The Wikipedia article claims that only 3.6 MW, or 3,600,000 watts is being generated at HAARP.Judas Maccabeus wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 10:25 pmThe wattage of the transmitters are nothing special, but it is massive. So are some broadcast stations. It is mostly in the shortwave band, and Wolfman Jack had more wattage than they are using. Those Mexican stations ran 150 KW, rumor was you could hear him with your vacuum cleaner. Mostly, the magic there is in the receivers. Your AM station puts 50KW into the sky, and your international shortwave puts up to 1 MW into the air in the same frequencies. I used to listen to Radio Moscow in my basement, and I can still get Havana. Mostly, 41 and 49 meter bands, 5.9 to 7.45 MHz. Same kind of emissions this test emits.JohnHurt wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 8:45 pmHello Ned,NedFlanders wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2024 8:19 pm
Geo-engineering to manipulate weather not being used?
I guess you’ve never study into Nikolai Tesla and HAARP.
I understand that Wardenclyffe Tower would have been working in the same space as the Schumann resonances. The space between the ionosphere and the ground is a spherical wave guide that goes around the world. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schumann_resonances
Tesla said you could energize the ionosphere and then pull the energy from the ionosphere by floating a wire under a balloon.
HAARP operates in this same area between the ionosphere and the ground. By staggering the radio wave signals from all of the towers, they can "point" the waves to go in any direction around the world, using the spherical wave guide between the ground and ionosphere.
The Van Allen belts are somehow acting as a force field to deflect harmful subatomic particles from the sun and other places, causing the aurora borealis. These belts might be charged by the earth's rotating iron core. I understand HAARP can work in these areas too.
There is so much we don't understand about how the earth operates. That HAARP is being used to modify the weather makes a lot of sense. Why else would they build it?
Regardless, for some reason, the HAARP facility is pumping a LOT of energy into the sky, supposedly for "testing purposes only." They have been testing for a very long time.
HAARP is powered by huge natural gas reservoirs under the Alaskan soil that run generators to create a massive amount of electricity.
But HAARP isn't real, just like Chemtrails. Nothing to see here. Just testing purposes, like chemtrails are theoretical at best. Yeah, right.
Thanks for your input.
John
If you are worried about electromagnetic radiation, you could move to the Radio Quiet Zone. I have a friend that moved there to get away from electromagnetism. Of course, you could find some conspiracy there too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-freq ... t_overview
Then it tells you that there are 180 antennae:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-freq ... _operation
The antennae field looks like this:
So 3,600,000 watts divided by 180 equals 20,000 watts going into each antennae.
20,000 watts on a 240 volt circuit is only 83 amps.
Do these antennae look like they can only handle 20,000 watts before they fry, or are they engineered for 10 to 100 times that amount?
Not that the government would lie to us, or anything like that.