TESLA, Nikola (1856-1943),
electrical inventor.
Tesla was famous at the turn
of the century for inventing the alternating current system
still in use today. But his later inventions, documented in
some 30 U.S. patents between 1890 and 1921, have never been
utilized as Tesla intended despite their obvious potential
for advancing in fundamental ways the technology of modern
civilization. Among these lost inventions: the disk-turbine
rotary engine, the Tesla coil, electric energy magnifier,
high-frequency lighting systems, the magnifying transmitter,
wireless power, and the free-energy receiver. Born
Yugoslavia, 1856. Educated at the polytechnic school at Graz
and at University of Prague. Worked as telephone engineer in
Prague and Paris. Conceived new type of electric motor
having no commutator, as direct current. motors have, but
works on principle of rotating magnetic field produced by
poly phase alternating currents. Constructed prototype.
Found nobody interested in Europe. Emigrated to U.S. (1884).
Worked briefly and unhappily with Thomas Edison.
Established own lab and
obtained patents on poly phase motors, dynamos, transformers
for a complete alternating current power system. Formed
alliance with George Westinghouse, who bought poly phase
patents for $1 million plus royalty. With Westinghouse,
engaged in struggle against Edison to convince public of
efficiency and safety of AC over DC, and succeeded in
getting Alternating Current accepted as the electric power
system worldwide.
Also with Westinghouse,
lit the Chicago World's Fair, built Niagara Falls hydropower
plant, and installed AC - Alternating Current - systems at
Colorado silver mines, and other industries. By turn of the
century was lifted to celebrity status comparable to
Edison's as media promoted him along with the expanding
electric power industry. Experimenting independently in
Manhattan lab, developed and patented electric devices based
on superior capabilities of high-potential, high-frequency
currents: Tesla coil, radio, high-frequency lighting,
x-rays, electrotherapy. Suffered lab fire. Rebuilt, and
continued. Moved lab to Colorado Springs for about one year
(1899). Built huge magnifying transmitter. Experimented with
wireless power, radio, and earth resonance. Studied
lightning. Created lightning. Returned to New York. With
encouragement of financier J.P. Morgan, promoted a World
System of radio broadcasting utilizing magnifying
transmitters. Built huge tower for magnifying transmitter at
Wardenclyffe, Long Island as first station in World System.
Received enough from Morgan to bring station within sight of
completion, then funds cut off, project collapsed.
Continued to invent into
the 1920's, but flow of patents meager compared to earlier
torrent, which amounted to some 700 patents worldwide.
High-frequency inventions ignored by established technology,
as were disk turbine, free energy receiver, and other
inventions. Shut out by media except for birthday press
conferences. At these conferences, predicted microwaves, TV,
beam technologies, cosmic-ray motor, interplanetary
communications, and wave-interference devices that since
have been named the Tesla howitzer and the Tesla shield. In
the 1930's, he was involved in wireless power projects in
Quebec. Last birthday media appearance in 1940.
Died privately and
peacefully at 87 in New York hotel room from no apparent
cause in particular. Personal papers, including copious lab
notes, impounded by U.S. Government, surfaced many years
later at the "Tesla Museum", in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Of
these notes, only a fragment, "Colorado Springs Notes", has
been published by the Museum.
the inventions:
1. Disk-Turbine Rotary
Engine
Tesla called it a
powerhouse in a hat. One version developed 110 h.p. at 5000
RPM and was less than ten inches in diameter. Tesla believed
larger turbines could achieve 1000 HP. The disk-turbine
rotary engine runs vibration free. It is cheap to
manufacture because nothing but the rotor bearings needs to
be fitted to close tolerances. It requires little
maintenance. If necessary, the rotor can be replaced with
ease. The turbine can run on steam, compressed air,
gasoline, or oil.
How it works
Unlike conventional
turbines that use blades or buckets to catch the flow,
Tesla's uses a set of rigid metal disks that, instead of
battling the propelling stream at steep angles, runs with
smooth efficiency in parallel with the flow. What drives the
disks is a peculiar adhesion that exists between the surface
of a body and any moving fluid. This adhesion, is, in
Tesla's words, caused by the shock of the fluid against the
asperities of the solid substance (simple resistance) and
from internal forces opposing molecular separation (a
sticking phenomenon).
The propellant enters the
intake and is directed through a nozzle onto the disks at
their perimeter. It travels over the spinning disks in a
spiral fashion, exiting at the disks' central openings and
is exhausted from the casing. Tesla notes in his patent
that, in an engine driven by a fluid, changes in the
velocity and direction of movement of the fluid should be as
gradual as possible. This, he observes, is not the case,
though, in existing engines where sudden changes, shocks,
and vibrations are unavoidable. The use of pistons, paddles,
vanes and blades, notes Tesla, necessarily introduces
numerous defects and limitations and adds to the
complication, cost of production, and maintenance of the
machines.
We who are stuck with the
piston engine know this all too well. The Tesla turbine is
vibration-free because the propelling fluid moves in natural
paths or stream lines of least resistance, free from
constraint and disturbance. Conducting the propellant
through the intake valve on the other side easily reverses
the turbine.
Internal combustion
A hollow casting is bolted
to the top of the turbine for the internal combustion mode.
A glow plug or spark plug screws into the top of this
chamber. Sticking out of the sides are the intake valves.
Interesting thing about these valves, there are no moving
parts. They work on a fluidic principle. The Tesla turbines'
only moving part is its rotor. Imagine, a powerful internal
combustion engine with only one moving part.
Fluidics
The fluidic valve, which
Tesla calls a valvular conduit, allows easy flow in one
direction but in the other the flow gets hung up in dead-end
chambers (buckets) where it gets spun around 360 degrees,
thus forming eddies, or countercurrents that stop the flow
as surely as if a mechanical valve were moved into the shut
position. The spinning rotor creates plenty of suction to
pull fuel and air into the combustion chamber. Tesla notes
that after a short lapse of time the chamber becomes heated
to such a degree that the ignition device may be shut off
without disturbing the established regime. In other words;
it diesels. The disk-turbine motor principle in reverse
becomes a very efficient pump. (Tesla's Patent No.
1,061,142)
Fluid drive
The disk turbine principle
is employed in the speedometer, which presents the problem
of having to turn the rotary motion of a vehicles wheels to
angular motion in order to push a spring-loaded indicator
needle over a short arc. Tesla's solution: the speedometer
cable connects to a disk which spins in interface with a
second disk, imparting spin to the fluid in between and,
hence, to the second disk which moves the needle. Interface
two disks of different sizes in a fluid medium and any
desired ratio between speeds of rotation may be obtained by
proper selection of the diameters of the disks, observes
Tesla in his patent, thus anticipating in 1911 the
fluid-drive automatic transmission.
Tesla First worked on his
turbine early in his career, believing it would be a good
prime mover for his alternating-current dynamos, far
superior to the reciprocal steam engines that were the
workhorses of that era. But he did not get down to
perfecting and patenting it until after the collapse of his
global broadcasting scheme (1909). By this time the
internal-combustion piston engine was firmly rooted in
Western power mechanics. Tesla referred to organized
opposition to his attempts to introduce the superior engine,
and so have others who have made the attempt since. But
Tesla still saw a glorious future for his turbine. To his
friend, Yale engineering professor Charles Scott, Tesla
predicted, "My turbine will scrap all the heat engines in
the world." Replied Scott, "That would make quite a pile of
scrap."
2. Spark-Gap
Oscillator:
Tesla was central in
establishing the 60 cycle alternating current power system
still in use today. Yet he suspected that the more striking
phenomena resided in the higher frequencies of electric
vibration. To reach these heights, he first tried dynamos
spun at higher speeds and having a greater number of poles
than any that had existed before. One having as an armature
a flat, radially grooved copper disk achieved 30,000 cycles,
but Tesla wanted to go into the millions of cycles.
It occurred to him that
this vibratory capability was to be found in the capacitor.
With a capacitor circuit, the spark-gap oscillator, he did
indeed achieve the higher frequencies, and he did so by non
mechanical means. The circuit was promising enough for him
to patent it as A Method of and Apparatus for Electrical
Conversion and Distribution, for Tesla saw in it the
possibility of a whole new system of electric lighting by
means of high frequencies. Though it was quickly succeeded
by the Tesla coil and is not numbered among the more famous
of the lost inventions, the spark-gap oscillator is pivotal
for Tesla as the invention that launched him into his career
in high frequencies.
How it works
The capacitor. There are
only a few basic building blocks of electrical circuitry.
The capacitor is one of them. Tesla didn't invent it, it had
been around for some time, arguably for millennia, but he
did improve upon it in three of his patents. Also called
condenser, the common capacitor is just a sandwich of
conductive and nonconductive layers that serves the purpose
of storing electrical charge. The simplest capacitor has
just two conductive sheets separated by a single sheet of
insulation. In the capacitor shown, the conductive elements
are two metal plates.
The insulation between
them is oil. In the official vocabulary, the plates are
indeed called plates and the insulative layer (oil, glass,
mica, or whatever) is called the dielectric. Connect the two
terminals of a capacitor into a circuit where there is
plus-minus electrical potential, and charge builds on the
plates, positive on one, negative on the other. Let this
charge build for a while, and then connect the two plates
through some resistance, a coil, say, and the capacitor
discharges very suddenly. Tesla said, The explosion of
dynamite is only the breath of a consumptive compared with
its discharge. He went on to say that the capacitor is the
means of producing the strongest current, the highest
electrical pressure, the greatest commotion in the medium.
