⚡️💡Under the transmission line experiments.

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Lighting fluorescent tubes under power line, and some sparks.

Пікірлер: 203

  • @artcollier1949
    @artcollier19496 ай бұрын

    We used florescent light tubes to peak tune the final radio frequency output tube on a commercial AM radio station back in the 1980s. The brighter the flash, the more signal was being delivered to our antenna.

  • @user-pj9cb4oy4r

    @user-pj9cb4oy4r

    6 ай бұрын

    We had a floursecent tube at the top of our transmitter tower 40 meters high at the boys scouts when a jota jamboree on the air was held to warm us not to climb the tower... We where only allowed to sit in a net several meters above ground in the tower made of wooden beams... The warning was quite visible contact even with Australia from the Netherlands under the right atmosphere conditions.. professional radia ham people who for once could go all out in power since at jota time no limits seemed to be there as long as you knew what you where doing...

  • @fb6performance271

    @fb6performance271

    5 ай бұрын

    We did that in the 80's when us teens all had cb radios in our cars...the guys who had "boosted" radios could light them up pretty bright by the antenna on the trunk

  • @RRaider
    @RRaider6 ай бұрын

    Back in the 80's we ran a permanent electric fence around a large farm I was working for. Part of that fence ran under some large power lines coming from a power plant and once that fence was insulated it was hot without being connected to a charger.

  • @chadweddingfeld

    @chadweddingfeld

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm guessing you mean insulated at every post going into the ground, so the current wouldn't be sent to the ground at every post.

  • @RRaider

    @RRaider

    5 ай бұрын

    @@chadweddingfeld Yes, electric fences are by definition insulated at each post. In this case they were fiberglass posts 5 ft high with 6 strands of wire as opposed to more common "temporary" electric fences that are 2-3ft high with steel posts, plastic insulators and one or two wires.

  • @thalesofmiletus2966
    @thalesofmiletus29666 ай бұрын

    When I was in the Navy back in the 70’s we used to strap fluorescent tubes near high powered radio sets when tuning up. The flickering lamp was a good indication we were transmitting. Also I rembet bring on a ship within 10 miles if a very high powered VLF transmitter and all the fluorescent lamps that were off would flash on and off.

  • @user-hp6sr8fe2n

    @user-hp6sr8fe2n

    4 ай бұрын

    Have a LED shop light light that never dims, think that might be the reason.

  • @jamesmarks8099
    @jamesmarks80996 ай бұрын

    I want to clarify somethi g i see in a lot of the comments. Its not power that is just seeping away lost forever. When you introduce an inductive circuit next to another it creates a back emf and actually opposes the flow of current in the power line, thereby causing resistance and effectively taking power. Without the light bulb in place, the emf from the power line has no opposition and therefore doesnt see a resistance on the line.

  • @Ooo-vz3jd

    @Ooo-vz3jd

    6 ай бұрын

    EVERY ferrous object within range of the magnetic lines of flux creates an inductive load...EVERY ferrous object! Shed, fence, windmill, automobiles, are just a few. Not to mention if any of those objects are touching ground the object magnetized is discharging continuously to ground. I demonstrated this to my students on numerous occasions using a compass near high current load. The needle...pointed the load field. After a few moments the only ferrous part of the compass (which allows one end of the needle to point North) effectively became magnetized. The needle then pointed South, and remained this way for a few days.

  • @Benpriebe314

    @Benpriebe314

    6 ай бұрын

    Very interesting I was just about to ask the same thing. Would diamagnetic metals exhibit any load on the system? Say silver, it conducts electricity so supposedly the field would have some interaction with it no? I want to better understand relationship between induction and magnetism/circutry

  • @Ooo-vz3jd

    @Ooo-vz3jd

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Benpriebe314 silver is non-ferrous along with several other metals so they offer no inductive impededence to current flow.

