Look at Stubblefields wireless telephone, it was loops of wire at audio (not radio) frequencies and IMO worked better than conventional EM would consider possible.
The magnetic field caught a lift rather literally, indeed here are devices that can make rather impressive magnetic beams or in one case where a magnetic field was carried by the aetheric output of a Tesla Coil and conducted through the experimenters body. (This is how Tesla's transmission technology really worked) The same effect is seen with ground radio where is seems the EM gets a lift on subterranean currents. (Borderlands has some good experiments) R. Stiffler found the same effect where a pickup coil latched on to the transmitter and remained at the same strength even when drawing the pickup coil further away. You need very specific designs to make this work but it can be seen in most of the solid state FE devices, the are one way transformers where the primary is unaware the secondary is drawing power due to the distance (loose coupling) but due to the magnetic field from the primary getting a unidirectional lift on a stream of aether energy is induced in the secondary. Note: There are only 3 possibilities, a universal static aether/reference frame (quite impossible), Special Relativity which is illogical and experiments have contradicted and even Einstein rejected after proposing it when he said you're a fool if you don't believe in an aether and finally a dynamic aether which matter largely entrains. Resonance can help in creating an aetheric bridge between primary and secondary but if you want it to be Overunity you need the bridge to be unidirectional. Look into Earl Ammann if your interested in distant transmission of electrical energy. On 6/10/07, Robin van Spaandonk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In reply to Jeff Fink's message of Sat, 9 Jun 2007 07:00:25 -0400: Hi, [snip] >So, why can't people living within a few hundred feet of high voltage >transmission lines tap useful "free" power with a 60 Hz receiver circuit? [snip] Are you sure they can't? Regards, Robin van Spaandonk The shrub is a plant.