Wireless Power Transmission is Here

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 มิ.ย. 2022
  • Modern researchers try to bring to life the idea of a scientist who lived more than a hundred years ago. We are talking about Nikola Tesla. In 1891, the inventor developed the Tesla coil, a resonant transformer that transmits electricity without wires, but only over short distances.
    Due to its limited capacity, it was not used. However, the scientist was not going to give up and created a project for a power plant that could cope with high-voltage wireless power transmission. Tesla tried to use it to transmit messages wirelessly over long distances. Unfortunately, the JP Morgan investor refused to provide additional funds for the tests, and, in 1906, the project was canceled and closed. Tesla’s dream was to place huge towers around the world that could transmit power wirelessly to any place, powering houses, enterprises, industrial facilities, and even giant electric ships in the ocean. Tesla died, unable to fully realize his idea of wireless electricity, but his followers continued the work of an outstanding scientist. In 1964, microwave electronics expert William C. Brown, first tested a helicopter model capable of receiving and using microwave beam energy as the direct current through an antenna array consisting of half-wave dipoles with highly efficient Schottky diodes.
    #inventions #technology #tesla
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ความคิดเห็น • 400

  • @davekolp4552

    It's been here since Tesla discovered it! The big corporations could not let it be because they did not figure out a way to charge money for it.

  • @chaorrottai

    the trick is that we do wireles power based on electromagnetic radiation propogating out from the transmitter as a radio bubble, tesla coils aren't transmitting power like that, they aren't using induction, they are using resonance coupling to turn the ground into the neutral and the air into the hot wire.

  • @ravindrabhanage360
    @ravindrabhanage360 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Excellent, thanks for detailed video 🙏

  • @rock_ok

    all of these came from 1 person tesla. and he died alone because of competition. and now we just use it. i hope people would honor him, that he was the one who made everything possible today

  • @geofferyromany4634
    @geofferyromany4634 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    No matter if this future tech is an application of tesla's devices, the concept came from him. He was a visionary. This is the future of electricity transmissions. Safety is paramount. More research needed on safety.

  • @kvanckurt1343
    @kvanckurt1343 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great research, great video.

  • @TheYuleTube

    "Short distances" apparently means "an entire town". He had functional electricity for his entire town off this technology.

  • @genehasenbuhler2594

    It's ALWAYS been here, your just now figuring out what the ancients knew long ago!

  • @geofferyromany4634
    @geofferyromany4634 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    I can see the adaption for the developing world. Power stations transmit to substations and then on individual poles to the 3 phase transformers. The only difference is that there are no wires running overhead nor underground. After an earthquake or hurricane or snowstorm or tsunami electricoty can be restored very quickly.

  • @scotty3114

    This process is NOT lossless! We would waste way more energy than we used. The second law of thermodynamics is in play and they are ignoring it.

  • @vkaitakirwa

    Tesla worked for all humanity.Scientists today work for money. The more they can squeeze out of us the better.

  • @thornescapes7707
    @thornescapes7707 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    "Has to convince people that radiation will not harm them." Far too many people think that all radiation is the same. This is common, but bizarre considering that visible light is also radiation.

  • @anasqai
    @anasqai ปีที่แล้ว

    What is the distance if shaped like that? It is like a cut wire and copper then wrapped(/cased) aluminium? If wifi to have that shape plugged in or antenna of extender replacing(modify) into that shape(because just like a rod)?

  • @braaitongs

    NT did not intend to send the power through the air but the earth. As it is a colossal reservoir of power. Also sending power using transverse electromagnetic waves will never really catch on. It is too lossy . Longitudinal dielectric rarefactions is what needs to be used.

  • @Mikexception

    82% efficiency means we lost 18% of 30 kW = 5,4 kW. it means 60W bulb used about 4 days 24 hours or 24 days using 4 hours . How about living specie comes to such area? How will drivers fell sitting on big power coils emitting fields? What about induced currents in all metals? Just curious.

  • @jamilaad5387

    How much DANGEROUS is this?

  • @apollolee1313

    What a Utopia it could have been if greed didn't get in the way

  • @LoporianIndustries
    @LoporianIndustries ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Microwave Transmitters for Wireless Electricity. I have to ask. Isn't that a Cancer risk? My Dad got Brain Cancer working with Waveguide Technology.

  • @jamesSmith-im5jo

    Some of these responses remind me of the old adage that; “Some people have just enough knowledge to think they are right, but not enough to know when they’re wrong.”

  • @theevilben666

    I wonder if I can adapt this to work with a hub battery on a wheel. Passing electricity to the main battery through magnetic transferring