose of ozone? 
> i doubt i would be writing this if I had experienced 
> rf heating. (right?)
>
> thanks, 
> larry.
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