Directional Wireless Energy Using Water

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  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2020
  • The holy grail of electricity, is directional wireless power. It's the ability to beam power wirelessly to a specific place only. Unfortunately, wave physics doesn't quite work that way. However, I recently stumbled across a pseudo-solution to transmitting wireless energy to specific locations. It may not be efficient, nor practical, but it works! Should be a world-first! #Seattle #wireless
    NOTE: do not build something like this if you are not familiar with high frequency electricity, or if you have a pacemaker.
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    DO NOT attempt to repeat my demonstrations, without prior knowledge of electrical or fire safety. I do not hold responsibility or liability for damage or injury incurred by copying results seen in my videos. High voltage is not for those new to electricity!
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Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @PlasmaChannel
    @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад +134

    *If you enjoyed this video, don't forget to subscribe. This is just the beginning of my water + high voltage videos!*

    • @PlanetshashKing
      @PlanetshashKing 4 года назад +4

      i would love the Capacitative Cafe to charge my phone as i drink coffee!

    • @Inadvisablescience
      @Inadvisablescience 4 года назад +8

      Awesome! I am curious that, since Hydrogen gas is formed, is there any way to safely harness and possibly, use that Hydrogen?

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад +6

      @@Inadvisablescience Great question. Yes, small valves could be used to let the gas out.

    • @Inadvisablescience
      @Inadvisablescience 4 года назад +4

      @@PlasmaChannel sounds like a great outdoor project!

    • @chrisd6709
      @chrisd6709 4 года назад +2

      Great vid! Subscribed. Could the water under the pyramids and electromagnetic energy found in them be related to the effect?

  • @integza
    @integza 4 года назад +189

    Pretty awesome project Jay but I'm not drinking water in your house after seeing this. Beer it is !

    • @starshiphopper7044
      @starshiphopper7044 4 года назад

      😂😂

    • @nathantschetter1264
      @nathantschetter1264 4 года назад +7

      Good choice, his water probably turns people into light bulbs, all jokes aside, I'm glad i watched it

    • @RajuSingh-kq3lh
      @RajuSingh-kq3lh 3 года назад

      🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @GiffysChannel
      @GiffysChannel 3 года назад +1

      I am so not surprised to see a comment from you here. Tesla fans for the win.

    • @fxphenix5162
      @fxphenix5162 3 года назад

      You are the funniest Person on RUclips Integza!! Hahaha 🤣

  • @toasega
    @toasega 3 года назад +43

    "You like living, right?"
    When I'm not at work? Sure, it's fine, I guess.

  • @Jakeoni
    @Jakeoni 4 года назад +77

    The US Navy used water as a transmition antenna about 15 years ago.

  • @manishnebhani6657
    @manishnebhani6657 4 года назад +288

    This system has alot of potential (pun intended).

    • @mohd.bilal__
      @mohd.bilal__ 4 года назад +7

      More like it has a lot of spark😂

    • @ChittiNAIDU2021
      @ChittiNAIDU2021 4 года назад +4

      Yes, we must support his innovation. It may not a useful now, then it is useful.

    • @sugumaranb4650
      @sugumaranb4650 4 года назад

      It's used high voltage

    • @veritasvalere88
      @veritasvalere88 4 года назад

      Is water conductor or an isolator? It’s the system Of which you didn’t invent!

    • @ValeyardStudios
      @ValeyardStudios 4 года назад +1

      @@veritasvalere88 water is non conductive at LOW voltage. At high voltage it can be very conductive.

  • @LoadBearingSolder
    @LoadBearingSolder 4 года назад +129

    Idea: WIRELESS POWER SHOWER

    • @grayeaglej
      @grayeaglej 4 года назад +16

      That would certainly Jolt you awake in the morning. O.o

    • @MrGrinny
      @MrGrinny 4 года назад +5

      Hmm Kind of reminds me of the suiside showers in Brazil, open high voltage coil heating water going trough a plastic showerhead, tingly, lol.

    • @IamJiva
      @IamJiva 4 года назад

      only God have cordless shower

    • @vegahimsa3057
      @vegahimsa3057 4 года назад +3

      How refreshing! How recharging!

    • @Eyes0penNoFear
      @Eyes0penNoFear 4 года назад +1

      @@MrGrinny a friend of mine had to karate kick his tall roommate out of one of those showers.. fortunately they both survived!

  • @Azerath2
    @Azerath2 4 года назад +1

    if you watch this video you basically got one step closer to understanding how the pyramids in egypt worked. good job. keep going.