  • @Ooo-vz3jd

    @Ooo-vz3jd

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Benpriebe314 current flow is the electrons moving along the conductor, outer shell of the atom to outer shell of another atom. Copper for example has one electron in it's outer shell, a good conductor, because it can move easily. Resistance is the materials opposition to that current flow. Inductance is the opposition to current flow as a result of impact on that magnetic field generated around that conductor during current flow. AC, the magnetic field collapses and expands each time the current changes direction. That impedes the change in direction of the electrons in the conductor. When ferrous material is near enough to the magnetic field, that metal becomes magnetized itself, generating it's own lines of Flux, magnetic field. This creates an added impedence to the current flow, making it harder to collapse the magnetic field each time electrons change direction. Analogy I used in class was an automobile. I start pushing it one way, voltage after a moment the car starts moving, electrons. Since our power here is 60hertz, the current changes direction 120 times a second. When I stop pushing, I run around and push from the opposite direction. Which way is the car still moving? After a moment, the car stops and starts moving the opposite direction. Resistance and inductance affects how fast the change in electron flow occurs. The lag in the change can be referred to as power factor. Another discussion, so much for the electrical theory rambling.

  • @rcdieselrc

    @rcdieselrc

    5 ай бұрын

    And lenzes law

  • @mikeh2520
    @mikeh25206 ай бұрын

    I'd parked my car under some very high voltage transmission lines in California right where the lines sagged. It was next to a creek running from a hot spring. I had gotten out of the water and sat on a small aluminum beach chair in the dirt next to my car. I touched my car and felt a pretty good voltage. Definitely made me pull back. It would have been interesting to measure the voltage with a meter but I didn't have one. The car was acting as part of a capacitor coupling through the air. There was a radio station in Hampton Virginia the early 80's called WPEX that put up fluorescent tubes on the tower so that it spelled out "X 15". It looked cool at night from Rt. 64. with the bulbs lit up from the RF of the antenna.

  • @dallasdorrington7449
    @dallasdorrington74494 ай бұрын

    Did this experiment myself when I was a kid. I found that using telephone wire wound around the tube caused it to glow very brightly. Understanding the physics behind why they did that took me many years to learn. It is the electro-magnetic field that was causing this effect. Another experiment is a fluorescent tube taped to a CB or ham radio antenna and transmitting on the radio. The tube would glow faintly and glow bright when whistling into the mike. In this case it was Radio Frequency (RF) a different form of EMF causing the particles in the tube to be excited and give off photons.

  • @flyingsodwai1382
    @flyingsodwai13825 ай бұрын

    Awesome. I've been wanting to do that for about 30 years now. Thanks!

  • @honkie247
    @honkie2472 ай бұрын

    I remember riding my dirt bike under the transmissions lines in a dry summer and feeling the hair on the back of my neck raise up.

  • @kmilton1593
    @kmilton15935 ай бұрын

    Great stories from the commenters and electricians. Hope you keep up your experiments.

  • @christopherleubner6633
    @christopherleubner66336 ай бұрын

    3 ways to grab power leakage. Capacitive, just a long plate of copper insulated from ground, inductive, a bunch of rebar or similar wrapped with copper wire, or ion capture, an array of insulated spikes. The first gives the highest voltage. The second gives the most current. The third is highly dependant on weather.

  • @chadweddingfeld

    @chadweddingfeld

    5 ай бұрын

    so in the next video after this, with his coax cable fence experiment, that would be capacitive. I hope he will try one to demonstrate inductive. This is very interesting!

  • @PlanetRockJesus
    @PlanetRockJesus6 ай бұрын

    Thirty years ago I drove a clean garbage truck picking up recyclable cardboard. I was loading cardboard into my truck from a dumpster, which was positioned under large electrical wires. I mean LARGE. As I was doing this, my upper arm touched the dumpster, and I received a mild continuous shock. I can't imagine what that might do to people who actually live in houses situated under those wires.

  • @UQRXD
    @UQRXD6 ай бұрын

    We did it as kids with 8 foot tubes. They really lit up on high humidity days.

  • @johnathanlivingstonseagull5524
    @johnathanlivingstonseagull55246 ай бұрын

    Very interesting experiments. I'm inspired to help find the next big bang! Thanks buddy

  • @rockcrusher4636
    @rockcrusher46366 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing, Merry X-mas and Happy New Year. Cheers.

  • @doubleMinnovations

    @doubleMinnovations

    6 ай бұрын

    Same to you rockcrusher4636!

  • @jeeper426
    @jeeper4266 ай бұрын

    a CB Radio properly tuned can illuminate a Fluorescent tube pretty well, i've done it and scared a friend of mine half to death with the demo, with a Linear amp the light was full brightness end to end and plenty of light to read by, and we did something similar when i was in Vo-Tech, we had some high-tension lines that ran across the campus, our instructor had a PVC Pipe with a fitting that was the right size to clip a Flouro tube into and hold it up in the air, with the other end going to the ground with just a tent stake on the end of it, it was i want to say a 10 or 12 foot chunk of Schedule 40 PVC and that tube lit up, not super bright, but bright enough you could see in the daylight, so it is doable, and its crazy what kind of power radiates as RF from things we use day-to-day, also i mentioned the CB Radio/base station with the Fluro tube, you can do the same thing by standing near an AM Transmitting station, or a SW station, that'll light a tube pretty good from not that far away (~100yds)

  • @BLKMGK4

    @BLKMGK4

    5 ай бұрын

    I used to run a small tube on my antenna with a linear "heater" and it lit easily although it screwed up my SWR. I did hear tell of a guy who had a far bigger amp who lit a McDonalds sign accidently - his alternator was apparently NOT happy about the current draw! I also had an issue with an intercom system at a bank keying up to talk to someone while in line in my car - the teller was NOT pleased at the noise on her end 😲

  • @longbowshooter5291
    @longbowshooter52915 ай бұрын

    Years ago I attended an electronics trade school, I remember the instructor pointing out the RF around power lines. He said you could actually take coils of wire and situate it under a power line, and you can/will produce electricity. You could even power your house just from what is being radiated into the air from the power line. BUT the electric company WOULD fine you for doing it, they consider it "stealing".

  • @rustyaxelrod
    @rustyaxelrod6 ай бұрын

    Really interesting, thanks for posting 👍

  • @jimallmondsr3467
    @jimallmondsr34675 ай бұрын

    I might suggest, as a test, is to see how many meters of "fence" cable it takes to sufficiently test your lamps brightness,instead of the aluminum antenna.(10, 20, 30 meters) Also there are two contact points on each end of the lamps. Did you use antenna and ground on the same end when you tested them? Would a capacitor keep the lamps from flickering? It sounds as if you can do several experiments if you want! It is a unique lab you have!

  • @dannmann17
    @dannmann176 ай бұрын

    I love your microwave shelf👍🏻🇺🇸

  • @dp.2766
    @dp.27663 ай бұрын

    I remember seeing a tv reporter hold up a tube in each hand under a large set of power lines in daylight and you could see them glowing. That was in the ‘80s.

  • @wientzer

    @wientzer

    18 күн бұрын

    I was just telling my wife, I saw the exact same thing...

  • @dp.2766

    @dp.2766

    17 күн бұрын

    @@wientzer so I guess we do remember the ‘80s in spite of all the bad things that we did back then huh? 😂👍

  • @rfiskillingussoftly6568
    @rfiskillingussoftly65686 ай бұрын

    You could probably do the same thing anywhere to be honest....if not with the same set up...with a slightly higher antenna! Great video man!

  • @randenerickson2743
    @randenerickson27436 ай бұрын

    Subscribed & liked. Please be careful. Thank you!

  • @josephhettiger2711
    @josephhettiger27116 ай бұрын

    My former work I worked at for 20 years had high voltage lines running down the main street in front of the business and I always heard them buzzing when it was wet or icy out

  • @loyddussaultsr4181
    @loyddussaultsr41816 ай бұрын

    Run a long insulated wire a few feet off the ground and parallel to the power lines to act as the generator antenna and connect the wire to one end of the fluorescent tube and the ground wire to the other end of the tube. I think you will have the potential to get more induction with a horizontal antenna than a vertical one. You could try this set up with your rectifier circuit and check out the DC output. I would think that the length of the antenna will affect the amount of electricity inducted into the wire and that a longer antenna has more output potential than a short one and that horizontal orientation would be better than vertical. I could be out in left field on my suggestions, it's Just a thought

