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  • #16
    Originally posted by bascule
    Oh come on, that thing is a puny 1kW at most!

    What you really need is a Raytheon 2J56A, a 50kW magnetron designed for RADAR... that'll fry some shit, like everyone's WiFi cards...
    Not to long ago I had the oppourtunity to buy an old truck mounted radar unit (sans truck) from the Canadian Military, now that would have been fun
    Never drink anything larger than your head!





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    • #17
      Originally posted by renderman
      Not to long ago I had the oppourtunity to buy an old truck mounted radar unit (sans truck) from the Canadian Military, now that would have been fun
      Canadian Military. Whats that? On the subject of Tesla Coils though I had the privelage to see one in Texas at a convention that stood over 10 feet tall...people who stayed around it too long complained of sickness and/or not feeling well. Ahh Nikola Tesla who knew he was the one who actually invented the lightbulb. Burn in hell Edison.
      Did Everquest teach you that?

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      • #18
        Originally posted by allentrace
        On the subject of Tesla Coils though I had the privelage to see one in Texas at a convention that stood over 10 feet tall...
        For our East-coast friends, the Carnegie Science Museum in Pittsburgh has (had?) a million-volt Tesla coil.


        Originally posted by allentrace
        Ahh Nikola Tesla who knew he was the one who actually invented the lightbulb. Burn in hell Edison.
        Not that you shouldn't have plenty of reasons to hate Edison, but I don't recall that Tesla was ever credited with the creation of a workable light globe.

        It might be more accurate to compare Edison's contributions to the light bulb (as well as many other inventions) as you would Al Gore's contributions to the Internet.

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        • #19
          An interesting idea to try would be phased array wifi. (we all know about Eli the Ice man) The principle that allows the SPY-1D radar to work.

          Anyone know if anyone has tried to apply this idea to commercial 802.11?

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          • #20
            Originally posted by Voltage Spike
            Not that you shouldn't have plenty of reasons to hate Edison, but I don't recall that Tesla was ever credited with the creation of a workable light globe.

            It might be more accurate to compare Edison's contributions to the light bulb (as well as many other inventions) as you would Al Gore's contributions to the Internet.
            Who I really feel sorry for is Sir Humphry Davy (inventor of the arc lamp, mentioned on the linked Wikipedia page). No one seems to remember that electric light existed nearly a century before Edison invented the light bulb. And limelight lingers as a cultural cliche long after its gas burners were rendered obsolete by a purely electrical solution.
            45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B0
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            • #21
              Originally posted by Syn-Ack
              An interesting idea to try would be phased array wifi. (we all know about Eli the Ice man) The principle that allows the SPY-1D radar to work.

              Anyone know if anyone has tried to apply this idea to commercial 802.11?
              About two years ago there was a bunch of stuff in the press regarding phased arrays "next big thing in wireless... blah, blah, blah". It was a big flap, and then it (if you'll pardon the pun) went off the radar. There may be some companies still working on it, but there hasn't been much mention in the trade press of late.
              Thorn
              "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." - Catherine Aird

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              • #22
                Originally posted by Thorn
                "next big thing in wireless... blah, blah, blah"
                In my mind that's 802.11s
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                [ redacted ]

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by bascule
                  In my mind that's 802.11s
                  Could be. Mesh has a lot of attractive features.

                  The biggest thing 802.11s (and 802.11n for that matter) will have to overcome it the inertia of the market and the currect installed b/g/a systems. 802.11b/g/a may not have hit saturation yet, but there are enough users out there right now that will not be inclined to change unless there is a big incentive in speed, distance or truly ubiquitous connections.
                  Thorn
                  "If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning." - Catherine Aird

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                  • #24
                    i totally had a bunch of tesla coils... then the allies swooped in with a nasty air strike and crushed me.... leaving my base totally destroyed.... how am i supposed to Command and Conquer without a base?!

                    wait... what were we talking about again?

                    a scrabble word?!
                    the fresh prince of 1337

                    To learn how to hack; submit your request

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by KeLviN
                      i totally had a bunch of tesla coils... then the allies swooped in with a nasty air strike and crushed me.... leaving my base totally destroyed.... how am i supposed to Command and Conquer without a base?!

                      wait... what were we talking about again?

                      a scrabble word?!
                      Interesting comparison though b/c the conspiracy theory goes the Russians have all of Tesla's patents locked up somewhere....erego the reason you see the Tesla Tank in C and C Red Alert
                      Did Everquest teach you that?

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                      • #26
                        My tesla page
                        Its not a big one, and its sort of dead now, but I do have 2 neon sign transformers... perfect for jacobs ladders :)
                        ยง

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                        • #27
                          http://www.amazing1.com/tesla.htm
                          Well someone had to be selling them on the internet didnt they?
                          Twigman

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                          • #28
                            Blue-fucking-snarfing?

                            What's all this talk about Tesla Coils all of a sudden? You going for a new world record in Bluesnarfing or smth?

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                            • #29
                              Hello.

                              If you are going to do something with a microwave oven you might as well buy a new one for under $40 at frys.
                              What you will need to do is preserve all of the ducting to the magnatron, as this is part waveguide and part cooling duct.
                              The power supply is quite easy to sort out, there are usually 2 circuits connected to the door interlock, to wire around is not that hard.
                              There are deadly jolts in both the primary and secondary of the power supply.
                              The microwave energy, likewise, can easily cook your eyeballs.
                              A microwave power supply makes a very good primary supply for a big tesla coil, remember, we are talking about anywhere from 600 watts to a KW, or more, at something like 1600 volts.
                              Remember, you will need to limit the load on the secondary of the oven PS to a safe value.
                              Be very careful, this stuff is like the old ham radio transmitters of yesteryear, it can easily kill.

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                              • #30
                                A few things...

                                2 things. A long time ago, the l0pht group in Boston had something under their projects about using microwave oven magnetrons and waveguides to do long distance communications. Not sure if they actually managed to do it, how far along they got, etc.

                                I helped out with a project a while ago that involved a jacobs ladder. It was made out of an older Neon sign transformer. Evidentially the newer neon sign transformers don't lend themselves well to the application either due to size or perhaps they are some sort of switch-mode supply that will cut off. It was at a Haloween haunted forest, in an electric chair scene. We had a microphone near the arc to pick up the sound. At one point in time the electricity jumped to the mic, and amazingly it didn't damage the Mic or the amp. The entire scene was run from a notebook computer. The "prisoner" hit a hidden button on the chair and it triggered an entire scene of strobes / lights, and of course the jacobs ladder.
                                Given the large size of the transformer he had, and the size of the ladder... it would require a huge supply to get say a 2' arc from one.

                                On that note, there are some CRAZY pages on the net with Tesla (love will find a wayyyy) coils that are running on solid state power supplies.

                                I have always wondered if you could have a pole on the roof of a building in public with a 2' streamer hanging off of it at all times during the night.

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