  • @andrewgreen2626
    @andrewgreen2626 4 года назад +45

    I would like to see you do another version with vinyl tubing formed into a secondary and primary coil for a functional water Tesla Coil.

    • @nathantschetter1264
      @nathantschetter1264 3 года назад +1

      Interesting Idea

    • @birdofparadise1453
      @birdofparadise1453 2 года назад +2

      My theory is that Angkor wat was a giant Tesla coil + wireless power plant using moats. Look up the design

    • @liquidluck711
      @liquidluck711 Год назад

      @@birdofparadise1453 could you elaborate further?

    • @birdofparadise1453
      @birdofparadise1453 Год назад

      @@liquidluck711 ruclips.net/video/wO5rowQ4dzw/видео.html he’s an amateur archaeologist. He covers this topic in some of his videos

  • @rakeday1726
    @rakeday1726 4 года назад +224

    Wireless energy! See? We replaced all those messy wires with hoses filled with water!

    • @switchjim
      @switchjim 4 года назад +7

      now it is just like the internet, a bunch of tubes! (anybody still remember that reference?)

    • @mundymorningreport3137
      @mundymorningreport3137 4 года назад +3

      Everything you need to clean up is at hand.

    • @DunnickFayuro
      @DunnickFayuro 4 года назад +4

      @@davewilliam576 Or sanitizing you...

    • @robmarrin6720
      @robmarrin6720 4 года назад +5

      Now when you drill through the flooring you can get electrocuted so you won't have to worry about the insurance claim 😂👍

    • @crskub
      @crskub 4 года назад +1

      @@switchjim me

  • @siwel060lewis6
    @siwel060lewis6 4 года назад +83

    This is the kinda thing that the people who made Back To The Future had in mind

  • @lightbearer3643
    @lightbearer3643 4 года назад +2

    Love these concepts, free lights, power, it's all very cool thank you. Your a clever guy!

  • @muhammadkevina1505
    @muhammadkevina1505 3 года назад +1

    wow, this video is amazing, I believe if we come together, research together, and trying to solve every shortcoming, this system could be applicable. If you notice, the sophisticated technologies which we have experienced were actually coming from simple ideas and not so modern relative to our time.
    This is the first video I have watched and this channel totally well deserved to be subscribed.

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  3 года назад

      I am honored to have earned your subscription. I pump out videos every two or three weeks - always on Fridays.

  • @TheRythimMan
    @TheRythimMan 4 года назад +13

    I love seeing cool stuff like this. It would be very interesting to see this improved and put to practical use.

  • @Scrogan
    @Scrogan 3 года назад +5

    When you mentioned “directional” I was envisioning some sort of focused RF energy transfer. As usual, direct capacitive (or inductive) energy transfer drops off with the cube of the distance, while EM waves drop off with the square, meaning you’ve already got a system inherently worse at long ranges, but those are ranges with respect to the size of the radiating element. So in a situation where the capacitive radiator is larger than the distance it is away from the device to be powered, you could have a comparatively high power flow. Of course, there are potential concerns with applying strong electric fields across human beings, and your whole system would lose energy the more coupling there is from the radiator directly to ground, so I couldn’t see it being used outside.
    I don’t think it’s possible to radiate an electric field in such a way that it focuses on a particular point, but considering the frequencies are only in the kHz range, it’s possible to build a phased array to test it without too much difficulty. A 3x3 square of emitters controlled independently by an MCU (or maybe a few clock generators like si5153s) would be a relatively simple proof of concept, and would allow an easy comparison to no phase shifting. Maybe there’s some analog way of handling the phase shifts automatically, but I can’t think of one.
    But using plastic valves to turn on and off high-voltage signals or power? That’s actually quite a practical sounding idea. To get sufficient separation to prevent dielectric breakdown, you’d need a switch that moves the contacts far away, and also prevents arcs from building and pitting the electrodes. But a plastic valve doesn’t really have those issues, besides whatever tiny leakage current it has. Maybe dunking a common mechanical toggle switch in mineral oil would be a good method, but I wonder if the 2mm or so of oil would be better than the 10+mm of a ball valve.

    • @YodaWhat
      @YodaWhat 4 месяца назад

      >Maybe there’s some analog way of handling the phase shifts automatically, but I can’t think of one.<
      How about Analog Delay Lines? Phase Shift Oscillators? Note that *the directionality of a Phased Array varies as the **_square of the number of array elements._*

  • @akharshatan
    @akharshatan 4 года назад

    Amazing idea ! And ! Extravagantly explained ! Best of luck for the future !