  • @earthssecretenergy2371

    @earthssecretenergy2371

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes i do agree

  • @amooser5839

    @amooser5839

    5 ай бұрын

    Try a 1\4 wavelength wire antenna stretched out under the transmission line. :-D

  • @richardcallihan9746

    @richardcallihan9746

    5 ай бұрын

    That would still be a very long wire @ 60 hertz's@@amooser5839

  • @restorator7
    @restorator75 ай бұрын

    My father had a horse farm with electric fences running under 250K voltage lines. The fence charger would burn out if we tried to hook one up. The induced voltage from the powerlines was enough to function as a stigmatizing deterrent but you could tell that it had higher joules. The current took the better part of a minute to build back up after you touched it. What I did for an experiment was to lower the volts with a transformer, because it was alternating current after all. What I wish I had progressed to was the use of a diode rectifier like you have there. Then, one of those variable-input buck transformers that takes in 50 to 13 volts DC and puts out a consistent 12 volts DC. Then, I could have had one of those 12-volt supercapacitor banks like some KZreadrs have used in place of a car battery. Then you have some nice standby power and can charge a battery also. What is interesting about this technical challenge is that if the Earth's magnetic field goes away for 3,000 years like it is said to be able to do, then solar and cosmic electromagnetism will do this to the entire sky. It would be an "EMP disaster," but the effect would be more sustained and consistent. Therefore, any suspended wire would become a free energy collector and flourescent tubes would become the light bulbs of choice. The electrical system would have to be re-tooled, obviously.

  • @chadweddingfeld

    @chadweddingfeld

    5 ай бұрын

    Perhaps that is how the grid systems worked before, and at some point "they" created the magnetic field we see today. Could some massive hidden geothermal power plants placed at key points across the earth generate our current magnetic field? IF this was done in theory, it may explain the star fort setups we see across the world, the domes and cathedrals we see across the world everywhere that could have been actually power plants harvesting energy from the air before the change in the magnetic field. I know that sounds insane, but the more u look into it, the more you wonder

  • @MrCorbin2618

    @MrCorbin2618

    4 ай бұрын

    @@chadweddingfeld sounds insane because it is

  • @markaz2kk
    @markaz2kk6 ай бұрын

    Great video! Make a rectifier to a usb 12v charger with a readout of current draw. Please make disclosure of your videos of explaining the hazards of Electrocution etc.

  • @WillN2Go1
    @WillN2Go16 ай бұрын

    After I sea kayaked off Alamitos Bay in Southern California I often went shopping at the Hawthorne Costco. Right behind the store are some high tension wires. I'd just wear my rubber wet suit, and rubber water shoes. I was a little damp, but not dripping. Pushing the shopping cart around the store about once every minute I get a real zap from the cart. A bit more than static electricity, but not dangerous.

  • @carlfoltz4244
    @carlfoltz42445 ай бұрын

    I used to park my Astro van underneath a 500 kV line at work. On damp days, when I reached for the door handle, I could feel a voltage from the handle through my boots. The roof of the van was a sizable capacitor plate insulated from ground. I often thought about connecting a multi meter to the handle and ground to see what the voltage was, but I never did.

  • @tonyowen_seagull_guy
    @tonyowen_seagull_guy6 ай бұрын

    Higher voltage power lines than these thread through our housing complexes and NOW I see why some of our neighbours complain about head aches!

  • @Laurel-Crowned
    @Laurel-CrownedАй бұрын

    If these things weren't so expensive and didn't burn out so fast I would line my whole place across the power lines 😂

  • @marksr49341
    @marksr493416 ай бұрын

    On a wet misty day if you walk under those lines you can feel your skin crawl.

  • @steveparker8723
    @steveparker87236 ай бұрын

    I remember an article in National Geographic maybe from the late 70s. There was a picture of a man holding a fluorescent tube up under high power lines and it was lit up.

  • @coreybabcock2023
    @coreybabcock20236 ай бұрын

    My Uncle JC told me about this way back in the Early 90s !

  • @analog_guy
    @analog_guy6 ай бұрын

    Merely carrying around a fluorescent tube inside a darkened house when the humidity is low, such as during cold weather, will produce visible flashes of light due to small electrical discharges you don't even feel.