The capacitor's discharge
is not necessarily a single event. If it discharges into a
suitable resistance, there is a rush of current outward,
then back again, as if it were bouncing off the resistance,
then out, and back and so forth until it peters out. The
discharge is oscillatory, a vibration. The vibration can be
sustained by recharging the capacitor at appropriate
intervals. When Tesla talks of the capacitor's discharge
causing commotion in the medium, he means a vibration or mix
of vibrations. The character of this vibration is determined
in part by the capacity of the capacitor, that is, how much
charge it will hold. This is a function of it size, the
distance between plates, and the composition of the
dielectric. Upon discharge there would be, typically, a
fundamental vibration, some harmonics, and perhaps other
commotion, maybe musical, maybe not. Additional circuitry
can tame the vibration to a pure tone.
The medium
When Tesla speaks of
commotion in the medium, what is the medium? In Tesla's time
it was an article of faith that there existed a unified
field that permeated all being called the ether. The ether
as the electric medium still is an article of faith in some
circles, but in official science its existence is presumed
to have been disproved in the laboratory. Nevertheless, this
conviction about an ether ran very deep, not only among
scientists but among all thinkers, until only about
forty-some years ago when particle theory, E=MC2, and,
finally Hiroshima firmly established the new faith. Tesla
said the electron did not exist.
The materialistic concept
of these little particles running through conductors is
alien to Tesla electric theory. Here is the Quaker writer
Rufus Jones on the ether in 1920: An intangible substance
which we call ether - luminiferous (light-bearing) aether -
fills all space, even the space occupied by visible objects,
and this ether which is capable of amazing vibrations,
billions of times a second, is set vibrating at different
velocities by different objects. These vibrations bombard
the minute rods of the retina... It is responsible also for
all the immensely varied phenomena of electricity, probably,
too of cohesion and gravitation...
The dynamo and the other
electrical mechanisms, which we have invented do not make or
create electricity. They merely let it come through, showing
itself now as light, now as heat, now again as motive power.
But always it was there before, unnoted, merely potential,
and yet a vast surrounding ocean of energy there behind,
ready to break into active operation when the medium was at
hand for it. Jones, who was not a scientist but a religious
thinker and communicator, was making a point about the
nearness of God's power and could do so by invoking the
physics of his time. This would be difficult using the
Einsteinian physics in fashion today, which W. Gordon Allen
has called atheistic science.
Although the ether is
intangible, it is assumed to have elastic properties, so
that Tesla can say a circuit with a large capacity behaves
as a slack spring, whereas one with a small capacity acts as
a stiff spring vibrating more vigorously. This elastic
character of the ether, which you experience palpably when
you play with a pair of magnets, is due to the medium's lust
for equilibrium. Distorted by electrical charge (or by
magnetism or by the gravity of a material body), the ether
seeks to restore a perfect balance between the polarities of
positive-negative, plus/minus, yang/yin.
Voltage is the measure of
ether strain or imbalance, called potential difference, or
just potential. Balance is not restored from this strained
condition in one swing-back. As we have seen with the
capacitor, the disturbed electric medium, like a plucked
guitar string, over-swings the centerline of equilibrium to
one side, then to the other, again and again, and this we
know as vibration. In this way of looking at nature,
vibration is energy; energy is vibration. So you could say
that the commotion in the medium caused by the capacitors
discharge is energy itself.
Thus, you can speak of the
capacitor as an energy magnifier. Even though a feeble
potential may charge it, the sudden blast of the capacitor's
release plucks the medium mightily. The capacitor is common
in modern circuitry, but Tesla used it with much greater
emphasis on its capability as an energy magnifier and on a
scale almost unheard of today. It's difficult to find
commercial capacitors that meet Tesla specifications.
Builders of tesla coils and other high-voltage devices
usually must construct their own capacitors. Fortunately,
this can be done using readily available materials.
How it works
The spark gap: A simple
way to discharge a capacitor is through a spark gap. The
spark-gap oscillator is just a capacitor firing into a
circuit load (lamps or whatever) through the spark gap. The
opening between the spark-gap electrodes determines when the
capacitor will fire. This setting is one determinant of the
frequency of the circuit.
The others are capacity
and the reactance, or bounce characteristics, of the load.
The potential needed to bridge the gap is in the tens of
thousands of volts. It takes a potential of about 20,000
volts to break down the resistance of just a quarter of an
inch of air. The gap doesn't necessarily have to be air.
Tesla has referred to a gap consisting of a film of
insulation. A spark gap is a switching device, a
semiconductor in fact. But the spark gap is problematic,
particularly the common two-electrode air-gap version.
Heating and ionizing of the air cause irregularities in
conduction and premature firing.
This arcing must be
quenched. It can be to a great degree by using a series of
small gaps instead of one larger one, or by using a rotary
gap. Tesla also immersed the gap in flowing oil, used an air
blowout, and even found that a magnetic field helps to
quench. For the gap Tesla substituted high-speed rotary
switches, which he called circuit controllers. One has a
rotor that dips into a pool of mercury, and another uses
mercury jets to make contact. You can operate a spark gap
without a capacitor by connecting it directly to a source of
sufficient voltage.
This is, of course, how
our automotive spark plugs work, directly off the coil. (The
capacitor in that circuit is used to juice the ignition coil
primary.) The auto distributor, incidentally, is a rotary
gap, pure Tesla. Early radio amateurs used spark-gap
oscillators as transmitters. The capacitor was, more often
than not, left out of the circuit, but with it the
transmitter could create a greater commotion in the medium.
3. Tesla Coil
Tesla's best-known
invention takes the spark-gap oscillator and uses it to
vibrate vigorously a coil consisting of few turns of heavy
conductor. Inside of this primary coil sits another
secondary coil with hundreds of turns of slender wire. In
the Tesla coil there is no iron core as in the conventional
step-up transformer, and this air-core transformer differs
radically in other ways. Recounting the birth of this
invention, Tesla wrote, Each time the condenser was
discharged the current would quiver in the primary wire and
induce corresponding oscillations in the secondary. Thus, a
transformer or induction coil on new principles was evolved
Electrical effects of any desired character and of
intensities undreamed of before are now easily producible by
perfected apparatus of this kind. Elsewhere Tesla wrote,
There is practically no limit to the power of an oscillator.
The conventional step-up
transformer (short primary winding, long secondary on an
iron core) boosts voltage at the expense of amperage. This
is not true of Tesla's transformer. There is a real gain in
power. Writing of the powerful coils he experimented with at
his Colorado Springs lab, coils with outputs in excess of 12
million volts, Tesla wrote, It was a revelation to myself to
find out that ... a single powerful streamer breaking out
from a well insulated terminal may easily convey a current
of several hundred amperes! The general impression is that
the current in such a streamer is small.
How it works
A Tesla coil secondary has
its own particular electrical character determined in part
by the length of that slender coiled wire. Like a guitar
string of a particular length, it wants to vibrate at a
particular frequency. The secondary is inductively plucked
by the primary coil. The primary circuit consists of a
pulsating high-voltage source (a generator or conventional
step-up transformer), a capacitor, a spark gap, and the
primary coil itself. This circuit must be designed so that
it vibrates at a frequency compatible with the frequency at
which the secondary wants to vibrate.
The primary circuit's
frequency is determined by the frequency and voltage of the
source, the capacity of the capacitor, the setting of the
spark gap, and the character of the primary coil, determined
in part by the length of its winding. Now when all these
primary-circuit components are tuned to work in harmony with
each other, and the circuit's resulting frequency is right
for plucking the secondary in a compatible rhythmic manner,
the secondary becomes at its terminal end maximally excited
and develops huge electrical potentials, which if not put to
work, boil off as a corona of bluish light or as sparks and
streamers that jump to nearby conductors with crackling
reports.
Unlike the conventional
iron-core step-up transformer, whose core has the effect of
damping vibrations, the secondary of the Tesla transformer
is relatively free to swing unchecked. The pulsing from the
primary coil has the effect of pushing a child in a swing.
If it's done in a rhythmic manner at just the right moment
at the end of a cycle, the swing will oscillate up to great
heights. Similarly, with the right timing, the electrical
vibration of the secondary can be made to swing up to
tremendous amplitudes, voltages in the millions. This is the
power of resonance.
Manmade earthquake
Tesla was fascinated with
the power of resonance and experimented with it not only
electrically but on the mechanical plane as well. In his
Manhattan lab he built mechanical vibrators and tested their
powers. One experiment got out of hand.
Tesla attached a powerful
little vibrator driven by compressed air to a steel pillar.
Leaving it there, he went about his business. Meanwhile,
down the street, a violent quaking built up, shaking down
plaster, bursting plumbing, cracking widows, and breaking
heavy machinery off its anchorage. Tesla's vibrator had
found the resonant frequency of a deep sandy layer of
subsoil beneath his building, setting up an earthquake.
Soon Tesla's own building
began to quake, and, just at the moment the police burst
into the lab, Tesla was seen smashing the device with a
sledgehammer, the only way he could promptly stop it. In a
similar experiment, on an evening walk through the city,
Tesla attached a battery-powered vibrator, described as
being the size of an alarm clock, to the steel framework of
a building under construction and, adjusting it to a
suitable frequency, set the structure into resonant
vibration. The structure shook, and so did the earth under
his feet.