  • @iamtsavah6680
    @iamtsavah6680 3 года назад

    This channel should be shared nonstop🙏🏽

  • @MrDeathray117
    @MrDeathray117 4 года назад +158

    I wonder if this is why Tesla's wardenclyffe tower had a central ground rod that ran through the water table?

    • @switchjim
      @switchjim 4 года назад +27

      If you look up AM radio, back in the day, studio could be in town, but the transmitting antenna was ideally located on marsh land, to make a more effective ground plane

    • @Jkirk3279
      @Jkirk3279 4 года назад +12

      Sigh.
      No.
      Tesla believed in the Ether, and that he could transmit power through the EARTH.

    • @switchjim
      @switchjim 4 года назад +23

      @@Jkirk3279 why the sigh? what do you believe, pertaining to 'ether', 'power through earth' or the original question about the wet ground ... you didn't actually explain anything

    • @MrDeathray117
      @MrDeathray117 4 года назад +14

      @@Jkirk3279 well plasma channel shower that water aids in transmitting power wirelessly, so I don't think that rules out Tesla using the water table and aquifers to aid in the transmission. However Tesla did say and believe in some wacky stuff, so while he may not have understood exactly why certain things happened, I don't think it rules out the possibility that he was utilizing groundwater.

    • @wallyworld817
      @wallyworld817 4 года назад

      @@Jkirk3279 and the atmosphere tundiskey event. Can't say for certain it's quite the coincidence if nothing else 🤔.

  • @imanactualduckneck1668
    @imanactualduckneck1668 4 года назад +4

    This is a very interesting concept. I love that you are always coming up with new ways to do things! Maybe one day you will come up with the next big thing in science. And maybe one day someone will look back on your research and use it to do something great!

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад +3

      That would be cool, truly. Its really my hope to inspire those who have more resources than me, to do something. One day i'd like to have the resources to enact the change I want to see, but for now, i'm hoping to inspire those who have the resources to act. Thanks for your compliments!

    • @pbat118
      @pbat118 4 года назад

      At the end of the day get onto indigogo fast and make it happen before it gets stolen now ppl invest in u not ypur idea but your enthusiasm so hurryup and make happen

  • @Goldindollar
    @Goldindollar 4 года назад

    Very nice indeed ! This should be used worlwide,and immediately! You did a great job capturing my attention 😁please keep up the great work.. your my favorite guy to watch.

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад

      Thank you very much! I am glad you enjoyed

  • @biharibhaitechnical2316
    @biharibhaitechnical2316 3 года назад +1

    Your experiments are awesome.👏👏👏

  • @NastySasquatch
    @NastySasquatch 3 года назад +7

    Seems fairly applicable in a small robotic platform powering and cooling systems with the same system. I'd love to see more on this with some info on what heat does to the system.

  • @danielarochovlogs1995
    @danielarochovlogs1995 4 года назад +4

    Phenomenal! I'd love to see more non-physical means of wireless energy transfer. Even though water is not non-physical I think it's a step in the right direction to moving toward more efficient and free forms of energy

  • @7kevinel209
    @7kevinel209 4 года назад

    Wow. Thanks for your works!

  • @thirdplanetman9468
    @thirdplanetman9468 3 года назад +1

    This was incredible! Thank you so much !

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  3 года назад +1

      I am glad you enjoyed it! It’s really amazing in person!

    • @thirdplanetman9468
      @thirdplanetman9468 3 года назад

      @@PlasmaChannelthanks so much for your reply!,
      I have some questions if you get the time to reply 😊
      I am not considering trying this at home recklessly, I however would love to get started on understanding the safety precautions you took and challenges you came across during making this, as well as what kind of electrical setup you are using.
      As in how does the electricity interface with the water, and what kind of voltages to amperage are you running? Does it need to be stepped up so that the energy output is at a median what you need it to be, or is it litterally, voltage in is what you get in terms of voltage out.
      Does it fry phones/other tech when its on and they are in the room?
      Or Does it jam your signal?
      Thanks again for the great video!!
      You are awesome !

  • @Darkev77
    @Darkev77 4 года назад +8

    This is absolutely amazing and stunning! So many questions going through my head, like: How efficient is this system? (How much energy is being lost compared to conventional wire transfer). Is it dangerous to humans nearby this AC high voltage source?