  • @wjstewdog
    @wjstewdog5 ай бұрын

    That is fascinating and scary as I live near high voltage lines

  • @barstow611
    @barstow6116 ай бұрын

    You could make light sabers! And fight with your grandkid.

  • @kengrieve5374
    @kengrieve53745 ай бұрын

    ...good that you brought awareness of the size of the flux that is around these transmission lines, you wouldn't want to be in a building 24/7 anywhere near these high voltage lines. Having that powerfull amount of magnetic field permeating your body all day long is something i would avoid which is why i refused getting a linemans ticket and just stayed with the electrician endorsement.

  • @zymmer4
    @zymmer45 ай бұрын

    in 1969..in North Thailand..I worked near the CommSEC radar domes..We could carry 4 foot florescent bulbs within 500 yards of the domes and they would light up brightly..I wonder what working there 12 hours a day did to my health?

  • @garyradtke3252
    @garyradtke32523 ай бұрын

    I never say it but years ago when the Coast Guard maintained the LORAN transmitters it was said that a florescent tube would light standing at the tower.

  • @lucasdog1
    @lucasdog12 ай бұрын

    I knew of a guy that used florescent lighting in all but the bedrooms of the house. He lived very close to an AM radio station. He used his TV antenna tower for the pickup point. It was very strange to see glowing tubes simply taped to the ceiling.

  • @doubleMinnovations

    @doubleMinnovations

    2 ай бұрын

    I believe that! Thanks for the story.

  • @confuseatronica
    @confuseatronica6 ай бұрын

    I stopped under some very large ones that led to Los Angeles, and you could get about 1/2 inch of spark to jump between your fingers and the car body. It was also loud enough to hear the sound from the spark, even next to a busy road. It was strong enough that I worried about having electronics out of the car.

  • @doubleMinnovations

    @doubleMinnovations

    5 ай бұрын

    Interesting!

  • @LeverPhile

    @LeverPhile

    5 ай бұрын

    Was this in the afternoon during a heatwave by any chance? With the whole LA Basin running air conditioning, I would think power flows would be at near maximum levels.

  • @caryreed1563
    @caryreed15636 ай бұрын

    Great video! What about the coil receiver from an inductive tea kettle and then running a LED strip light

  • @geraldmansfield2631
    @geraldmansfield26315 ай бұрын

    Lots of fun.

  • @The_Fat_Controller.
    @The_Fat_Controller.15 күн бұрын

    I have a friend who, while in the Navy, had an acquaintance who claimed that he and some of his friends would take fluorescent tubes to high voltage power lines and launch the tubes up at the power lines at their lowest points between the transmission towers. This man claimed to my friend that the fluorescent tubes would light up very brightly as they came very close to the wires. The man also claimed that if the fluorescent tubes actually contacted the wires, the tubes would spin around the wires for a few seconds and then explode from the high voltage. My friend and I have serious doubts about the veracity of this person's claims, but have both wondered what would happen if you did do what this man claimed and flung fluorescent tubes at high voltage wires. Neither of us are actually willing to put this to the test.

  • @zilog357
    @zilog3574 күн бұрын

    If I were living there, I would make a huge coil with thick wire (maybe AWG 00) and make it resonant to 60Hz. If I could, I would attach some kind of iron core for better performance, though it must be taken into account for the resonance calculation of the coil. The thing would be placed above ground (maybe in a large wooden table) and be put directly under the power lines at their lower altitude in the property. Even when it would be a pricy setup because of the wire, I would have "free" energy, or better said, "pirated" energy as long as transmission lines are energized. In this case, as if it was a transformer, the higher the load in the lines (users in the city with many appliances turned on), the higher the current induced in my coil as a secondary. Since this gives no control over voltage, I would rectify it and regulate it to charge batteries for an inverter.

  • @jamesspash5561
    @jamesspash55616 ай бұрын

    I work for a power utility and work with high voltages. Lines and substations. Those weird looking places that look like space ports. There is a reason we build fences around them and put up those danger signs. Please be cautious, these lines and installations transfer and control extreme amounts of energy. Be very cautious around facilities high voltage or any voltage if your not fully knowledgably and trained.

  • @dond668

    @dond668

    6 ай бұрын

    I’m amazed by substations. Over time I’ve figured out the switches… Just seeing how the lines attach to the insulators on the poles is amazing. I figure most are completely clueless to all the hardware required to power that TV.

