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I love it. Fantastic demonstration. But I hope that you are working to determine, refine and publish the overall efficiency of such an application. I like to show off to my friends the fact that my TC can brightly illuminate a 48" fluorescent tube at 10' from the source. But in order to do that I am pulling 12 amps at 140 volts for the primary input. Its an incredible waste of energy to say the least. That being said, I am merely a hobbyist. I have zero formal training on the matter other than having a HAM license. I would really like to see the numbers regarding power output from the transmitting coil compared to the actual work being done in HP or some other quantifiable measurement by the receiving device. My two cents - Brandon Garretson On Sat, Aug 1, 2020 at 8:56 PM jimlux <jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 8/1/20 3:36 PM, David Thomson wrote: > > Is there any doubt that if someone had attempted to discuss this project > on > > this list before building the working model that they would have been > > moderated into silence? > > > Not at all - this would be a perfectly appropriate topic - where it > would get the side-eye from the moderators if you started to talk about > "powering the entire country" kinds of things. > > If you want to discuss power transmission using tesla coils in a > physics/engineering practical sense - how much power into your > transmitter, what voltages are practical, how would you build a > receiver, and those sorts of questions, I don't have a problem with it. > > _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla