Thursday, January 13, 2011

Nikola Tesla's Dynamic Theory of Gravity

An excerpt from: Occult Ether Physics Book

by William R. Lyne

According to Tesla's lecture prepared for the Institute of Immigrant Welfare (May. 12, 1938), his "Dynamic Theory of Gravity" was one of two far reaching discoveries, which he "...worked out in all details", in the years 1893 and 1894. The 1938 lecture was less than five years before his death.

More complete statements concerning these discoveries can only be gleaned from scattered and sparse sources, because the papers of Tesla are concealed in government vaults for "national security" reasons. When I specifically asked for these papers at the "National Security Research Center" - now the "Robert J. Oppenheimer Research Center" - in 1979, I was denied access because they were classified, even though on that same day I discovered the plans for the hydrogen bomb on an open shelf, and told a Harvard graduate student about it later in the day at a Santa Fe restaurant. The guy went to Los Alamos, copied the plans, and wrote an expose at Harvard.


Saturday, January 8, 2011

CHRONOLOGY OF NIKOLA TESLA'S LIFE




1856, 10 July
Born at Smiljan, a village near Gospić (a small town in Austrian-Empire, now in the Republic of Croatia);
1873.
Passed the final examination in the secondary school (Realgymnasi um) at Karlovac;

Friday, January 7, 2011

TESLA'S DEATH RAY

I stumbled upon an old article about Nikola Tesla’s Death Ray. In my humble opinion it is one of the best articles that were written about Nikola Tesla's Death Ray. It was dated 1994 and it is in a scanned image format. I converted it to text format using an online free OCR surface.  I hope you like it.




Thursday, January 6, 2011

Nikola Tesla’s Wireless Electricity


From the beginning of A. K. Brown's and George Westinghouse's fortuitous partnerships with Tesla, the inventor was at work on other projects above and beyond the AC dynamo. Able to devote himself to the unhindered realization of his countless ideas, he would later recall these years of his life as "little short of continuous rapture."
Tesla's New York laboratory was a hive of continuous activity, with a small staff of assistants working solely from their employer's verbal instructions. His distaste for putting ideas down on paper, coupled with his tendency to get bored with a completed invention and move on to the next challenge, led Tesla to toss aside a large number of creations that he never even bothered to patent. Once, when exhaustion left Tesla in a state of temporary amnesia, his assistant filed for patents on many of the unregistered inventions on Tesla's behalf, and had the master sign the papers while still incapacitated. Tesla's shunning of documentation was of some benefit when fire destroyed the lab in 1895, right after the success at Niagara. The loss was a setback, but not a catastrophic one, since the most valuable of the laboratory's assets remained intact in Tesla's brain.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Nikola Tesla: The Genius Who Lit The World

This program reveals the discoveries of a forgotten genius, many of which went virtually unnoticed for nearly a century. Nikola Tesla is considered the father of our modern technological age and one of the most mysterious and controversial scientists in history. How did this obscure visionary from what is now Yugoslavia, lay the foundation for modern communications and energy research?

Nikola Tesla's contributions to science and technology include the invention of radio, television, radio-astronomy, remote control and robotics, radar, medical x-ray and the wireless transmission of electricity. Many of Nikola Tesla's inventions were and in some cases still are considered too revolutionary by government agencies and the power brokers of the time and are discussed in detail in this program.

Encyclopedia Britannica lists Nikola Tesla as one of the top ten most fascinating people in history. So why is he virtually unknown to the general public? This program is a penetrating study of the life and mind of a scientific superman who, against all odds, dedicated his life to the task of designing and improving technology for the service and advancement of humanity.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Nikola Tesla - The Forgotten Wizard


Nikola Tesla, who was born in Yugoslavia around 1856-1857, demonstrated the existence of Scalar Energy. Tesla, who became a US citizen in 1891 carried on James Clark Maxwells work and soon began to harness Scalar Energy without using any wires. Tesla referred to this energy as standing energy or universal waves.

