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Re: knock on the door
Original poster: robert heidlebaugh <rheidlebaugh-at-desertgate-dot-com>
In California you can get a visit within 30 minits I was,
Robert H
--
> From: "Tesla list" <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> Date: Sat, 22 May 2004 16:45:35 -0600
> To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Subject: knock on the door
> Resent-From: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Resent-Date: Sat, 22 May 2004 17:18:48 -0600
>
> Original poster: "Gary Weaver" <gary350-at-earthlink-dot-net>
>
>
> I don't think anyone will ever have to worry about a knock on the door from
> the FEDS. There was a guy in the neighbor hood with a armature radio
> station that over powered ever TV in the neighbor hood. The guy talked on
> his radio non stop. He was on the radio by 6am every morning and when I
> got home from work at 3:40pm the guy was still on the radio and at 10:30pm
> when I went to bed the guy was still on the radio. The TV picked up the
> guy talking with a blizzard of static on all TV stations. It was
> impossible to watch TV. I switched to cable TV thinking it would help but
> his signal still over powered my TV. I put the TV in a grounded metal box
> and it helped. One by one the neighbors complained and ask the guy to cut
> it out. The guy said he has a license and is doing nothing illegal so buzz
> off. The neighbor hood called a meeting and I was elected to check into
> this to see what could be done. I called the FCC and they mailed me some
> forms to fill out. Several pages of forms. The forms ask for the guys
> transmitter manufacture name, manufacture model number, serial number,
> power output, frequency, his antenna model, type and serial number. The
> FCC wants the mans name, address, social security number, license number,
> date of birth, etc. And to top it off they wanted to know the guys FCC
> license number. The only way to get that information is to knock on the
> guys door and ask or break in to the guys house when he is not home and
> look for myself. I don't think so!!! I called the FCC and was told the
> FCC is strapped for funds and will no longer investigate on its own all the
> leg work must be done by the person filing the complaint. I reported my
> findings to the neighbor hood committee and a few days later someone
> attached a log chain to the guys antenna in the middle of the night and
> pulled it about 2 blocks down the street and left the twisted wreckage in
> the middle of the street. The guy was off the air for about 2 weeks and
> back on the air again for 1 day when his antenna was destroyed again. The
> guy finally moved a few miles out of town on a 5 acre lot where he has
> lived there now for over 15 years. He has his 5 acre lot covered with all
> sorts of antennas. Now everyone is happy and the FCC did absolutely
> nothing.
>
> Gary Weaver
> gary350-at-earthlink-dot-net
> Why Wait? Move to EarthLink.
>
>
>> [Original Message]
>> From: Tesla list <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
>> To: <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
>> Date: 5/21/2004 8:18:58 PM
>> Subject: Re: Tesla Coil RF interference 2
>>
>> Original poster: Ed Phillips <evp-at-pacbell-dot-net>
>>
>> "Original poster: "Gary Weaver" <gary350-at-earthlink-dot-net>
>>
>> Transmitters use to be Spark Gap type transmitters way back when. The
>> Titanic had a spark gap transmitter as I recall. I wonder if an LC
>> circuit
>> could be attached to a TC spark gap and transmit on a certain
>> frequency. I
>> just did some calculations and I get 900 MHZ with 1pf cap and 3 turns of
>> .018 dia. wire .125" OD .250" long. Wonder if a cell phone would pick
>> that
>> up. I might build an LC circuit on my TC for a certain radio frequency
>> and
>> see if it will transmit to a radio. I did a little research on spark
>> gap
>> transmitters it seems to be only a spark gap connected to an LC circuit
>> with an antenna. Simple technology.
>>
>>
>> Gary Weaver
>> gary350-at-earthlink-dot-net
>> Why Wait? Move to EarthLink."
>>
>> I'm reading my mail late so there have probably been lots of answers to
>> this by now. First of all, you do generate RF with a TC and, hooked to
>> a suitable antenna, could radiate a lot of power. Result would be lots
>> of radio interference and, probably, a knock on the door sooner or
>> later. Don't even think about it!
>>
>> As for the 900 MHz transmission, your proposed system wouldn't work. A
>> 6" long dipole, fed with voltage at the center and with a spark gap
>> across the connections, would generate very broad waves with a frequency
>> around 900 to 1000 MHz. Almost exactly what Hertz did in some of his
>> early experimentgs. The signal probably wouldn't be detectable in a
>> cell phone, which is specifically designed to reject such interference.
>>
>> I remember seeing a web page recently in which someone discussed
>> duplicating Hertz's experiments with modern equipment and a Google
>> search might find it. I have tried transmitting at about 300 MHz and
>> could generate a detectable signal to about 50 feet from the antenna.
>>
>> Ed
>>
>
>