  • @theggodmovicious1729
    @theggodmovicious1729 4 года назад +3

    This is genius good work great video good upload I appreciate it keep going this is the future it's these type of ideas that pave the way I appreciate you thank you blessings to you and yours💪🔛💯

  • @thomascorbett2936
    @thomascorbett2936 4 года назад

    Very clever and creative, thinking outside the box, I'm impressed.

  • @cccarter9858
    @cccarter9858 3 года назад +1

    There is water and oil in a transformers and this is working, so now they just have to find a way to charge us to make their pockets fat. Great video. Thumbs up.

  • @Healitnow
    @Healitnow 4 года назад +30

    Great idea till you spring a leak.

  • @vojtakutilek5770
    @vojtakutilek5770 4 года назад +8

    Try make Dipole antenna with two hoses. It can even do bigger range of radiation?

  • @antoniospanayiotou8619
    @antoniospanayiotou8619 3 года назад

    Love your spirit of experimentation and joy of discovery!
    Water and graphene elements of Life!

  • @peterlo5900
    @peterlo5900 4 года назад

    Woow incredible! Had absolutely no idea that kind of system even existed. Good work.

  • @CrazyNerdInventor
    @CrazyNerdInventor 4 года назад +45

    The cfl stayed lit when you turned the valve off due to capacitive copping.

    • @xxportalxx.
      @xxportalxx. 4 года назад +7

      He may also be generating a fair bit of radiation with an oscillator connected to what are essentially antenna

    • @MB-st7be
      @MB-st7be 4 года назад +1

      @@xxportalxx. At those short distances that's the same thing; near field = capacitive coupling.

    • @jimprats4867
      @jimprats4867 4 года назад +5

      I think its because it was directly connected at the time to end caps, residual power leaking out. When they were not attached they powered off completely

    • @blackturbine
      @blackturbine 4 года назад

      It all makes sense now

    • @mrsc9282
      @mrsc9282 4 года назад +1

      There was residual power left in the ballast in the CFL. Enough to excite lazy flurons

  • @kulpritblk1578
    @kulpritblk1578 4 года назад +3

    Wireless transfer past/through the valves? Re: dim leaking?

  • @TheEngineeringDutchman
    @TheEngineeringDutchman 4 года назад

    Your video quality is amazing! Keep it up 💪

  • @jbertpana7012
    @jbertpana7012 3 года назад

    thanks for showing this kind of electricity transfer.. it answers my mind question..

  • @gtk3471
    @gtk3471 4 года назад +99

    Who tf dislikes a video like this? :/

    • @turritopsisdohrniii148
      @turritopsisdohrniii148 4 года назад +4

      They jealous, they didnt come up with it first

    • @russdill
      @russdill 4 года назад +6

      Anyone with electrical engineering knowledge. "Oooh, wires made of water, that's so special! No one realized water is a conductor before!"

    • @jackwelshans6229
      @jackwelshans6229 4 года назад +6

      A democratic protester No Doubt

    • @stellaq3306
      @stellaq3306 4 года назад +1

      gtk Wi-fi tech companies

    • @Stevemacleod58
      @Stevemacleod58 4 года назад

      The electric company

  • @TheTubejunky
    @TheTubejunky 4 года назад +52

    ElectroBoom episode coming up...I'm sure this would be interesting to him.

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад +16

      You should reach out to him and suggest it. He's very receptive to input.

    • @wallyworld817
      @wallyworld817 4 года назад +2

      Yes please do!

    • @lancemgy
      @lancemgy 4 года назад +4

      I'm sure ElectroBoom would wonder why such added complexity is warranted, when simple wires and switches would do the same thing but better, without all the mess and added danger. Kinda like normal antennas.

    • @user-vm1vt3je1i
      @user-vm1vt3je1i 4 года назад +5

      He can't shock himself with this method. Hahaha!

    • @rivergrrrl1256
      @rivergrrrl1256 4 года назад +5

      @@lancemgy airborn frequencies are interfering with navigation frequencies used by bees birds...ect. Test: receiver for base phone (short distance frequency phone) placed on beehive= no bees return home because frequency interfers with their navigation frequency.

  • @ShinyArjunSingh
    @ShinyArjunSingh 3 года назад

    wow man, made my life...
    nice one, subscribed...keep'em comin...

  • @RexTorres
    @RexTorres 3 года назад

    This channel is *_wicked cool_* ! Subscribed!