Nikola Tesla: Death Ray

Nikola Tesla, one of the truly great inventors who celebrated his eighty-fourth birthday on July 10, tells the writer that he stands ready-to divulge to the United States Government the secret of his “teleforce,” with which, he said, airplane motors would be melted at a distance of 250 miles, so that an invisible Chinese Wall of Defense would be built around the country against any attempted attack by an enemy air force, no matter how large.
This “teleforce,” he said is based on an entirely new principle of physics that “no one has ever dreamed about,” different from the principle embodied in his inventions relating to the transmission of electrical power from a distance, for which he has received a number of basic patents.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Free Energy Blast From The Past!

This collection of Classic Energy Videos presents some of the most direct and blatant evidence of these proofs. Modern Physics has already been turned on its head, but you won't find out how on the Evening News. If you are interested in a sustainable energy future, than you owe it to yourself to find out everything that is already known. This collection of Classic Energy Videos is a great place to start.

Many of these films cost $30 or more when they were first released. Most have had extremely limited circulation. Taken together, they represent an astonishing archive. Now you can have them ALL in one package for one low price.

Learn why some people say "there is no ENERGY CRISIS!" If that's true, then what we really have is a SOCIAL CRISIS, where society is being held ransom by a Political and Financial Elite who have made it their policy to prevent the development of these discoveries. The only thing that we can do is educate ourselves and tell our friends!


You could be DOWNLOADING them in minutes Click Here!




Sunday, January 2, 2011

Nikola Tesla Quotes

"Let the future tell the truth, and evaluate each one according to his work and accomplishments. The present is theirs; the future, for which I have really worked, is mine.”

 “If Edison had a needle to find in a haystack, he would proceed at once with the diligence of the bee to examine straw after straw until he found the object of his search. I was a sorry witness of such doings, knowing that a little theory and calculation would have saved him ninety per cent of his labor.”

PRODIGAL GENIUS: The Life of Nikola Tesla - Book


 Even the gods of old, in the wildest imaginings of their worshipers, never undertook such gigantic tasks of world-wide dimension as those which Tesla attempted and accomplished.
-from Chapter One

First published in 1944 and long a favorite of Tesla fans, this is a definitive biography of the man without whom modern civilization would not exist.
 
Nikola Tesla, pioneer of electrical engineering, was a close friend of Pulitzer Prize-winning author O'Neill, and here, O'Neill captures the man as a scientist and as a public figure, exploring:
 
. how Tesla's father inspired his life in engineering
. why Tesla clung to his theories of electricity in the face of opposition
. how the shy but newly popular Tesla navigated the social life of New York in the gay 1890s
. Tesla's friendship with Mark Twain
. the story of Tesla's lost Nobel Prize
. Tesla's dabblings in the paranormal
. and much more.

The Secret of Nikola Tesla - The Movie



 All I can say is that this film mesmerized me not because it is the most polished motion picture film I have ever seen because it is not. What comes through is the absolute marvel of Tesla's inventive mind. This film has done well to possibly give me a lifelong interest in Tesla and leaves me wanting to read and find out so much more. The fact that there are some Hollywood lengends acting in this film makes it all the more curious and desireable to see. If Tesla interests you at all this is a must see film.  

Saturday, January 1, 2011

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 10 of 10

In 1937 Tesla presented a plan to the Amtorg Trading Corporation, an alleged Soviet arms front based in New York City. Two years later, after completing stage one of the plan and testing the device in the USSR, Tesla was sent a check for $25,000. The system required a series of power plants along the country’s coast to scan for enemy aircraft. The beam was projected in a straight line and was effective up to 200 miles, the same distance of the curvature of the Earth. Tesla offered peace time applications for the beam as well such as transmitting power over great distances, and radical suggestions such as heating the upper atmosphere to provide a man-made aurora borealis.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 9

Despite his growing eccentricity, he was still flooded with amazing ideas and at the beginning of World War I he described yet another idea that was too far ahead of its time. A system that would used high-frequency radio waves and reflect of the hulls of vessels in the area that could be read off a florescent screen. We know know this system as radar. He was also the first to warn of an era of flying vehicles without wings that would be remotely controlled to land with an explosive device on an unexpected enemy, also known as a torpedo.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 8