Later Tesla boasted that
he could shake down the Empire State Building with such a
device, and, as if this claim were not extravagant enough,
he went on to state that a large-scale resonant vibration
was capable of splitting the Earth in half. No details of
Tesla's vibrators are available, but they probably resembled
one of Tesla's reciprocating engines (such as Patent No.
511,916). These exploited the elasticity of gases, just as
his electrical vibrators, like the Tesla coil, exploit the
elasticity of the electric medium.
A new power system
Tesla invented his
resonant transformer, as the Tesla coil is sometimes called,
to power a new type of high-frequency lighting system, as
his 1891 patent drawing shows. This was the first Tesla coil
patent. There followed a series of other patents developing
the device. All of these are for bipolar coils: both ends of
the secondary are connected to the working circuit (usually
lamps), as opposed to the mono polar format favored by
today's basement builders in which the top is connected to a
ball or other terminal capacitor, the bottom to ground. The
mono polar format emerges later in patents for radio and
wireless power, including Tesla's magnifying transmitter.
The 1896 patent drawing
shows an evolved bipolar coil using tandem chokes to store
energy for sudden release into the capacitor, enabling the
device to be powered by relatively modest inputs. Chokes are
coils wound on iron cores. They store energy as magnetism.
When the charging current is interrupted, the magnetic field
collapses inducing current in the coils, which rushes in to
charge the capacitors.
Superconductivity
Alternating currents can
be sent over long distances with relatively low losses. This
is why Tesla's early 60-cycle system triumphed over Edison's
direct current. The high frequency, high-potential output of
a Tesla coil can travel over relatively light conductors for
vastly greater distances than conventional 60-cycle AC
Losses occur to some degree from corona discharge but hardly
at all from ohmic resistance. This type of current also
renders conductive materials that are normally
nonconductive, rarefied gases, for example. You might say
these currents make a medium superconductive.
Although super-magnetism
is not in the picture because high-frequency vibrations
would be severely damped by an electromagnet's iron core, it
is revealing to reflect upon the unexploited
superconductivity of Tesla energy these days when science is
congratulating itself on new advances in the field. Prior to
recent breakthroughs, superconductivity and super magnetism
were low-temperature (cryogenic) phenomena, occurring when
circuits were cooled down to near absolute zero. The new
superconductivity at less drastically reduced temperatures
developed out of the cryogenic work of the last twenty
years, and this may be in debt to Tesla, who patented a
similar idea way back in 1901.
Tesla's patent shows that
the deep cooling of conductors with agents like liquid air
results in an extraordinary magnification of the oscillation
in the resonating circuit. Imagine the performance of a
super cooled Tesla coil. No electrocution. Since we tend to
associate high voltage with possibly fatal electric shock it
may be puzzling to learn that the output of a well-tuned
Tesla coil, though in the millions of volts, is harmless.
This is customarily thought to be because the amperage is
low (it's not) or it's explained in terms of something
called the skin effect, which means that the current travels
over you instead of through. But the real reason is a matter
of human frequency response. Just as your ears cannot
respond to vibrations over about 30,000 cycles, or the eyes
to light vibrations at or above ultra violet, your nervous
system cannot be shocked by frequencies over about 2,000
cycles.
Electrotherapy
Now that you know it's
harmless, would you believe these currents are even good for
you? Fact is that a whole branch of medicine was founded on
the healing effects of certain Tesla coil frequencies. Tesla
understood the therapeutic value of high-frequency
vibrations. He never patented in the area but did announce
his findings to the medical community, and a number of
devices were patented and marketed by others.
Patients, by focusing
certain frequencies on afflicted areas, or, in some cases,
just sitting in the vicinity of vibrations from a device
like the Lakhovsky Multi wave Oscillator, which produced a
blend of specific frequencies, were said to have experienced
relief from rheumatism and other painful conditions. It was
even considered a cure for certain types of paralysis. Such
radiation's increase the supply of blood to the area with a
warming effect (diathermy). They enhance the oxygenation and
nutritive value of the blood, increase various secretions,
and accelerate the elimination of waste products in the
blood. All this promotes healing. Electrotherapists even
spoke of broadcasting vitamins to the body. Reversals of
cancer tumor growths have been documented. Lakhovsky
predicated science will discover, some day, not only the
nature of microbes by the radiation they produce, but also a
method of killing disease within the body by radiation.
Electrotherapy devices
were sold directly to the public via ads in popular
magazines and in the Sears catalogs. Self-treatment was
widespread. This easy access to treatment of all sorts of
conditions led to the eventual suppression of the technology
by the medical establishment. Electrotherapy, however, is
making a big comeback. In chiropractic and sports medicine,
low-frequency AC and DC pulses are being used to kill pain
and exercise muscles. High-frequency electrotherapy is
coming back in alternative healing practices. There is an
increasing appreciation of the electrical nature of
biological functioning and that some electric vibrations in
the environment are harmful while others are healing.
Reprints of Lakhovsky's works are widely read. There is a
growing conviction that cancer can be effectively treated
with high-frequency therapies.
In his experimenting over
an eight-year period, Tesla made no fewer than 50 types of
oscillating coils. He experimented with lighting and other
vacuum effects, including x-rays. He also experimented with
novel shapes for the normally cylindrical coils, getting
satisfying results from cone shapes and flat spirals. At
Colorado Springs Tesla achieved phenomenally increased
outputs by using a third coil resonantly tuned to the
secondary. Observing the tremendous magnification this
achieved, he gave much of his attention to integrating this
extra coil, as he called it, into an evolved outsize tesla
coil called the magnifying transmitter.
4. Magnifying
Transmitters; Wireless Power
In 1893 Tesla told a
meeting of the National Electric Light Association that he
believed it practical to disturb, by means of powerful
machines, the electrostatic conditions of the earth, and
thus transmit intelligible signals, and, perhaps, power. He
said, It could not require a great amount of energy to
produce a disturbance perceptible at a great distance, or
even all over the surface of the earth. The ultimate
powerful machine for these tasks is Tesla's magnifying
transmitter.
How it works
An extra coil gives the
resonant boost of a Tesla coil secondary but has the
advantage of being more independent in its movement. A
secondary, being closely slaved to the primary, is inhibited
somewhat by it, its oscillations slightly damped. The extra
coil is able to swing more freely. Extra coils, writes
Tesla, enable the obtainment of practically any EMF, the
limits being so far remote that I would not hesitate to
produce sparks of thousands of feet in this manner.
The engineering challenge
of the magnifying transmitter, then, becomes one of
containing and properly radiating its immense electrical
activities, measured in the tens and even hundreds of
thousands of horsepower, as Tesla put it. Containment and
effective radiation of this power is the whole point of the
design shown, for which Tesla applied for patent in 1902.
The heavy primary is wound on top of the secondary at the
base of the tower. The extra coil extends upward through a
hooded connection to a conductive cylinder.
The antenna is a toroid, a
donut-shaped geometry that allows for a maximum of surface
area with a comparative minimum of electrical capacity.
Since this is a high-frequency device, a relatively low
capacity is desirable. To increase the area of the radiating
surface, the outside of the toroid is covered with
half-spherical metal plates. A subtlety of the design is
that the conductive cylinder is of larger radius than the
radius of curvature of these plates, since a tighter curve
would allow escape of energy. The cylinder is polished to
minimize losses through irregularities in the surface. At
the center of the top surface sits a pointy plate that
serves as a safety valve for overloads so the powerful
discharge may dart out there and lose itself harmlessly in
the air.
Tesla advises bringing the
power up slowly and carefully so pressure does not build at
some point below the antenna, in which case a ball of fire
might break out and destroy the support or anything else in
the way, an event that may take place with inconceivable
violence. Current in the antenna could build to an
incredible 4000 amperes.
A.C. / D.C.
Wireless power
transmission via the magnifying transmitter was the ultimate
development of the inventor who had earlier brought
alternating-current power to the world with his poly phase
system. The predecessor of A.C. was a direct-current system
developed, manufactured, and marketed chiefly by Thomas
Edison. Direct current was adequate for serving small areas
but was unworkable for long distance transmission. By
contrast, A.C. could be transmitted for long distances over
lighter wires and its voltage could be stepped up for
transmission and down for consumption by means of
transformers. Tesla invented from scratch a new kind of
motor (poly phase) that could utilize A.C., and he greatly
evolved earlier concepts of dynamos to generate A.C. as well
as transformers to step voltage up and down. Whereas
Edison's D.C. would have been suitable for a society of
small, autonomous communities, the evolving system of
industrial rule wanted centralized power and needed A.C.'s
long distance capability to serve huge sprawling
populations.
George Westinghouse, an
inventor (the air brake) who, like Edison, turned
industrialist (having found that to profit from an invention
one must undertake manufacturing and marketing as well) saw
the promise in Tesla's poly phase inventions and formed an
alliance with the young prodigy. Westinghouse paid Tesla one
million dollars and contracted to pay a royalty of one
dollar per horsepower for the poly phase inventions. Later
Westinghouse was forced to renege on the royalty.
Together, Westinghouse and
Tesla triumphed over Edison's D.C. system and installed the
first A.C. power facilities, the most notable being the
hydra plant at Niagara Falls. Tesla believed in hydropower.
His ultimate energy-magnifying, wireless power system would
have been hydro-based. The centralized A.C. electric power
system we have today was forced into existence on a colossal
scale by utility magnates of that era, the most prominent
being Samuel Insull, who became infamous in some circles for
his massive bilking of the investing public and famous in
others for hammering together the electric power complex now
in place. This complex has developed into a federally
protected monopoly with greater capital wealth than any
other industry in the U. S. In the order of energy sources
used, Tesla's hydropower has been left well behind the
burning of fossil fuels, a process that dumps 24 million
tons of pollutants into the nation's air supply each year.