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  3 года назад +1

      Thanks Rex!!! Dont forget to ring the sub bell to be notified of all my new videos

  • @baleylavarta2573
    @baleylavarta2573 4 года назад +4

    What is the sodium concentration of the water?
    This has my mind bending previous barriers in projects of my own.
    Point on fact. Tap water is conductive. Distilled or purifier water is but much lower conduction great resistance. However adding sodium makes the water (any source) very conductive.

  • @larswigenius6510
    @larswigenius6510 4 года назад +18

    Water don't like sharp edges and straight lines when running.

    • @nicolascoquin7760
      @nicolascoquin7760 4 года назад +3

      I think for the sake of a proof of concept prototype, a simple design like this was enough. Could be interesting to see how to improve the system later on

    • @henrinaths1
      @henrinaths1 3 года назад

      @@nicolascoquin7760
      I would venture a suggestion to go along the Tesla conceptual intelligent path, it leads to further exploration of frequencies in the design.
      (The use of multi phase ac increases efficiency add triangulation in the soup mix and vola safe directional wireless energy.
      Oookkaa! my work is done here, I need a nap lol)

  • @rob9320
    @rob9320 4 года назад +1

    This is so awesome wow nice video man

  • @briancoles6616
    @briancoles6616 4 года назад

    Thanks very much for a very enlightening video ~~ just proves we live in a plasma world~~

  • @timovneerden
    @timovneerden 4 года назад +3

    So when do you plan to open that Capacitance Café ? I would love to come by and see my metalic spoon in my cup of tea have corona-glow, or have my hair stand right up the moment I walk in thanks to the huge Van Der Graafs in the corner :D

  • @BurkenProductions
    @BurkenProductions 4 года назад +13

    "This system it has some potential" haha no shit high voltage potential!! :) :) lol

  • @stevendavis6601
    @stevendavis6601 4 года назад

    Excellent, love it!

  • @rocketpoolpki
    @rocketpoolpki 4 года назад

    really cool man, super good demonstration

  • @boomyx_ytk3546
    @boomyx_ytk3546 4 года назад +9

    You could try to use other liquids like salt water or destilled or fluorescent liquids... but imagine sea water instead of copper cables 🧐

    • @zuproc
      @zuproc 4 года назад

      Imo distilled or Deionized water may not work

    • @boomyx_ytk3546
      @boomyx_ytk3546 4 года назад

      @@zuproc right... i forgot my fault :P

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад +2

      Correct, DI water likely would not work - no conduction when there are no ions

    • @mrjasonjneal
      @mrjasonjneal 4 года назад

      Ice

    • @mernok2001
      @mernok2001 4 года назад

      @@PlasmaChannel It would still conduct at high voltage.

  • @iant2064
    @iant2064 4 года назад +6

    Electrified water pipes, what could go wrong?

  • @jtpinion4294
    @jtpinion4294 4 года назад

    Looks really good man. Great concept and like it when people stretch the imagination to try and think outside the box. Reading comments here and knowledge I have acquired suggests that it may not be very efficient or practical yet, that doesn't mean it will never work efficiently it be practical one day. Keep playing, testing and investigating, for that is the true nature of science and innovation.

  • @orchidrain8236
    @orchidrain8236 4 года назад

    First video of yours I came across and wow! That is amazing! Liked and subscribed. Imagine the idea of a water powered wireless city! 💡🌃🤩

  • @switchjim
    @switchjim 4 года назад +5

    It looks so much like kirlian photography

  • @Nagol189
    @Nagol189 4 года назад +5

    This made me curious about the Egyptian hieroglyphs of their so called light bulbs. I am wondering with your experiment if this is more on the mark with what they used. It's just a thought, although I would like to look more into their technology hieroglyphs and the lay of the landscape in that time period.

  • @paulharriott7667
    @paulharriott7667 3 года назад

    Amazing never thought this was possible 😊

  • @luciferkhiljie
    @luciferkhiljie 3 года назад

    The fluorescent bulb kept glowing even after turning off the power source, which might be for capacitative coupling. Awesome video sir. A big fan of yours!!!

  • @ZoltanMagas3D
    @ZoltanMagas3D 4 года назад +7

    I love "Capacitance Cafe" - I want to be the first guest! :)

    • @versag3776
      @versag3776 3 года назад

      Don't fall into the tranquil stream

  • @mjk6618
    @mjk6618 4 года назад +9

    Dont forget: "Water HAS Memory!"
    We need to incorporate this fact when dealing with water as it also likens itself unto itself...
    It enjoys its own company dearly! 💕

    • @AuGrrr
      @AuGrrr 4 года назад

      You know it doesn't right?

