Sunday, February 14, 2021

Wardenclyffe

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[UPDATE: I know I received an electric shock due to there being a tapping sound from the floor when I touched it.  There was also losing some coordination and having trouble thinking for a few minutes when I tried to walk.  The tinnitus I normally hear in the apartment stopped for awhile after that so I used an ultrasonic receiver to listen through the apartment for anything.  The last thing I expected to hear was a clicking sound that repeated at the same interval as the tapping I felt, but that's what happened.  The source was where the ground wire from a power line pole (with transformer) behind my apartment touched the ground.  When I aimed the receiver at that spot I could hear the clicking continuously.  Original post on 02-14-2021 10:51 AM]

   The name Tesla should be at least slightly familiar to everyone.  There's the car company, a few towns, and an opera.  Those are in addition to the man, Nicola Tesla.  You can probably guess which of those this blog isn't about.

   Tesla is known for his work with AC current and that he briefly work for Thomas Edison then effectively became his competitor.  This was all over a hundred years go... so his inventions are somewhat old school now.

   In 1893 while in St. Louis giving a demonstration involving AC power, Tesla stated that a system like his could one day conduct "intelligible signals or perhaps even power to any distance without the use of wires" by going through the earth itself.

   He's also known for something considered a huge failure.

   It's a project in upstate New York known as Wardenclyffe Tower.

   Most accounts you'll find written state the project was in competition with Marconi for wireless communication.  But Tesla had acknowledged his actual intent was to experiment with wireless power delivery through the ground.  Think of it as a wireless charging station for your phone but implemented backwards - that's what he built.

   Plugging an appliance into the ground for power is about as scary as it gets.

   Which is why you may be surprised to know someone(s) have been discouraging individuals from living in St. Louis by borrowing the concept.  I recently received enough of an electric shock from the floor in my apartment kitchen to cause loss of coordination and memory for a few minutes.

   Kitchen floors aren't usually electrified.

   There's been an AC magnetic field from somewhere beneath the floor at the last 2 apartments I've lived in.  Neither had a magnetic field at the time I moved in.  So it seems to have followed me... somehow.

   Electricity has "shock value" in more ways than one apparently.  It tends to make one back up and look around.  That's resulted in finding another way for tinnitus like sounds to be created.  It's preceded by the build up of static charge on nearby on surfaces.  And that can explain short duration white flashes with no visible source - electrostatic discharge.

   You might be wondering what could be charging the floor with energy?

   If it's from the utility there's a lawsuit just waiting to happen.

   But it's not the utility.

   It's the same pattern over and over repeated.  In this case is the person's on cell phone(s) and other electronics devices causing it.  A cell phone can start operating in a mode that rapidly drains the battery and causes power to transfer into the floor.  Other electronics draw power through their cords - most likely on the floor - and cause electricity to behave unexpectedly.

   Does anyone else think something's not quite right in St. Louis?

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