Hydropower even runs way
behind the nukes in kilowatt-hours produced. So went another
Tesla dream. Tesla was a celebrity in his poly phase heyday,
but today his celebrity is as an underground cult figure
known for his radically progressive energy-magnifying,
free-energy, and wireless power inventions, which, of
course, have no place in the established system.
Power by wire
Prior to his wireless
power inventions, Tesla patented in 1897 a high frequency
system that transmitted power by wire. The system used
previously unheard of levels of electric potential. He notes
that at these voltages, conventional power would destroy the
equipment, but that his system not only contains this energy
but is harmless to handle while in use. This system is not a
circuit in the usual sense but a single wire without return.
It employs the familiar Tesla coil configurations at both
sending and receiving ends. The primary circuit (power
source, capacitor, spark gap) is represented in the drawing
by the generator symbol. The secondary coil is a flat
spiral. An advantage in this coil design is that the voltage
adjacent to the primary, where arcing across could occur, is
at zero and soars to high values as the coil spirals inward.
The same patent also shows a cone-shaped secondary in which
the primary is at the base of the cone, which is at zero
potential.
Wireless power
The drawing for Tesla's
wireless power patent looks like the earlier power-by-wire
patent except now spherical antennas replace the
transmission lines, which are dropped out of the picture
almost as if they were redundant. The ball antenna is
peculiarly Tesla, as is the toroid, and you wonder why
nothing like them have appeared since. In this 1900 patent,
wireless power is not represented as an earth-resonant
system. Here Tesla talks about transmission through elevated
strata. The patent contains much discussion of how rarefied
gases in the upper atmosphere became quite conductive when
there is applied many hundred thousand or millions of volts.
Balloons are suggested to send the antennas aloft.
Appreciate that Tesla in this patent has invented nothing
less than the principles of radio.
Tesla recognizes only a
quantitative difference between sending radio signals and
broadcasting electric power. Both involve sending and
receiving stations tuned to one another by means of tesla
coil circuits. Tesla's wireless power would be the ultimate
centralized electric system, a capitalist dream, but for the
fact that the technology is too simple. Just raising an
antenna, planting a ground, and connecting simple Tesla coil
circuitry in between could achieve reception of power.
Although Tesla himself
patented a couple of electric meters for high frequencies,
it would be all too easy for consumers to tune in for free,
just as many today bootleg pay TV signals using illicit
equipment far more sophisticated. It is no wonder, then,
that the electric power establishment didn't welcome this
invention. This was one problem. Another was that the
established electric power system would have to be relegated
to another great pile of scrap, and maybe the established
system of political power as well.
Tesla's announced dream
was to use hydra sources where available and through
wireless power broadcast that energy around the planet, thus
liberating the world from poverty. Such a scheme would not
be readily embraced by powers that sustain their rule by
keeping populations poor and weak. Centralized control of
energy, as well as other resources, is, of course, believed
to be essential to civilized rule, at least as far as
thinking on that subject has progressed in this era.
Moreover, no multinational political system was in
existence, or is now for that matter, that could implement a
technology of such global implications. Tesla was blind to
such considerations.
His commitment, his
overriding priority as a technological purist, was to take
machine possibilities to their logical conclusions. Today,
if wireless power were seriously proposed, there would no
doubt be at least one political problem that would not have
arisen in Tesla's time: resistance from environmentalists.
What would an environmental impact report have to say about
biologic hazards? A Navy submarine communication system that
uses extremely low frequency (ELF) waves, down to below 10
cycles, has been challenged by environmentalists, as have
microwave and 60 cycle high-voltage transmission lines.
Engineering details
Patents normally don't
give many quantitative specifics, but Tesla's wireless power
patent does give some about the big prototype
power-transmission Tesla coil (which was, incidentally, used
to conduct a demonstration before skeptical patent
examiners). A 50,000-volt transformer charged a capacitor of
.004 mfd., which discharged through a rotary gap that gave
5,000 breaks per second. The eight-foot diameter primary had
just one turn of stout stranded cable. The secondary was 50
turns of heavily insulated No. 8 wire wound as a flat
spiral. It vibrated at 230-250,000 cycles and produced 2 to
4 million volts. This coil evolved into the huge
experimental magnifying transmitter
Tesla describes in his
Colorado Springs notes. Housed in a specially built lab 110
feet square, the device used a 50,000 volt Westinghouse
transformer to charge a capacitor that consisted of a
galvanized tub full of salt water as an electrolyte, into
which he placed large glass bottles, themselves containing
salt water. The salt water in the tub was one plate of this
capacitor, the salt water inside the bottles the other
plate, and the bottle glass the dielectric. Various
capacities were tried, incremental changes being made by
connecting more or fewer bottles. A variable tuning coil of
20 turns was connected to the primary, which consisted of
two turns of heavy insulated cable that ran around the base
of the huge fence like wooden secondary framework. The
secondary had 24 turns of No. 8 wire on a diameter of 51
feet Various extra coils were tried, the final version being
12 feet high, 8 feet in diameter, and having 100 turns of
No. 8 wire.
The antenna was a 30-inch
conductive ball adjustable for height on a 142-foot mast.
The huge transmitter could vibrate from 45 to 150
kilocycles. Even with the big transformer, this bill of
materials does not seem inaccessible to enterprising people,
and the technology does not seem so abstruse, so it is no
wonder that people have gotten together to build magnifying
transmitters and experiment with wireless power without
support from corporations or government.
One such group was the
People's Power Project in central Minnesota in the late
70's. This group, largely farmers, objected to high voltage
power lines trespassing on their land and set out to build
an alternative. Limited by the sketchy information then
available, the project was not successful. Another attempt,
called Project Tesla, is being set up in Colorado. Endowed
with more precise calculations and more experienced
personnel, Project Tesla will try to repeat Tesla's
wireless-power experiment and verify his theory by taking
measurements at various remote locations.
Earth resonance
Among the appealing
features of Colorado Springs for Tesla was the region's
frequent and sensational electrical storms. For Tesla,
lightning was a joyous phenomenon. Biographers report that,
during storms back East, Tesla would throw open the windows
of his New York lab and recline on a couch for the duration,
muttering to himself ecstatically. In Colorado Springs he
tuned in and tracked lightning storms using rudimentary
radio receiving equipment. He thereby determined that
lightning was a vibratory phenomenon, which set up standing
waves bouncing within the earth at a frequency resonantly
compatible with the earth's electrical capacity. This
earth-resonant frequency, he reasoned, was the ideal
frequency for wireless power transmission, and he tuned his
ultimate magnifying transmitter accordingly.
The literature contains
various reports on exactly what this frequency is. Some say
150 kilocycles, which would be at the upper range of the
Colorado Springs transmitter. Others give frequencies
considerably lower, 11.78 cycles, 6.8 cycles, frequencies
Tesla's transmitter may have achieved harmonically. With
reinforcement from the earth resonance, the power would
actually increase in the process of transmission.
In one memorable
experiment with the Colorado Springs transmitter, Tesla shot
from the antenna ball veritable lightning bolts of 135 feet,
producing thunder heard 15 miles distant, and, in the
process, pulled so many amperes that he burned out the
municipal generator. In another experiment he lit up
wirelessly, at a distance of 26 miles from the lab, a bank
of 10,000 watts worth of incandescent bulbs. Two years after
Colorado Springs, Tesla applied for patent for the far more
refined magnifying transmitter shown at the opening of this
chapter, a patent that was not granted until a dozen years
later.
In this patent he no
longer speaks of energy broadcast through the upper strata
of the atmosphere but of a grounded resonant circuit. Tesla
predicted that his magnifying transmitter would prove most
important and valuable to future generations, that it would
bring about an industrial revolution and make possible great
humanitarian achievements. Instead, as we shall see, the
magnifying transmitter became Tesla's Waterloo.
5. Magnifying
Transmitter II ; Grounded Radio:
With the backing of J. P.
Morgan, Tesla began, soon after returning from Colorado
Springs, the construction of a magnifying transmitter tower
at Wardenclyffe, near Shoreham, Long Island. Though closely
related to a wireless power propagator and intended for
further experimentation in that area, the tower was built
specifically as the first station in Tesla's proposed World
System of broadcasting. The system was to carry programming
for the general public as well as private communications.
Tesla was the first to
suggest the broadcasting of news and entertainment to the
public; only point-to-point signaling had been experimented
with up to then. The fully realized World System was to
serve as a multi-frequency wireless interconnects for all
existing telephone, telegraph, and stock ticker services
around the planet. Exclusivity and noninterference of
priority private communications was to be assured by
multiplex techniques. The giant transmitter was also to
carry a universal time register, navigation beacons, and
facsimile transmissions. This was in 1902. As we shall see,
Tesla's massive contribution to radio is still largely
unrecognized.
The Wardenclyffe tower's
rugged wooden structure, designed by Stanford White, stood
at 187 feet. It was topped by a mushroom-like terminal 68
feet in diameter. A separate brick building at the foot
housed generating and other equipment. The entire project
was to cover 200 acres and include housing for 2,000
employees of the facility. Tesla estimated that the tower
would emit a wave complex of a total maximum activity of 10
million horsepower. The top of the tower was outfitted with
a platform that may have been intended to accommodate
powerful ultraviolet lamps, which Tesla could have used for
an experimental beam system of electric power transmission
that was on his mind. The tower structure and building
beneath were built and partially equipped, but they never
saw operation.