    • @myhuman8Bmind
      @myhuman8Bmind 4 года назад

      elsa

    • @4amlab584
      @4amlab584 3 года назад

      you drink filtered reuse water from toilets, lets hope water dont have memory

    • @benbart5711
      @benbart5711 7 месяцев назад

      @@AuGrrr It SURE DOES HAVE MEMORY! what have you been reading the last 10 years?

    • @benbart5711
      @benbart5711 7 месяцев назад

      @@4amlab584 It SURE DOES HAVE MEMORY! what have you been reading the last 10 years?

  • @MrVvsb
    @MrVvsb 4 года назад +1

    Awesome stuff!

  • @ericweber8218
    @ericweber8218 3 года назад +1

    Man that's some seriously cosmic ambience. This stuff is so cool :) :)
    btw, inverse square law - applies to both gravity and electromagnetic attraction. Difference in formulas is like one letter ("big G" or something) - always thought that super interesting.
    love the videos!

  • @prakharmishra3000
    @prakharmishra3000 4 года назад +9

    Hey jay! Please try building a zvs tesla coil...

    • @snaj9989
      @snaj9989 4 года назад

      @Heads Mess Are ZVZ driver tesla coils are really that bad, can you explain which one is better.

    • @Ferraday
      @Ferraday 4 года назад +2

      Heads Mess I believe he meant using a zvs driver as a scaleable/adjustable high power high voltage source to create spark gap Tesla coils with

    • @terabyte7683
      @terabyte7683 4 года назад

      @Heads Mess if you use an old flyback without the internal diode then you can do some pretty cool stuff using a zvs driver, that's what I did because it was the cheapest way I could get decent high voltage, the wireless transmission I get from it in crazy

    • @paddy2661
      @paddy2661 4 года назад

      Two types of zvs one is induction 2 terminals for induction heating coil and a zvs bipolar 3 terminals out haven't tested 3 terminal unit yet . Jay used one in a previous video.
      Cheers

  • @PlasmaFreak
    @PlasmaFreak 4 года назад +33

    This is genius! Great work. How does different electrolytes affect the efficiency of transferring power? Oh, and would this work with distilled water which does not have impurities? I believe tap water is conductive due to impurities and minerals, but distilled water is not.

    • @waldovanderwesthuizen4557
      @waldovanderwesthuizen4557 4 года назад +10

      This will not work with distilled water...
      Water from a tap will act like a high voltage resistor...
      By adding salt you can tune the resistance of the electrolyte and create a custom high power resistor...
      Electrolyte resistors actually find use in industry...

    • @TheGoodS8n
      @TheGoodS8n 4 года назад +1

      i'd like to see one filled with mercury

    • @deltab9768
      @deltab9768 4 года назад +3

      I was thinking the same thing. Water has a tremendous dielectric constant. But I'd also imagine that the reactance between opposite ends of a pipe will be much higher than the resistance. A 1 cm length of tube 1 cm2 in cross section full of tap water will have a resistance of 20kohm at most.
      www.lenntech.com/applications/ultrapure/conductivity/water-conductivity.htm
      If water has a dielectric constant of 100, that same tube would have a capacitance end to end of maybe 9pf. At 1mhz, the reactance would be about 17kohm, so the displacement current and ionic current would be on the same order. For lower frequencies or higher dissolved solid content in the water, the ionic conductivity would exceed the capacitive displacement current.

    • @waldovanderwesthuizen4557
      @waldovanderwesthuizen4557 4 года назад

      @Heads Mess
      LOL 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂

    • @kreynolds1123
      @kreynolds1123 4 года назад +3

      @@waldovanderwesthuizen4557 stick 120vdc across distlled water, and your aware that little to no current will flow. Doing the same with 120vac on the other hand will have current flow through capative coupling rather than ionic flow.
      Pure water may not be conductive, but its water molecules are polar and easily rotated and their shape deformed in an electric field which is why it has a high dielectric constant.

  • @Moist_yet_Crispy
    @Moist_yet_Crispy 4 года назад

    my fav video so far!

  • @camelxravennova
    @camelxravennova 4 года назад

    I love you for this beautiful video

  • @martinbaxter2616
    @martinbaxter2616 4 года назад +8

    'Don't do this at home.' (turns off video, as the entire purpose of viewing is now moot)

  • @kirbaliscious
    @kirbaliscious 4 года назад +8

    He just demonstrated one way in which Qi functions in the human body.

