CADmancan said:
I believe its possbile but wanted to ask if its possible to light a single LED light by and RF signal if its strong enough. I know there are LED's that are as low as 3 milliwatt that could work. Thanks in advance.
I have 2 antennas on my roof, 1 is 75 feet of phone cable suspended about 4 feet from the roof top, the other is 75 feet of triple shielded coaxial cable with a '2nd controller RF dish remote box antenna" on the end as a cap.
The cable wire run antenna is of one 50 foot strip joined by a gold plated connector to another 50 foot strip but at the 75ft mark I ran both cables down into my room through the window.
The cable wire gets between 300mV and 500mV. The telephone wire gets from 80mV to 160mV. Both flux up and down constantly. Today I'm off to buy a solar powered yard light for the trickle charge battery components inside.
This is the setup I have:
1. 75ft antenna of phone line & coaxial cable on roof putting out 380mV to 660mV.
2. Connected antenna wire the L tip of a spark plug.
3. Copper of coaxial cable connected to the metal screw portion on other end of spark plug
4. Other end of that coaxial cable run into a ignition coil, the connection in the middle.
5. 2 coaxial cable copper insides connected to the + and - side terminals of the ignition coil run both to the + end of a trickle charge solar yard lamp battery.
6. Negative end of solar yard lamp battery connected to metal pole in ground by coaxial cable.
Optional:
7. 1KV to 3KV capacitor or single direction diode running from ground to antenna to prevent overcharging of system and route to ground to keep large charges from collection on antenna.
If this doesn't work tonight I'm thinking of designing a better antenna, an aluminum fence mesh wire coated in polyurethane paint or a long strip of aluminum foil between 2 sheets of wax paper or saran-wrap elevated a few feet away from the ground should make a much better antenna. Other options include balloons suspended by a short length of thin copper wire.
I've even considered one of those spinning aluminum attic vents suspended over the roof with PVC pipe inside that has a copper run inside of it. Wool or fur can be wrapped around the PVC pipe and tied to the spinning vent by fishing line so that it spins around the pipe creating a static charge that will transfer to the copper line and run down to charge the battery inside my room.
I'm thinking maybe a lot of charge is lost back out into the air through the antenna though. A round antenna atop a pole would be best but it has to be metal coated in plastic, so I'm at a dead end on how to find one of those for free or how to make one for cheap?
I'll keep you up-to-date on my progress...
Any more wild and crazy but cheap ideas to charge this up?
(I had junk cables laying round and a metal pipe for ground, plus a spark plug only cost 40 cent and the ignition coil was $14 or less on Amazon, I'm thinking the batteries will cost less than $4 tonight, making this a truly green energy project.)