From: A MUSEUM AT
WARDENCLYFFE - THE CREATION OF A MONUMENT TO NIKOLA TESLA
The year was 1900 and
following 9 productive months of wireless propagation
research in Colorado, Nikola Tesla was anxious to put a mass
of new found knowledge to work. His vision focused on the
development of a prototype wireless communications station
and research facility and he needed a site on which to
build. In 1901 he cast his eyes some 60 miles eastward to
the north shore village of Woodville Landing. Only six years
before the north branch of the Long Island Railroad had
opened, reducing travel time to the locality from a horse
drawn five hours to less than two. Seeing an opportunity in
land development a western lawyer and banker by the name of
James S. Warden had purchased 1400 acres in the area and
started building an exclusive summer resort community known
as Wardenclyffe-On-Sound. With an opportunity for further
development in mind, Warden offered Tesla a 200 acre section
of this parcel lying directly to the south of the newly laid
track. It was anticipated that implementation of Tesla's
system would eventually lead to the establishment of a
"Radio City" to house the thousands of employees needed for
operation of the facility. The proximity to Manhattan and
the fairly short travel time between the two, along with the
site's closeness to a railway line must surely have been
attractive features and Tesla accepted the offer.
The Wardenclyffe World
Wireless facility as envisioned by Tesla was to have been
quite different from present day radio broadcasting
stations. While there was to be a great similarity in the
apparatus employed, the method in which it was to be
utilized would have been radically different. Conventional
transmitters are designed so as to maximize the amount of
power radiated from the antenna structure. Such equipment
must process tremendous amounts of power in order to
counteract the loss in field strength encountered as the
signal radiates out from its point of origin. The
transmitter at Wardenclyffe was being configured so as to
minimize the radiated power. The energy of Tesla's steam
driven Westinghouse 200 kW alternator was to be channeled
instead into an extensive underground radial structure of
iron pipe installed 120 feet beneath the tower's base. This
was to be accomplished by superposing a low frequency
baseband signal on the higher frequency signal coursing
through the transmitter's helical resonator. The low
frequency current in the presence of an enveloping
corona-induced plasma of free charge carriers would have
pumped the earth's charge. It is believed the resulting
ground current and its associated wave complex would have
allowed the propagation of wireless transmissions to any
distance on the earth's surface with as little as 5% loss
due to radiation. The terrestrial transmission line modes so
excited would have supported a system with the following
technical capabilities:
Establishment of a
multi-channel global broadcasting system with programming
including news, music, etc;
Interconnection of the world's telephone and telegraph
exchanges, and stock tickers;
Transmission of written and printed matter, and data;
World wide reproduction of photographic images;
Establishment of a universal marine navigation and location
system, including a means for the synchronization of
precision timepieces;
Establishment of secure wireless communications services.
The plan was to build the first of many installations to be
located near major population centers around the world. If
the program had moved forward without interruption, the Long
Island prototype would have been followed by additional
units the first of which being built somewhere along the
coast of England. By the Summer of 1902 Tesla had shifted
his laboratory operations from the Houston Street Laboratory
to the rural Long Island setting and work began in earnest
on development of the station and furthering of the
propagation research. Construction had been made possible
largely through the backing of financier J. Pierpont Morgan
who had offered Tesla $150,000 towards the end of 1900. By
July 1904, however, this support had run out and with a
subsequent major down turn in the financial markets Tesla
was compelled to pursue alternative methods of financing.
With funds raised through an unrecorded mortgage against the
property, additional venture capital, and the sale of X-ray
tube power supplies to the medical profession he was able to
make ends meet for another couple of years. In spite of
valiant efforts to maintain the operation, income dwindled
and his employees were eventually dropped from the payroll.
Still, Tesla was certain that his wireless system would
yield handsome rewards if it could only be set into
operation and so the work continued as he was able. A second
mortgage in 1908 acquired again from the Waldorf-Astoria
proprietor George C. Boldt allowed some additional bills to
be paid, but debt continued to mount and between 1912 and
1915 Tesla's financial condition disintegrated. The loss of
ability to make additional payments was accompanied by the
collapse of his plan for high capacity trans-Atlantic
wireless communications. The property was foreclosed, Nikola
Tesla honored the agreement with his debtor and title on the
property was signed over to Mr. Boldt. The plant's
abandonment sometime around 1911-1912 followed by demolition
and salvaging of the tower in 1917 essentially brought an
end to this era. Tesla's April 20, 1922 loss on appeal of
the judgment completely closed the door to any further
chance of his developing the site.
Tesla; the Father of
Radio?
As we have seen, Tesla's
earliest oscillators were dynamos, but, having determined
that he could not reach the higher frequencies by this
means, he went on to develop the spark gap oscillator, the
Tesla coil, and the magnifying transmitter. But did any of
these devices become the first to be used for overseas radio
transmission? No, ironically, the first commercial overseas
transmitter was a 21.8 kilocycle GE Alexanderson alternator
operated by RCA, a design evolved straight out of Tesla's
early dynamos. Such was Tesla's luck in radio.
Official histories often
credit Tesla with the poly phase system and either ignore
his later inventions altogether or dismiss them as the work
of. a crackpot. But among those who have published honest
research on the subject, there is one hundred percent
consensus that Tesla was cheated out of his rightful place
in history, particularly his status as the leading inventor
of radio technology.
Radio simplified
Early radio devices are
fascinating and worthy of study if only because they remind
us that powerful radio technologies can be so simple and
accessible to anyone, the present-day micro complexity
notwithstanding. As we have seen, the earliest transmitters
in wide use by amateurs were not alternators but spark-gap
oscillators. To get on the air all you needed was a battery,
a telegraph key, an induction coil, a spark gap, a length of
wire as an antenna, and a ground. Of course, the addition of
a capacitor juiced it up considerably.
The very earliest
experiments in radio receiving used spark gaps as receivers.
When you saw an arc across the gap, this was the detection
of a disturbance in the medium. This evolved into a detector
called a coherer. This is just a horizontal glass tube
loosely filled with metal chips (iron, nickel). It is placed
in series with a battery and a telegraph sounder, and one
side of the coherer goes to the antenna, the other to
ground.
The coherer is a switch (a
semiconductor, really) that conducts when there is a
disturbance of the medium. The more easily conducted
radio-frequency energy triggers conduction of this almost
conductive material. To get the coherer back to a non
conducting state requires a tap that can be accomplished
manually or by mechanical linkage to the telegraph sounder.
Tesla comes into the technology about here. He improves the
coherer by putting it into continual rotation (rotating
coherer) so it didn't need a tap to reset.
Tuned radio
The spark gap transmitter
was indiscriminate as to the frequency of the disturbance.
It put out a dirty complex of frequencies consisting of a
rough fundamental determined by width of gap, together with
parasitic oscillations, harmonics splatter what-have-you.
The coherer was set off by any disturbance. In Colorado
Springs, Tesla used a rotating coherer to track electrical
storms. The celebrated Marconi units employed nothing more
evolved than this crash method of signaling.
So why is Marconi so
famous? It is because, like Edison and Westinghouse, he
built up an industry around the invention and made himself
famous in the course of promoting his enterprise. Marconi's
company was ultimately incorporated into RCA (now
incorporated into General Electric). It owed much of its
technological development to ideas lifted from the likes of
Tesla. Tesla's contribution was nothing less than selective
tuning. He set forth the principle of resonantly tuned
circuits in his Tesla coil patent of 1896, and the
principles of transmitter-receiver tuned circuits a year
later in his wireless power patent.
The Tesla coil is a
powerful and simple radio transmitter. If the primary
circuit is smoothly vibrating well above the audio range,
its signal can even be modulated for voice transmission by
varying some circuit element.
Tesla's few published
notes on modulation describe crude ways of varying spark
gaps, but, conceivably, an inductance core mechanically
linked to a loudspeaker transducer might modulate the signal
with some fidelity. Tesla and his supporters waged a fight
for recognition of Tesla as the founder of radio. The
struggle was finally won in the Supreme Court, but this did
not happen until shortly after Tesla's death.
Tesla vs. Hertz
Tesla was not a
theoretician by calling, but he made plenty of observations
on the electrical nature of the universe that put him at
odds with of official theory. In fashion then (and even now)
was the theory of Heinrich Hertz, an interpreter of the
physics of James Maxwell. Hertz explained radio propagation
as transverse waves akin to light. Tesla was convinced that
radio disturbances were standing waves in the ether akin to
sound. When you drop a pebble into water, the disturbances
you see in the form of concentric circles are standing
waves.
Both Tesla and Hertz
assumed the existence of an aetheric medium, but differed as
to its energy transmitting properties. Tesla believed that
the ether was a gas like medium, that electric propagation
was very much like that of sounds in air, alternate
compression's and rarefaction's of the medium, and that
Hertzian waves could only take place in a solid medium.
Tesla once said that Hertz waves are radiation and that no
energy could be economically transmitted to a distance by
any such agency. He said, In my system, the process is one
of true conduction which can be effected at the greatest
distance without appreciable loss.