  • @breakinghabits_II
    @breakinghabits_II 2 года назад

    I like the use of ‘shocking’ and ‘potential’ in this video…
    Nice work 😉

  • @ebaab9913
    @ebaab9913 3 года назад

    What I have experienced is that lightning travels among rivers. We used to deploy water level loggers along long (+ 10 km) stretches of a river to measure water surge travel times. The measurement sensors used a float on a stainless steel cable with opto-coupling via a plastic disk to measure the height changes. The logger was connected to the opto-coupler via a circuit inside a sealed metal box. So very well protected from any high voltage. What we found was that we would have a series of loggers blow up within a few seconds of each other, although they were kilometers apart. The data was written to EPROM so was unaffected by the damage, which often included the well protected front end circuits of the loggers.

  • @akshitchoudhary877
    @akshitchoudhary877 4 года назад +10

    This idea is really nice 😊
    but the only problem is it has very very very less efficiency so too much power wastage which is not a nice thing

    • @m3dasm
      @m3dasm 4 года назад

      Electroboom entered the chat 😂

    • @PerpetualMotor
      @PerpetualMotor 4 года назад

      That’s only if you consider it as a closed thermodynamic system. Water is very strange. Who knows what will happen when it becomes stressed with other natural forces like light, heat, vacuum, aeration, phase changes, etc. that can come from the environment. Keep an open (system) mind and not a closed (system) mind.

    • @DeepThinker193
      @DeepThinker193 4 года назад

      He just has to find a better more efficient material than water to perform the task.

  • @neologicalgamer3437
    @neologicalgamer3437 4 года назад +6

    WIRELESS ELECTRICITY WATER FOUNTAIN

  • @andreacarfagna1673
    @andreacarfagna1673 4 года назад +1

    Hello Jay and thank you for the great video.
    I think the valve doesn't shut down the light completely because the valves are designed for water or air pressure, not electrical isolation.
    Probably the closing part that rotates inside the valve should be either thicker or made of another material like glass.
    Greetings from Sardegna!

  • @sarbajitdas7659
    @sarbajitdas7659 4 года назад

    Great experimental set up

  • @adrielbasco5351
    @adrielbasco5351 4 года назад +6

    Boss: what’s the fault?
    Me: water leakage

  • @masteragario3335
    @masteragario3335 4 года назад +8

    The fact that you are still alive and breathing suggests to me that whilst very initeresting, this has minimal practical use.

  • @stevenacker6964
    @stevenacker6964 2 года назад

    I'm so glad I found this chanlle . Dose a good job explaining the science and the best thing no fake free energy b.s.

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  2 года назад

      Thank you Steven. Honored you enjoy my content. I have some epic content coming up.

  • @zachfox7771
    @zachfox7771 3 года назад +1

    Awesome!

  • @GarrettGrimes1661
    @GarrettGrimes1661 4 года назад +3

    Its can flow or it can crash. Be water my friends: by Bruce lee

  • @josebatista5188
    @josebatista5188 4 года назад +18

    I m dum, so I all I herd was "water power". Smash the energy cartel!

    • @SuperAWaC
      @SuperAWaC 3 года назад

      the energy cartel already uses water power you brainlet.

  • @ET2uscg
    @ET2uscg 3 года назад

    Excellent vid and work. I think the bulb stays barely lit due to a cap discharging or phosphorus still excited. This project has inspired me to get one of my old projects back out, a few years ago I was working with a 4KV low current transmitter that I made using a transformer that I found in a disposable camera that was powered by 6vdc, it was all over the tube at that time. I was using it to kill bacteria on my dishes and utensils. It worked great, the range was about 3ft but if I added metal pots in a line, I could get it to transfer power 6ft, that was the length of my counter, it should go further. It also could light an LED brightly if touching the metal.
    Now I am thinking of using water tubes to transfer the power out to my mailbox to power a light. Thanks for putting this out there for us. Heck ya.

  • @VitoVeccia
    @VitoVeccia 4 года назад

    This reminds me of the EMI problems that cars and various other electronics have. Hence the need for shielded circuitry. But I love the idea of using water to help with wireless power transfer.

  • @edward17829991
    @edward17829991 4 года назад +4

    The efficiency is really low.
    It's applicable only when the system is well isolated like the demo set-up you showed.

