Tesla (was Engineers (was: Connectors

From: Lawrence Walker <lgwalker_at_mts.net>
Date: Wed Jan 2 16:14:54 2002

 I was referring to the popular image of Edison as held in the U.S.
 The subject of Tesla's primacy and contributions to radio transmission is too
vast a subject to cover here nor do I have the expertese. Suffice to say that
in 1893 before the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia he demonstrated all the
fundamental principals of modern radio.
 1. An antenna or aerial wire
 2. A ground connection
 3. An aerial-ground circuit containing inductance and capacity
 4. Adjustabe inductance and capacity (for tuning)
 5. Sending and reciving sets tuned to resonance with each other
 6. Electronic tube detectors

 The paper was translated and dissemnated in many languages.
 This was done 2 years before Marconi's demonstration in 1895.

 In the Supreme Court judgement of 1943 ruling in Marconi vs U.S.
that Tesla had anticipated all other contenders with his fundamental radio
patents. One of the justices commented that Marconi's claim that he had
never seen the paper as ludicrous. I would recommend to you that you
look into Tesla's contributions to modern science, it's little known but
astounding. Even now it is alleged that his papers, seized by the US
government upon his death, some of which were classified and turned
over to the Dept of Nat.Defense, are the underpinnings of the HAARP
project and also long-distance communication for submarines and
other things (ELFwaves) To me he is the greatest engineer of all time.

Lawrence



> Lawrence Walker wrote:
>
> > Well from what I've heard about the "father of electricity" and Henry Ford
> for
> > that matter, he would hire a bunch of "promising" engineers like Tesla,
> > take what they've already discovered, claim them as products of his own
> > and become a wold-famous inventor. And of course, like Marconi, become the
> > "inventor of Radio" which we are now celebrating, despite the fact that
> Tesla
> > won a court decision in US courts to his primacy with it. History is
> written by
> > the Victors.
>
> I hope you meant Faraday as the "father of electricity" and not Edison.
> As for Marconi, I'd say he "pioneered" radio engineering but wouldn't have
> got very far if it hadn't been for Hertz. I'm not sure how Tesla fits into the
> picture, he did invent the squirel cage induction motor but I'm not aware of any
> major contributions he made to radio engineering.
>
> Chris
>



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