When quantum physics and
particle theory came into vogue, the aetheric medium was
dropped out of electric theory altogether, but Hertz's
theory was more compatible with the new concepts of
propagation and therefore survived. By way of rubbing this
in, the unit of frequency, formerly cycles per second (cps),
was renamed in honor of Hertz (Hz), while only an obscure
unit of magnetic flux density remembers Tesla. It is in
respect to Tesla that I have reverted to the old unit in
this book. Hertzian radio is straight-line, light-like
radiation's that bounce off hills and mountains. Long
distance Hertzian transmissions are explained in terms of
radiation's bouncing off a radio reflective upper layer
called the ionosphere. Tesla thought this was all nonsense
and declared in 1919 that Hertzian thinking has stifled
creative effort in the wireless art and retarded it for 25
years. Hertzian radio is aerial.
Most of us are conditioned
to thinking in terms of aerial radio; the air waves, on the
air. Tesla's radio is grounded; the lower end of the
energized coil is rooted in the earth. Pure Hertzian radio
has no such natural load. Tesla doesn't speak of antennas as
such; the element he places aloft is an elevated capacity.
Tesla said radio devices should be designed with due regard
to the physical properties of this planet and the electrical
conditions obtaining in same. Grounded radio is indeed more
powerful than the Hertzian aerial. But this is true
particularly for the frequencies Tesla was using. The higher
frequencies do behave in a Hertzian manner. Yet grounding is
all but a lost concept in consumer electronics. Up through
the 1940's, AM radio receivers customarily had a terminal
one was encouraged to connect to a cold water pipe or other
deep earth connection. Ground the chassis of any of today's
receivers, and, unless there is some kind of interference
coming up through the ground (from fluorescent circuits,
light dimmers, which are oscillators, or from the local
Tesla coil), you will usually improve signal strength and
range.
Among Tesla's
contributions to radio was remote control. Tesla
demonstrated a radio-controlled boat before crowds at
Madison Square Gardens and sent another robot craft 25 miles
up the Hudson River. Grounded radio works particularly well
through water. Tesla's basic radio tuning tank circuit for
receiving (coil plus capacitor between antenna and ground)
was, and is, all by itself, a powerful signal amplifier, and
a beautifully simple one, at that. But as radio developed
over the years, the tank circuit shrank in size and the
result was a loss in gain. This was compensated for by the
addition of stage upon stage of complex amplification
circuitry.
Tesla watched this
development with bewilderment. Tesla knew that the most
efficient long-distance radio took place in the lower
frequencies, especially those close to the earth-resonant
frequency. Frequencies well below the AM broadcast band were
the favored ham frequencies in the early days prior to World
War I. In fact, waves of 600 meters (500 kc) were considered
short while considered fairly long were the waves of 1200
meters (25 kc). Like a lot of good real estate, many of
these more radio-effective frequencies below the AM
broadcast band have been appropriated for military use, but
also for navigation beacons, weather stations, and time
registers.
Underground radio
The mind conditioned by
Hertzian aerial radio concepts has trouble grasping the idea
that signaling can take place without any above-surface
antenna, totally through the ground. James Harris Rogers,
taking a cue from Tesla, circa World War I, built a radio
system in which both sending and receiving antennas were
sunk completely into the ground or submerged in bodies of
water. He found this system far more effective and far less
vulnerable to interference than any aerial radio Signal
strength has been said to be 5,000 times stronger
The military is on to
this, as evidenced in the Navy's ELF and by a U. S. Air
Force project underway called Ground Wave Emergency Network.
GWEN is a low-frequency communications system designed for
used during a nuclear war. The network will have a
cross-continent series of 600-foot diameter underground
copper screens connected to 300-foot towers reminiscent of
Tesla's Wardenclyffe.
Among the advantages of
the system is its invulnerability to the effects of the
electric pulse sent out by nuclear blasts. Such a pulse
fries at one stroke any and all solid-state electronics
within its extensive range. (Strong electric vibrations from
a Tesla coil or magnifying transmitter have a similar effect
on solid state and will scramble or disable such circuitry
temporarily or even dud it permanently.) It's revealing that
for last-ditch doomsday communications, the government
reverts to Tesla's grounded radio.
J. P. Morgan sinks Tesla
Tesla's ambitious World
System came to an end when its principal financier, J. P.
Morgan pulled the plug on funding. Morgan, the financial
giant behind the formation of many monopolies in railroads,
shipping, steel, banking, etc., was a major conduit of
European capital into U. S. industrial development in the
Robber Baron era. He looms large in Tesla's life. Morgan
money was in the Niagara Falls project. He backed Edison,
too. It was Morgan's pressure on Westinghouse, whom he also
financed, that caused the cancellation of Tesla's
dollar-a-horsepower contract and the loss of millions in
royalties to Tesla for his poly phase.
When Tesla's lab burned
down (arson was suspected), one of Morgan's men promptly
arrived with aid, as well as with the offer of a partnership
with Morgan interests. Acceptance would have put Tesla
firmly under Morgan's control. Tesla refused. And Tesla
succeeded in preserving his autonomy until he became
possessed with overwhelming ardor to fulfill the dream of
his World system. Tesla was ready to sell his soul to
finance Wardenclyffe, and J. P. Morgan was right there to
buy it.
In 1901, Tesla signed over
to Morgan controlling interest in the patents he still
owned, as well as all future ones, in lighting and radio.
Morgan then put about $150,000 startup funding into
Wardenclyffe. Later he invested more, just enough to bring
the project within sight of completion. Morgan then became
elusive. Tesla tried desperately to communicate with the
investor, but to no avail. When word was out on Wall Street
that Morgan had withdrawn support, no one would touch the
project. This finished Tesla as a functioning inventor. Work
on the Wardenclyffe tower came to a halt. Left to
dereliction, the tower remained only as a curiosity to
passersby. During World War I, the tower was unceremoniously
dynamited to the ground.
6. Lighting
In 1891 Tesla said that
existing methods of lighting were very wasteful, that some
better methods must be invented, some more perfect apparatus
devised. Tesla went and did just that. Yet, here we are
today, in a world lit predominantly by the same Edison bulb!
Edison's bulb burns with six percent efficiency, the rest
going off as heat, while the high resistance filament cooks
at 4,000 degrees and eventually breaks without warning.
Today's fluorescent tube, though inspired by Tesla, is no
model of efficiency either.
Its inner surfaces are
stimulated to phosphorescence by energy-consuming
filament-like cathodes that also burn out, and the lit-up
tube would present a dead short to the current if it were
not for the so-called ballast transformer, an inductance
placed in the circuit to oppose and thus eat up yet more
current. What sent Tesla into an exploration of high
frequency phenomena was his conviction that these rapid
vibrations held the key to a superior mode of lighting. The
explorations were not Tesla's first venture into lighting.
His very first U. S. patent (1885) is for an improvement in
the arc lamp. He used an electromagnet to feed carbons to
the arc at a uniform rate to produce a steadier light (No.
335,785).
Early arc lamps produced a
brilliant blue-white light, good for street lighting but not
for the home, and they emitted noxious fumes. Home lighting
was by gas. Street arc lighting used series circuits. Edison
introduced the parallel circuit, and designed his lamp for
such a circuit. Edison introduced the big scale production
and sale of electric power itself on the model of gas
lighting, a major industry at the time. He wanted to be
first in the business and announced to the press that he had
an operable bulb before he actually had a bulb that worked.
When Tesla's a.c. system was established, it was grafted on
to Edison's, greatly extending its range and efficiency.
But, essentially, it was still Edison's parallel circuit,
high consumption, incandescent lighting system, and this is
what we have to live with today.
A better way
Tesla patented both his
spark-gap oscillator and his Tesla coil specifically as
power sources for a new lighting system that used currents
of high frequency and high potential. Lest you get the
impression that a lone genius named Tesla invented this new
form of lighting out of the blue, you should know that
others before him had used high frequencies to stimulate
light, and others, like Sir William Crookes, had done the
same with high potentials, but Tesla was the first on record
to put the two together.
In Jules Verne's 1872
novel A Journey to the Center of the Earth, the narrator
tells of a brilliant portable battery lamp used by the
underground explorers. The device was powered by a Ruhmkorf
coil; a high voltage buzzer-type induction coil (step-up
transformer) popular among early electrical experimenters.
The Ruhmkorf coil stimulated a lamp (type unspecified but
probably a gas tube), which produced the light of an
artificial day. The lamp had such a low current draw that
the battery lasted throughout the subterranean adventure.
Verne evidently was drawing, at least in part, on
experimental knowledge of his day for what he calls this
ingenious application of electricity to practical purposes.
Perhaps somebody should
reinvent such a high potential lamp to replace today's
flashlight, which seems to exist for the purpose of
enriching the Eveready division of Union Carbide. Modern
neon lighting is high potential at 2,000 to 15,000 volts.
(Neon sign transformers are good for powering tesla coils,
but a low-frequency, high voltage device: caution.) Neon, as
well as its cousin, 7,500-volt cold cathode (filament's)
fluorescent, which is used in some industrial lighting, is
as close as we get to Tesla lighting today.
Circa 1900, Tesla
experimented with luminous tubes bent into alphabetic
characters and other shapes. Although today's neon is
simplistic Tesla, being driven by 60-cycle high-voltage
transformer power alone without the benefits of
high-frequency excitation, it should suggest to us the
amazing efficiency of high-potential lighting, since a
single 15,000-volt neon transformer drawing only 230 watts
can light up a tube extending up to 120 feet. How superior
is the economy of Tesla high potential, high frequency
lighting over Edison incandescent? Tesla says certainly 20
times, if not more light is obtained for the same
expenditure of energy.