  • @MrClipper500
    @MrClipper5006 ай бұрын

    When I was but a lad of nineteen I use to hang around a friend that lived on a farm (yeah, he had a cute sister) where a sixteen line high voltage power line on really high metal poles that ran through the property. My friends father use to plant potatoes under that power line and often when he ran his tractor to plow before planting the hair on the back of his head use to stand up. My friend and I assumed it was the magnetic field from the overhead wires. We had a big coil of magnet wire connected to an analog meter and when we waived the wire the meter pointer jumped. Never thought of using a bridge rectifier. A guy up the street built a house under the power line where it crossed the road and his kitchen lights use to glow dimly without being turned on. He got the Cancer at a very young age so the magnetic fields probably did not do him any good. Based on this we had some floresent tubes and when in the potato field, when we raised them in the air they brightly lit. Wish I kept those pictures.

  • @youtopia2000

    @youtopia2000

    5 ай бұрын

    I would like to have done some experiments with those potatoes!

  • @mmi6280
    @mmi62806 ай бұрын

    The 230Kv is the phase to phase most likely. Phase to Ground is approx. 132Kv .

  • @buensomeritano1755
    @buensomeritano17556 ай бұрын

    Set up a circuit with a step down transformer and see if you can raise the amps to something useful.

  • @Eduardo_Espinoza
    @Eduardo_Espinoza6 ай бұрын

    that is one big electric sniffer :)

  • @shartne
    @shartne5 ай бұрын

    wow cool.

  • @mikekeller491
    @mikekeller4915 ай бұрын

    You should do an experiment set those up in your yard during a thunderstorm and see which ones light up just before lightning. I wonder what kind of experiment that would pan out to? I would love to see the results.

  • @patrickzavas
    @patrickzavas5 ай бұрын

    It might also be interesting to set up and antenna or your long fence line whatever and hook it up to an oscilloscope and an amp rope. It would be kind of cool to monitor the voltage, frequencies, amperage at different times of the day.

  • @JKent-ry9yg
    @JKent-ry9yg5 ай бұрын

    High volt lines in Brownfield Texas with maybe 15 houses underneath it. Lines like yours between Seagraves and Wellman Texas with about 10 houses under neath it.

  • @bdobson1616
    @bdobson16166 ай бұрын

    In a Navy we used to tape for us and bulbs on broomsticks and stick them in front of our microwave illuminator you can see where the beam is lights up that area The rest is not lit

  • @ocsrc
    @ocsrc6 ай бұрын

    It works a lot better in the late summer on a hot humid night when you hear the loud crackling of the lines

  • @barryfoster453
    @barryfoster4534 ай бұрын

    I did this back in 1983 in England. Not only did it glow, the roof of my car started to 'tingly' vibrate. It's called 'electrovibration' and is caused by it not being grounded. I didn't hang around.

  • @jeffreyfales7343
    @jeffreyfales73436 ай бұрын

    Remember going to a L RAN station and the guys would take a Florencent tube light and hold it next to a power line in some kind of pipe and it would light up so bright.

  • @pb223
    @pb2235 ай бұрын

    Are they really flashing or is that a effect caused by the camera? Veryyyy interesting content 😊 thank you

  • @THELASTLINEOFDEFENCE
    @THELASTLINEOFDEFENCE5 ай бұрын

    ❤️ya stove, fire place.

  • @kevinroberts781
    @kevinroberts7816 ай бұрын

    Can you use the fence wire as the antenna?

  • @notwocdivad
    @notwocdivad5 ай бұрын

    We must remember in normal use a tube has a "Starter" unit without which it will not light properly! Not being an electrician I don't know but maybe there is a way to wire one in to your experiments and see what happens? Very interesting!!

  • @sircampbell1249
    @sircampbell12496 ай бұрын

    Old house on Park Ave, we have transmission line out front door feeding Greeley Colorado area...

  • @davidblake398
    @davidblake3985 ай бұрын

    Put some compisters on the bottom of that tube if the comp charges it should give it enough to power the tube.wireless powered light right?

