AFAIK he lit the famous Crystal Palace Exhibition (1891 comes to mind but probably wrongly) completely wirelessly. Better than your average vapour-ware. Russell McMahon _____________________________ > I don't believe anyone understands it because it was "vaporware." >Towards the end of his life, Tesla seemed to do a lot of promotion of >stuff that didn't really exist. Communication with mars, etc. His >earlier inventions (3 phase power generation and distribution) are >certainly amazing. > I did an Alta Vista search on "Terrestrial Stationary Waves". An >interesting site (which may or may not have been written by Tesla) is at >http://members.aol.com/buckscopal/teslatoc.html > >Harold >(No Tesla expert, but I've read a couple books about him...) > >On Wed, 17 May 2000 13:06:18 -0400 Andrew Kunz >writes: >> I was just looking for water wheel plans (haven't found them yet, >> anybody got >> any for a 12-24" wheel that I can use to run a PIC project?) when I >> found this >> link: >> >> >> >http://sun.kent.wednet.edu/staff/trobinso/physicspages/Web/P6Phys/Tesla/T >ESLA.HTM >> >> Anybody understand the concept of "wireless tranmission of energy" >> that he >> discovered? >> >> Thanks. >> >> Andy > >________________________________________________________________ >YOU'RE PAYING TOO MUCH FOR THE INTERNET! >Juno now offers FREE Internet Access! >Try it today - there's no risk! For your FREE software, visit: >http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj. >