The power plant at wardenclyffe tower was intended to help him prove the transmission aspect of the technology works. He had a silver diode at altitude and another buried deep underground. He pumped ultra high voltage electricity into the diodes and transmitted power through the ether along electromagnetic strata in the earth’s electric field.
The generator can be obviated if this setup is placed on an optimal location. Ley lines, in my view, describe where these optimal locations exist. The ancients also had knowledge of this and built their diode sets on such sites. The pyramids were one such diode set, it once had a golden cap at altitude, and it is likely the other golden diode remains buried deep beneath the pyramids. At this location, the earth’s electric field can be tapped into and no power plant is needed. This apparatus would transmit power through the ether and could be received by “baghdad batteries,” which otherwise make no sense. They couldn’t possibly have held enough charge to be remotely useful as batteries, but they didn’t need to hold a charge. The charge was constantly supplied by these ancient and ideally situated monuments.
The power plant at wardenclyffe tower was intended to help him prove the transmission aspect of the technology works. He had a silver diode at altitude and another buried deep underground. He pumped ultra high voltage electricity into the diodes and transmitted power through the ether along electromagnetic strata in the earth’s electric field.
The generator can be obviated if this setup is placed on an optimal location. Ley lines, in my view, describe where these optimal locations exist. The ancients also had knowledge of this and built their diode sets on such sites. The pyramids were one such diode set, it once had a golden cap at altitude, and it is likely the other golden diode remains buried deep beneath the pyramids. At this location, the earth’s electric field can be tapped into and no power plant is needed. This apparatus would transmit power through the ether and could be received by “baghdad batteries,” which otherwise make no sense. They couldn’t possibly have held enough charge to be remotely useful as batteries, but they didn’t need to hold a charge. The charge was constantly supplied by these ancient and ideally situated monuments.