  • @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958
    @ninehundreddollarluxuryyac59586 ай бұрын

    Your experiments with the power lines are really interesting. There are tiny neon panel lights that run at high voltage and need very little power. Can you make an illuminated fence? How close together along the fence can you put the neons and still have them light?

  • @Mrbfgray

    @Mrbfgray

    6 ай бұрын

    As a kid I had florescent desk light that I'd occasionally remove tube and play with in total darkness, it would glow between my hands. (no big power lines around)

  • @SpaceLord2025
    @SpaceLord20255 ай бұрын

    look how much power leaks out of those wires jesus!!!

  • @63mrl
    @63mrl4 ай бұрын

    What would wrapping a wire in a spaced coil pattern do?

  • @Laurel-Crowned
    @Laurel-CrownedАй бұрын

    I just had a thought! What if you build a large transformer and put underneath! Kinda like how the ac to DC transformers work

  • @travisfisher594
    @travisfisher5946 ай бұрын

    👍🏻👊🏻⚡️

  • @DangerClose13E
    @DangerClose13E5 ай бұрын

    Nickola Tesla would be proud.

  • @markevanko1477
    @markevanko14775 ай бұрын

    How about taking a multi meter out with you next time so that you can actually measure voltage and/or amperage between your ground and your antenna. This would give an idea about how usable or storable the field created by the H/T wires actually is in different conditions.

  • @dangerdavefreestyle
    @dangerdavefreestyle5 ай бұрын

    if you are illuminating a fluorescent bulb at all in that situation it is wireless power. tesla did that in front of some spectators apparently way bright from 10 ft away, but he figured out other things involved in its operation and use of components in a very specific manner that is a mystery to us.

  • @mikeadler434
    @mikeadler4346 ай бұрын

    👍👍

  • @TomPauls007
    @TomPauls0076 ай бұрын

    on a larger scale, the sun's high radiation energy hits earth (like the energy from the transmission lines) and lights up our magnetic forces (auroras). When they are powerful enough, the sun's energy hits long power lines and they, in turn, generate serious power surges. Fun stuff, that invisible force.

  • @patrickzavas
    @patrickzavas5 ай бұрын

    It would be cool to set a string of LEDs along the length of the power line. I'm not sure exactly what would be the best way to wire it... You might be able to visually observe the grids power consumption based on the brightness of the LEDs

  • @imontime77
    @imontime775 ай бұрын

    Try this. Leave your ground rod in and them put another one 90 degs from it about 100 yards away. Measure the voltage between them. Its not much but it will run your driveway or sidewalk lights 24 hours a day.

  • @ralphwatten2426
    @ralphwatten24266 ай бұрын

    The flashing of the tube looks like the ones in my garage when the garage is cold.

  • @richardcallihan9746

    @richardcallihan9746

    5 ай бұрын

    Bad ballast. Convert to led

  • @bindardondat5292
    @bindardondat52925 ай бұрын

    What is this transient power doing to your body?

  • @jimalcott760
    @jimalcott7606 ай бұрын

    On the police department, i would hold a 4 foot tube over the cruiser and when i keyed the radio mike the tube would light up. There were no connections to the cruiser, antenna nor anything except my bare hand. Distance was about a foot above the roof.

  • @alparkopp
    @alparkopp6 ай бұрын

    Connect a battery on the filaments.Heat will make the electrons faster.Also theHg will evaporate and make gas conducting better inside the tube

  • @mustamuri
    @mustamuri5 ай бұрын

    ⚡💡⚡ 👶👏💛

  • @jamesspash5561
    @jamesspash55616 ай бұрын

    The sizzling is corona effect. The air acts as an insulator between the lines and the ground {earth}. With moisture added and temperature effect the insulating effect of the air is reduced close to the conductor (wire). The noise you hear is the ionizing of the air. The air molecules are being polarized and beginning to conduct electrons dissipating energy into the surrounding air. How a radio/television transmitter works.

  • @jamesbutler5570
    @jamesbutler55706 ай бұрын

    Works best under a 100 kw FM tower. Tested in switzerland

  • @drwhoeric
    @drwhoeric5 ай бұрын

    It would be interesting to try LED lighting as the amount of current required to fire them is even less than Fluorescent Lighting.