  • @3amali1
    @3amali1 4 года назад +4

    Jay, you are simply using water as an electrical conductor. Add some salt to your water and see the increase in brightness of those bulbs. The wireless aspect is just due to the combination of AC and being high voltage. It is an interesting idea, but water is certainly not an efficient conductor so don't take this too far. Keep up the good work.

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад

      I appreciate the compliments! What is strange, is that too conductive of water , I found, weakened the effect. I believe it is because the water was able to radiate power into the air more easily, so the power dissipated prior to reaching the light bulbs.

    • @3amali1
      @3amali1 4 года назад

      Interesting! To validate that theory, sticking a copper wire on the tube while being empty just to take its shape and power it from the same source should dissipate most of the power before reaching the light bulb, is that even possible? or this is a different phenomena to do with water being ionic conductor rather conventional electronic conductor? Thought provoking!

    • @danieljust295
      @danieljust295 4 года назад

      Ehab Saleh ايهاب صالح The effect has to be electrostatic. The water without salt is very bad conductor but it can be used as insulator in capacitor. Such system creates electric polarization which is electric field around the pipes. Low voltage bulbs can easily be excited be such electric field. This is definitely not power transfer system, it’s electrostatic system.

  • @CausticLemons7
    @CausticLemons7 3 года назад

    I was really hoping for wireless water but this is good too.

  • @rrbuda67
    @rrbuda67 3 года назад

    Amazing brotha!!!

  • @foxmulder4653
    @foxmulder4653 4 года назад +13

    Now replace a petrol engine with heavy duty magnets on a generator and we have free energy. Let's take down the energy supply companies

    • @Giveitallyougot
      @Giveitallyougot 3 года назад +2

      There's no such thing as free energy and never will be sadly....

    • @nathantschetter1264
      @nathantschetter1264 3 года назад +2

      Thats an idea that should work , because when they came out with neodimium magnets, they used them on air conditioners and cut power requirements to 1/3

  • @buddhikaruwan5708
    @buddhikaruwan5708 4 года назад

    Reminds Me About The Aqua Ducts Under The Great Pyramids Of Giza.... Thank You Soo Much For The Amazing Video....

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад

      My pleasure 😊This video was tons of fun to shoot. You should see this in person....its incredible.

  • @derekkelley7490
    @derekkelley7490 4 года назад

    fantastic! way to think outside the box

  • @3DSage
    @3DSage 4 года назад

    Very interesting! :)

  • @chasadisum
    @chasadisum 4 года назад

    Amazing demonstration...... ..I never thought like this...mind opening..👍🏅🤔

  • @bl8596
    @bl8596 3 года назад

    Great content!

  • @ApolloVR6
    @ApolloVR6 3 года назад

    Brilliant! Billy Carson talks about how the ancient Egyptians were very technologically advanced and had some really cool power tech. According to his research, they used underground water channels (under the giza pyramid) to gather static electricity and distribute it to nearby sites. Really amazing stuff

  • @rogerhargreaves2272
    @rogerhargreaves2272 4 года назад

    Epic Bro, capacitive coupling. Tesla is probably looking at your channel and vividly, happily & proudly thinking Yasssss! RgY from Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿. Keep safe dude. 👍💯

  • @solicitutoob
    @solicitutoob 4 года назад

    Very cool!

  • @613_gauravshashikantshinde8
    @613_gauravshashikantshinde8 4 года назад +1

    This was really awesome sir 👍

  • @shahiilshet8353
    @shahiilshet8353 3 года назад +1

    Nice work love your work

  • @jbocaneg17611
    @jbocaneg17611 3 года назад

    I'm guessing that there was some voltage left in the water but this is amazingly fantastic. I love the brook running café idea.

  • @PowerMechGuyTechMasterEarl
    @PowerMechGuyTechMasterEarl 4 года назад

    It's stuff like this that makes me want to be an inventor. There is so much potential laden within the elements.

    • @PlasmaChannel
      @PlasmaChannel  4 года назад +1

      Hi PowerMechGuy, thanks so much for the comment. That's why I do this channel. To show my passion, and try to inspire a global community of experimenters and inventors. A very famous scientist we all know once said, "man's grasp far exceeds his reach". Think about that for a second. It's inspiring.

  • @ronniet71
    @ronniet71 4 года назад

    Excellent my friend!!!

  • @I_am_an_OG
    @I_am_an_OG 4 года назад

    If only our eyes could see the magnificent world of energy. It would be spectacular.

  • @KristeeBee
    @KristeeBee 4 года назад

    I’m no expert but this sounds like a very advanced and valuable idea. Way of the future