"Pure" light
Tesla invented a variety
of lamps, not all of which show up in his patents. He lit up
solid bodies like carbon rods in vacuum bulbs, or in bulbs
containing various inert gases at low pressure (rarefied).
He noted that tubes devoid of any electrodes may be used,
and there is no difficulty in producing by their means light
to read by. But he noted that the effect is considerably
increased by the use of phosphorescent bodies, such as
yttrium, uranium glass, etc. Here Tesla lays the foundation
for fluorescent lighting. Applied to such lamps were
currents at potentials ranging from a lower limit of 20,000
volts up to voltages in the millions and vibrations of
15,000 cycles per second and up.
Tesla dreamed of creating
what he called pure light or cold light by generating
electric vibrations at frequencies that equaled those of
visible light itself. Light produced by this direct and
efficient means would require vibrations of 350 to 750
billion cycles, but Tesla believed such oscillations, far
above those attainable by his coils, would someday be
achieved. Even so, his rarefied gas-tube lamps produced a
light that more closely approximated natural daylight than
any other artificial source Tesla's light is like the
full-spectrum light that is coming to be recognized as far
more healthful than Edison incandescent and particularly
more healthful than conventional fluorescent. Full-spectrum
lighting is believed by some health practitioners actually
to have healing properties.
No sudden burnout
Tesla's gas tube lamps
burn indefinitely, as do today's neon tubes, for there is
nothing within to be consumed. Tesla's lamps that contain
electrodes like carbon rods, however, do undergo some
deterioration. In Tesla's words, a very slow destruction and
gradual diminution in size always occurs, as in incandescent
filaments; but there is no possibility of sudden and
premature disabling which occurs in the latter by the
breaking of the filament, especially when incandescent
bodies are in the shape of blocks. In vacuum lamps, the life
of the bulb depends upon the degree of exhaustion, which can
never be made perfect. Also, the higher the frequency
applied to such a lamp the slower the deterioration.
Electrodes glow at high temperatures, and this raises the
problem of how to conduct energy to them since wires or
other metallic elements will melt. The problem must be
addressed in lamp design. For example, in the incandescent
lamp shown at the opening of this chapter, the lead-in wires
connect to the hot electrodes via bronze powder contained in
a refractory cup. Tesla may have designed his capacitor-base
bulbs to help address this same problem.
High heat
Tesla's search for the
ideal electrode is reminiscent of Edison's search for the
long lasting filament: The production of a small electrode
capable of withstanding enormous temperatures, said Tesla,
ìI regard as the greatest importance in the manufacture of
light. One of the electrodes he tried was a small button of
carbon, which he placed in a near vacuum. Tesla regarded the
high incandescence of the button to be a necessary evil. For
lighting purposes, it was the incandescence of the gas
remaining in the mostly evacuated chamber that was
important. But the carbon-button lamp proved to have some
remarkable properties beyond its use for illumination. When
the voltage was turned up, the lamp produced such tremendous
heat that the carbon button rapidly vaporized. Tesla
experimented extensively with this fascinating phenomenon.
For the button of carbon he substituted zirconium, the most
refractory substance available at the time. It fused
instantly. Even rubies vaporized. Diamonds, and, to a
greater degree, carborundum, endured the best, but these
could also be vaporized at high potentials.
Tesla worked on the
problem of heating. I have read that he contributed to the
development of a high-frequency induction heating. Did Tesla
work on the problem of space heating? Certainly the huge
current draw of conventional electric heaters, which use
resistive elements, argues for some inventiveness in this
area. Tesla did observe that the discharges from a tesla
coil resembled flames escaping under pressure and were
indeed hot. He reflected that a similar process must take
place in the ordinary flame, that this might be an electric
phenomenon. He said that electric discharges might be a
possible way of producing by other than chemical means a
veritable flame which would give light and heat without
material consumed. The behavior of the carbon-button lamp
suggests that a new heating mode might be found in the
effects of high-frequency currents in a vacuum.
Lighting up the sky
Hold a fluorescent tube
near a Tesla coil and it will light up in your hand. This is
true of any tube or bulb with vacuum or rarefied gas. A more
efficient way is to ground one end of the tube and put a
length of wire as a sort of antenna on the other. Better
yet, put a coil of wire that resonates with the secondary in
series with the tube and ground and you have the optimal
wireless power arrangement.
Tesla conducted many
experiments with different arrangements like this, using on
some occasions the widely available Edison filament
incandescent, which lighted up more brilliantly than usual
because of the effects of high frequencies on the bulbs
rarefied interior. Inside his New York lab Tesla strung a
wire connected to a tesla coil around the perimeter of the
room. Wherever he needed light he hung a gas tube in the
vicinity of this high frequency conductor.
Tesla had a bold fantasy
whereby he would use the principle of rarefied gas
luminescence to light up the sky at night. High frequency
electric energy would be transmitted, perhaps by an ionizing
beam of ultraviolet radiation, into the upper atmosphere,
where gases are at relatively low pressure, so that this
layer would behave like a luminous tube. Sky lighting, he
said, would reduce the need for street lighting, and
facilitate the movement of ocean going vessels. The aurora
borealis is an electrical phenomenon that works on this
principle, the effects of cosmic eruptions such as those
from the sun being the source of electric stimulation. I,
for one, am grateful that this particular Tesla fantasy
never materialized since it is difficult enough to see the
stars with existing light pollution, and there might be
undesirable biological impacts as well.
Rotating brush
Tesla took an evacuated
incandescent type lamp globe, suspended within it at dead
center a conductive element, stimulated that element with
high voltage currents from an induction coil, and thus
created a beam-like emanation, a brush discharge that was so
eerily sensitive to disturbances in its environs that it
seemed to be endowed with an intelligent life of its own.
The device works best if there is no lead-in wire. In the
bulb shown, every measure has been taken to construct it so
it is free from its own electrical influence. The bulb could
be stimulated inductively by applying energy to metal foil
wrapped around its neck. Thus excited, an intense
phosphorescence then spreads at first over the globe, but
soon gives place to a white misty light, observes Tesla. The
glow then resolves into a directional brush or beam that
will spin around the central element. So responsive is it to
any electrostatic or magnetic changes in its vicinity that
the approach of an observer at a few paces from the bulb
will cause the brush to fly to the opposite side. A small,
inch-wide permanent magnet will affect it visibly at a
distance of two meters, slowing down or accelerating the
rotation according to how it is held relatively to the
brush.
Tesla never patented the
rotating brush or used it in any practical application, but
he believed it could have practical applications. He saw one
use in radio where the device could conceivably be adapted
to being a most sensitive detector of disturbances in the
medium. The rotating brush appears to be a precursor of the
plasma globe toys now in fashion; these are sometimes called
Tesla globes. Tesla's new lighting was famous in its time.
Tesla, the promoter, saw to it. He conducted demonstrations
at lectures before the electric industry associations,
before large audiences in rented halls, and before select
groups of influential New Yorkers in his Manhattan lab.
His articles about the new
lighting were published in the popular scientific press and
it was reported in the newspapers. Still, it did not catch
on with the powers-that-be who no doubt saw in it Tesla's
perennial pile-of scrap problem. But, I wonder, would the
whole electric distribution system have to be scrapped to
implement the efficiencies of Tesla lighting? Conceivably,
the new lighting could be run off of local oscillators at
the consumer end, the old power distribution system
remaining intact. This is still a possibility, as it has
been for about one hundred years.
7. Transportation
Tesla speculated, that,
perhaps the most valuable application of wireless energy,
will be the propulsion of the flying machine, which will
carry no fuel and be free from any limitations of the
present airplanes and dirigibles. The possibility of
electric flight intrigued Tesla, though he never did patent
an electric aircraft. But he did patent an electric railway
using his high frequency, high-potential electricity in a
by-wire mode, and also patented a radical aircraft that,
while not electric, did have an advanced power plant: his
disk turbine. Tesla's railway and aircraft can be numbered
among the lost inventions. The closest transport technology
has come to putting any of Tesla into actual practice is
with diesel-electric power using Tesla poly phase motors, an
early and notable example of which was the ocean liner
Normandy. In the field of transport, Tesla is more commonly
identified with antigravity flight and UFOs. Although this
identification is based upon nothing more than a few public
utterances, his suggestions charge the imagination with
possibilities.
High-frequency railway
Tesla's high-frequency,
high-potential railway picks up its power inductively
without the use of the rolling or sliding contacts used in
conventional trolley or third-rail systems. A pickup bar
travels near a cable carrying the oscillating energy. This
cable, which Tesla specifically invented to carry such
currents, is the precursor of the grounded shielded cable
used today to carry TV and other high-frequency signals. But
unlike today's cables, which carry energy only of signal
strength and shield by means of a continuous grounded static
screen of fine braided copper wire, Tesla's high voltage
cable uses metal pipe or screen that is broken up into short
lengths, very much shorter, says Tesla in his patent, than
the wave lengths of the current used. This feature reduces
loss. Since the shielding must not be interrupted, the short
sections are made to overlap but are insulated from one
another. To further reduce loss to ground, an inductance of
high ohmic resistance or a small capacity is placed in the
ground line.
Motor mystery
A conundrum raised by
Tesla's railway patent is that the vehicle is powered by an
electric motor, but nowhere among Tesla's inventions is to
be found an electric motor that runs off of high-frequency
currents. Was Tesla planning to use a lower frequency here,
something under 1,000 cycles? Did he have a converter in
mind that could bring the frequency down? Or did Tesla
invent a high-frequency motor that never made it into
patent, an invention that may be among his unpublished
notes? Anyway, Tesla proceeds in many of his discussions of
high-frequency power as if this problem were solved. I've
seen references post-Tesla to the existence of such a motor.