  • @richardcallihan9746

    @richardcallihan9746

    5 ай бұрын

    The evacuated tube is the berry

  • @paulhare662
    @paulhare6626 ай бұрын

    1990s police radio antennas on cop cars would light them when the mic was keyed.

  • @carlfoltz4244
    @carlfoltz42445 ай бұрын

    The sizzling is corona discharge. The 230 kV is enough to pull air molecules apart and they become ions. And ions can provide a conductive path and bleed a little bit of power off of the 230 kV lines. Th power company works hard to remove sharp points and edges on their insulator connections (reducing 1/r^2) to reduce corona as much as possible. The moisture in the air or frost increases the small constant loss, and produces the sounds you hear.

  • @markkinsler4333

    @markkinsler4333

    5 ай бұрын

    The corona also eats metal parts nearby.

  • @racebiketuner
    @racebiketuner6 ай бұрын

    I'm wondering how much more illumination you'd get by taping it to a 20 foot piece of thin wall tubing and positioning it as close to the power line as possible.

  • @randywl8925

    @randywl8925

    5 ай бұрын

    No ...................just, no.

  • @randywl8925

    @randywl8925

    5 ай бұрын

    Depending on the voltage in the lines, a safe distance is 10 to 45 feet. If you get too close it will arc. When it does...... you won't feel a thing and they might not recognize your smoldering body. Pretty dangerous stuff.

  • @raydewley9796
    @raydewley97965 ай бұрын

    The florescent bulbs might light better in warmer weather such as 70 degrees ir so as they dont like to light when cold. You might notice this ehen replacing bulbs that were stored in a cool area.

  • @doubleMinnovations

    @doubleMinnovations

    5 ай бұрын

    Later, I was thinking the same thing. Won't be getting 70˚ temps for many months yet...

  • @hinspect
    @hinspect5 ай бұрын

    Nikola Tesla was no Dummy! ⚡

  • @IesKorpershoek
    @IesKorpershoek6 ай бұрын

    You should create a coil 3 feet in diameter and a couple of windings.

  • @markkinsler4333
    @markkinsler43335 ай бұрын

    The e/m field is highest at some horizontal distance from the outer wires: about the same distance as the power line height.

  • @user-qt7kh2sl3d
    @user-qt7kh2sl3d6 ай бұрын

    Can you hook up your home solar power battery's to it.

  • @jrevan
    @jrevan6 ай бұрын

    I’ve heard of stories of people who live real close to power lines getting all types of cancers.

  • @bindardondat5292
    @bindardondat52925 ай бұрын

    There should be enough transient power from these transmission lines to recharge every electric vehicle in America

  • @arasethw
    @arasethw6 ай бұрын

    You should consider any magnetic flux past that 62 foot easement line Yours ! And if they say anything! Bring suite against the power companies for, dangerous trespass on your property !

  • @drunkwoodswyllia4885
    @drunkwoodswyllia48855 ай бұрын

    This is some witchcraft!

  • @user-hq4jz6lc9d
    @user-hq4jz6lc9d5 ай бұрын

    Does anyone know if these transmission lines will mess with metal detectors? Asking for a friend.

  • @TheHomeonbay
    @TheHomeonbay6 ай бұрын

    try a capacitive "hat" ie a flat plate for coupling

  • @novaspence6
    @novaspence66 ай бұрын

    It would have probably worked better in summer. They don't like to work in the cold.

  • @daccrowell4776
    @daccrowell47766 ай бұрын

    Ok...for one thing, that transmission line isn't on the magnitude of a real HV line. Circuits like the one in the clip supply smaller loads to step-downs for smaller distribution areas. If you want to see the effect you're aiming for, the power line has got to be one of those spicy 765 kV ones. That's where you see those dramatic pics being taken. One other note...about that "antenna", you need to never use that, period! Consider what you're proposing doing: holding up a conductor under a transmission line that has to be up that high in a CLEARED path is potentially suicidal. You're providing a closer path to ground...and if you do this when the lines are making those sizzling noises, there's a very REAL possibility that all that will be left of you is a smoking pair of shoes and a big, greasy soot-mark. DO NOT EVER DO THIS!

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