Back in New York, Tesla wrote an excellent article for Century Magazine where he detailed his futuristic vision. He described tapping the Sun’s energy with an antenna, he wrote how it would be possible to control the weather with electrical energy, and he explained how war would be impossible through the use of machines. Most importantly he proposed a global system of wireless communications, which to most was unimaginable, but Tesla as always, was not to be underestimated.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 7

Leonard E. Curtis, a patent lawyer and friend of Teslas’ offered to find land and provide power from the El Paso Power Company of Colorado Springs for his research. Also coming on board with monetary backing was Colonel John Jacob Astor with a $30,000 investment. Tesla immediately packed for Colorado and began construction on his new lab near Pikes Peak. Several of his assistants traveled with him but were not fully informed of Tesla’s intentions. In May of 1899 Tesla inspected the area and told reporters that he planned on sending a radio signal from Pikes Peak to Paris, without any other information given to the public, Tesla went to work.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 6

A 1898 electric exhibition in the newly constructed Madison Square Gardens would become the stage for Tesla to show the potential for his wireless transmission of energy (radio). The audience was not ready for what they would see, as with many of Tesla’s inventions, it was so far ahead of its time onlookers didn’t know how to react. What they saw was the world’s first radio-controlled vessel, Tesla had built a iron-hulled boat that sat in an indoor pond for the display. Tesla explained that the boat was controlled by what he called, “a borrowed mind.” Cleverly, he put the audience at ease by asking the boat questions such as “What is the cube root of 64?” lights on the boat flashed four times. At a time when only a small group of people knew about radio waves, it was assumed that Tesla was controlling the vessel with his mind. Though actually the boat was outfitted with a receiver and Tesla used a small box with control levers that send the signals.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 5

After the success of the Niagara project, Tesla had time for his favorite venture, experimentation. Back in his New York City lab, Tesla dove head first into exploring high-frequency electricity as a number of recent breakthroughs had opened doors to the high-frequency phenomenon. In 1873 English experiments proved mathematically that light was electromagnetic radiation, ergo; light was electricity, vibrating at very high frequencies. In 1888, Heinrich Hertz of Germany confirmed through experimentation that an electric spark generates electromagnetic waves into space. These discoveries identified radio waves and opened a new chapter in what was possible with electricity.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 4

On the night of May 1, 1893 President Grover Cleveland pushed a button that would illuminate a hundred thousand incandescent lamps. This “City of Lights” as it was called, was the work of Tesla, Westinghouse, and 12 thousand-horsepower AC generation units that were stored in the Hall of Machinery. Meanwhile, in the Great Hall of Electricity, Tesla’s polyphase power generation and transmission AC system was proudly displayed for all to see. More than 27 million people saw first hand what would become the future of power in not only America, but the World. From the end of the fair forward 80% of all electrical devices ordered in America were for alternating current, Tesla’s dream became a reality.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 3

Tesla dug ditches to live as word spread of his unusual talents and eventually offers came in for Tesla to improve the current arc lighting methods. Though not the chance he had hoped for, investors agreed to fund the Tesla Electric Light Company and immediately he went to work to invent an arc lamp that would be beautiful and efficient. Tesla was never concerned with his own financial gain and sadly never reaped the monetary benefits of his inventions.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 2

Nikola Tesla arrived in New York City when he was 28 and was appalled to discover America was mechanical and unattractive. Tesla reported home that America was centuries behind Europe in civilization and etiquette. Tesla arrived to America with four cents, sketches for a flying machine and an introduction letter from Charles Batchelor who was a European business colleague of Edison’s.

The Brilliance of Nikola Tesla – Part 1

Nikola Tesla was born in 1856 to his father Milutin and mother Djuka who were both Serbian by birth. Tesla’s father was an Orthodox priest, gifted writer and poet. Much of Tesla’s childhood was spent reading in his father’s extensive library. His mother was a very hard working woman who often invented appliances to help around the farm, one being a mechanical eggbeater. Later Nikola would attribute all his inventive abilities to his mother.