Free-energy inventor, Hermann Plauson, (next chapter) refers
to high-frequency motors. These motors have magnetic cores
made of very thin laminations insulated from each other, a
design that would limit damping effects.
Turbine aircraft
Tesla's only patented
aircraft is a vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) plane that
he intended as an improvement upon the helicopter, already
invented at this time (1921): The helicopter type of flying
machine, especially with large inclination angle of the
propeller axis to the horizontal, at which it is generally
expected to operate, is quite unsuitable for speedy aerial
transport; it is incapable of proceeding horizontally along
a straight line under prevailing air conditions; it is
subject to dangerous plunges and oscillations ... and it is
almost certainly doomed to destruction in case the motive
power gives out. Advances in helicopter design may have
mitigated some of these problems, but at least the last one
still holds true: Tesla's craft, which has a large wing
area, is powered by two disk turbines, rotating in opposite
directions. The engineering problem of swinging the pilot
and passengers around 90 degrees after takeoff, is solved at
least to Tesla's satisfaction. There have been some
experimental VTOL's but nothing in production.
Electric flight
Tesla's dream electric
aircraft would be powered by means of magnifying
transmitters: Aerial machines will be propelled around the
earth without a stop. Also, in 1900, he predicted a cold
coal battery with such output that a practical flying
machine would be possible. Such a battery also would
enormously enhance the introduction of the automobile. Tesla
fantasized a personal aerial taxi which could be folded into
a six-foot cube, and would weigh under 250 lb.: It can be
run through the streets and put in a garage, if desired,
just like an automobile.
Explaining how his
earth-resonant wireless-power system could energize vehicles
aloft, he said, power can be readily supplied without ground
connection, for, although the flow is confined to earth, an
electromagnetic field is created in the atmosphere
surrounding it. Tesla believed such a system to be the
ultimate method of man-made flight: With an industrial plant
of great capacity, sufficient power can be derived in this
manner to propel any kind of aerial machine. This I have
always considered the best and permanent solution to the
problems of flight. No fuel of any kind will be required as
the propulsion will be accomplished by light electric motors
operated at great speed.
Antigravity
Tesla wrote in 1900 of an
antigravity motor: Imagine a disk of some homogeneous
material turned perfectly true and arranged to turn in
friction less bearings on a horizontal shaft above the
ground. Now, it is possible that we may learn how to make
such a disk rotate continuously and perform work by the
force of gravity. To do so, he said, we have only to invent
a screen against this force. By such a screen we could
prevent this force from acting on one-half of the disk, and
rotation of the latter would follow.
Does it not follow then,
that such a gravity screen could also be used to levitate a
vehicle? Tesla held no patent on such a device or on any
other antigravity device, and there are no published notes
on experimentation in the area. Nevertheless, Tesla
inevitably pops up in the literature of antigravity and
UFOs. This may be because Tesla was a prominent exponent of
a physics in which antigravity seems more feasible because
gravity is better explained.
A researcher-theorist of
today, Thomas Bearden, allows for gravity control in the
physics he calls the new Tesla electromagnetic. Scalar
(standing) waves in time itself can be produced electrically
and this becomes a magic tool capable of directly affecting
and altering anything that exists in time, including
gravitational fields, says Bearden. In 1931 the editor of
Science And Mechanics, Hugo Gernsback reported, It is
believed by many scientists today that the force of
gravitation is merely another manifestation of
electromagnetic waves. Edward Farrow, a New York inventor,
reported in 1911 an antigravity effect produced by a ring of
spark gaps. When the gaps were fired, the device, called a
condensing dynamo, lost one-sixth of its weight. T. Henry
Moray wrote, Frequencies may be developed which will balance
the force of gravity to a point of neutralization.
Antigravity researcher Richard Lefors Clark places the
frequency of gravity's vibrations right at Nature's neutral
center in the radiant energy spectrum, above radar and below
infrared, at l012 cycles per second.
8. Free-Energy Receiver
For starters, think of
this as a solar-electric panel. Tesla's invention is very
different, but the closest thing to it in conventional
technology is in photovoltaic. One radical difference is
that conventional solar-electric panels consist of a
substrate coated with crystalline silicon; the latest use
amorphous silicon. Conventional solar panels are expensive,
and, whatever the coating, they are manufactured by esoteric
processes. But Tesla's solar panel is just a shiny metal
plate with a transparent coating of some insulating
material, which today could be a spray plastic. Stick one of
these antenna-like panels up in the air, the higher the
better, and wire it to one side of a capacitor, the other
going to a good earth ground. Now the energy from the sun is
charging that capacitor. Connect across the capacitor some
sort of switching device so that it can be discharged
arrhythmic intervals, and you have an electric output.
Tesla's patent is telling us that it is that simple to get
electric energy. The bigger the area of the insulated plate,
the more energy you get. But this is more than a solar panel
because it does not necessarily need sunshine to operate. It
also produces power at night Of course; this is impossible
according to official science.
For this reason, you could
not get a patent on such an invention today. Many an
inventor has learned this the hard way. Tesla had his
problems with the patent examiners, but today's free-energy
inventor has it much tougher. Tesla's free-energy receiver
was patented in 1901 as An Apparatus for the Utilization of
Radiant Energy. The patent refers to the sun, as well as
other sources of radiant energy, like cosmic rays. That the
device works at night is explained in terms of the nighttime
availability of cosmic rays.
Tesla also refers to the
ground as a vast reservoir of negative electricity. Tesla
was fascinated by radiant energy and its free-energy
possibilities. He called the Crooke's radiometer (a device
which has vanes that spin in a vacuum when exposed to
radiant energy) a beautiful invention. He believed that it
would become possible to harness energy directly by
connecting to the very wheelwork of nature. His free-energy
receiver is as close as he ever came to such a device in his
patented work. But on his 76th birthday at the ritual press
conference, Tesla (who was without the financial wherewithal
to patent but went on inventing in his head) announced a
cosmic-ray motor. When asked if it was more powerful than
the Crooke's radiometer, he answered, thousands of times
more powerful.
how it works
From the electric
potential that exists between the elevated plate (plus) and
the ground (minus), energy builds in the capacitor, and,
after a suitable time interval, the accumulated energy will
manifest itself in a powerful discharge which can do work.
The capacitor, says Tesla should be of considerable
electrostatic capacity and its dielectric made of the best
quality mica, for it has to with stand potentials that could
rupture a weaker dielectric.
Tesla gives various
options for the switching device. One is a rotary switch
that resembles a Tesla circuit controller. Another is an
electrostatic device consisting of two very light,
membranous conductors suspended in a vacuum. These sense the
energy buildup in the capacitor, one going positive, the
other negative, and, at a certain charge level, are
attracted, touch, and thus fire the capacitor. Tesla also
mentions another switching device consisting of a minute air
gap or weak dielectric film, which breaks down suddenly when
a certain potential is reached. The above is about all the
technical detail you get in the patent.
Plauson's converter
Tesla's invention may have
helped to inspire the many other inventors who have worked
in the field of free energy. At least a dozen are on record.
Let's look at one in particular. In 1921 Hermann Plauson, a
German experimenter, succeeded in obtaining patents,
including one in the U. S., for Conversion of Atmospheric
Electric Energy. In school, every introduction to
electricity touches on the phenomenon of so-called static
(or electrostatic) electricity, and this is what Plauson
means by atmospheric. Static electricity is built-up charge,
electricity in a raw state, and it comes easy in Nature, as
evidenced by lightning and the aurora borealis.
If you have ever seen a
frictional static machine in operation, it's not difficult
to imagine the tremendous potential in artificially produced
static. A rotating disk type of static machine or the silk
belt type, as in the Van de Graff generator, produces
discharges like those from a tesla coil. Unfortunately, in
school, the subject of static electricity is briefly touched
upon and then abruptly dropped, never to be mentioned again.
Electrical power sources thereafter are limited to the
battery or the wall socket.
How it works
In the Plauson drawing the
free energy converter on the left interfaces with a disk
type static machine via special pick up combs. When the
static collecting disk is rotated, the combs pick up the
charge, one comb going positive, and the other negative. The
combs, in turn, charge up their respective capacitors until
sufficiently high potential builds to jump the spark gap.
The oscillatory discharge is induced into the transformer
primary. This is high-voltage, high frequency electric
energy. The familiar spark-gap oscillator has turned charge
into dynamic energy.
The transformer steps down
the vibrating high voltage to practical levels to power
lighting, heating, and special high-frequency motors. The
Plauson patent drawing shows a device that works on the same
principle but collects energy by means of an antenna, as
does Tesla's receiver. Since the higher the antenna the
better, and the more area the better, Plauson favors big
metallic helium balloons. Plauson says the safety gap, which
has three times the resistance of the working gap, is
absolutely necessary for collecting large quantities of
charge. The capacitors across the gaps in the series safety
gap allow for uniform sparking. Plauson's device suggests
that Tesla's might be explained in terms of electrostatics.
Tesla, at the press
conference honoring his 77th birthday in 1933 declared that
electric power was everywhere present in unlimited
quantities and could drive the worlds machinery without the
need of coal, oil, gas, or any other fuels. A reporter asked
if the sudden introduction of his principle wouldn't upset
the present economic system...
Tesla replied, "It is
badly upset already."
END