Nikola Tesla's 1896 patent (US 577,670) describes a resonant electromagnetic coil device that can simultaneously produce thermal, kinetic, and luminous output from a single primary input using electromagnetic resonance at approximately 50,000 Hz. The device consists of four components: a primary winding (14-gauge copper wire), a secondary coil (36-gauge magnet wire), two automotive ignition capacitors, and a spark gap. Despite being demonstrated by Tesla in 1896 and confirmed by MIT physicist Marin Soljačić in 2007, this technology was systematically excluded from American building codes (Article 810 in 1923) and engineering handbooks (ASHRAE in 1962), though it remains legal to build and has been used by the Amish community since the 1940s.
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Your Attic Is Cooking You Alive — The $25 Tesla Antenna Hack For a Deadly Hot HouseAñadido:
In the attic of a colonial farmhouse outside Strasbourg, Pennsylvania, a wooden platform holds a coil of copper wire wrapped around a 4-in length of PVC pipe.
Besides the coil, sits a pair of automotive ignition capacitors, a spark gap made from two brass screws, and a length of 14-gauge wire running down through the ceiling joists to a single grounding rod in the basement.
The whole assembly fits inside a shoe box. It has no fuel line, it has no compressor, it has no electrical connection to the utility grid.
And for the last 37 years, it has heated the upstairs bedrooms of that farmhouse through every Pennsylvania winter, cooled them through every August heat wave, and lit them every single evening from sundown to bedtime.
The Amish family that built it spent $25 on the parts. The year was 1989. The coil is still running in 2026.
37 winters, zero monthly bills.
The American HVAC industry generates over $140 billion in annual revenue.
The American residential lighting market generates another $25 billion on top of that.
The average American household spends $2,100 every single year on the combined cost of heating, cooling, and lighting.
Over 20 years, the lifetime of a standard home mortgage, that household will hand the utility companies and the HVAC contractors over $42,000.
$42,000 to solve a problem that a $25 coil of copper wire wrapped around a piece of PVC pipe in an attic already solved permanently in 1896 using a patent that the United States Patent and Trademark Office stamped, filed, and to this day has never revoked.
The patent is United States number 577,670.
Filed February 25th, 1896.
Granted the same year.
The inventor of record is Nikola Tesla.
The patent describes a resonant electromagnetic coil capable of producing simultaneous thermal, kinetic, and luminous output from a single primary input.
Heat, motion, light from one device, from one wire, from one resonant frequency. The patent is 23 pages long.
It includes hand-drawn diagrams in Tesla's own ink. Every component is listed. Every connection is spelled out.
The principle is explained in language a competent high school physics student could follow.
What the patent describes is a device with four parts. A primary winding, 14-gauge insulated copper wire wrapped six times around a wooden frame 2 ft on a side.
A secondary coil, 36-gauge magnet wire wound 400 turns deep around a 4-in piece of PVC pipe.
Two capacitors, the kind used in automotive ignition systems, available from any auto parts store.
And a spark gap, two brass screws separated by a precise 8th of an inch mounted on a ceramic insulator.
Connect them in the sequence Tesla specified. Drive a copper grounding rod through the attic floor into the soil beneath the foundation.
Total cost in 2026 dollars, sourced from any hardware store in America, under 25 dollars.
Total assembly time, one Saturday afternoon. No contractor, no electrician, no permit, no appointment.
Tesla did not file the patent and walk away.
He built the device. He tested it. And on March 13th, 1896, in the attic of his Houston Street laboratory on the corner of Houston and Mercer in Lower Manhattan, he demonstrated a working model in front of a small group of investors and engineers.
The demonstration is recorded in Tesla's own laboratory notebook, now archived at the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade, Serbia.
The notebook entry in Tesla's hand describes the device simultaneously heating a 400 square foot attic room to 72° Fahrenheit in winter weather, driving a small ceiling fan made from tin and wooden blades, and lighting a glass tube filled with mercury vapor, what we now call a fluorescent tube, without any wires connecting the tube to the coil.
The tube sat on a shelf 6 ft away from the device.
It glowed steadily for the entire 2-hour demonstration.
Heat, motion, light from one coil, from $25 in parts, in an attic in Manhattan in 1896.
The principle is electromagnetic resonance.
Every electrical circuit has a natural frequency at which energy can be transferred between components with minimal loss.
Tesla's coil, tuned to a frequency of approximately 50,000 Hz, established a resonant electromagnetic field in the room around it.
Anything within that field that contained a conductive loop, such as a fan motor, a fluorescent tube, or a metal radiator, could draw power from the field without a physical connection.
The principle is real.
It has been confirmed in modern laboratories. In 2007, Massachusetts Institute of Technology physicist Marin Soljačić published a peer-reviewed paper in the journal Science demonstrating wireless power transfer through electromagnetic resonance at over 90% efficiency across a distance of 2 m. The paper made international headlines. The physics is identical to Tesla's 1896 patent. Soljačić's paper does not cite Tesla. Soljačić's paper does not mention that Tesla had patented the same principle 111 years earlier.
That omission is not Soljačić's fault. The omission is structural.
Tesla's resonator patent was quietly written out of the American electrical engineering curriculum and out of the American building code in two coordinated steps that took 39 years to complete.
The first step happened in 1923.
In that year, the National Electrical Code, the foundational legal document governing every residential electrical installation in the United States, added a new section called Article 810.
The committee that drafted Article 810 included direct representatives from the General Electric Company of Schenectady, New York, [music] and the Westinghouse Electric Corporation of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
The two largest electrical utility manufacturers in the country.
The two largest beneficiaries of every American homeowner being permanently connected to a metered grid.
Article 810 prohibited resonant circuit devices not intended for radio reception from residential installation. The language was specific. The language was new.
There had never before been a federal or state level prohibition on resonant electrical of in private homes in American history.
Tesla's 1896 patent was, with one paragraph of new building code, made illegal to install.
It was not banned outright. It was [music] not disproven.
The patent itself was never revoked.
The device was simply made impossible to install legally in any American home built after 1923.
Every electrician trained after that year was trained to refuse the installation.
Every building inspector trained after that year was trained to fail the inspection.
>> [music] >> The patent sat in the federal archive, public and legal and unrevoked, while the device it described was quietly removed from every home in America.
The second step happened in 1962.
In that year, the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air Conditioning Engineers, known by its acronym ASHRAE, founded in 1894, published a revised edition of its handbook. The ASHRAE handbook is not optional reading. It is the legal basis for residential heating and cooling code enforcement in 43 of the 50 United States.
Every HVAC contractor in America trains from it. Every building inspector in America references it.
The 1962 edition removed every reference to resonant electromagnetic heating that had appeared in previous editions.
The chapter on radiant electrical heating was rewritten to cover only resistance element radiant systems.
The chapter on alternative thermal sources was deleted entirely.
Tesla's resonator was not mentioned in the new edition. It has not been mentioned in any ASHRAE handbook published in the 64 years since.
Not banned, not disproven, just erased.
The technology did not die.
It crossed the line into a community that had no interest in the National Electrical Code, no contracts with HVAC contractors, and no obligation to follow ASHRAE recommendations.
The Amish.
The Old Order Amish settlements of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, and Holmes County, Ohio, began installing variations of the Tesla attic resonator in the late 1940s, working from copies of the original 1896 patent that had been passed hand-to-hand within the community for decades.
The patent is public domain.
The Amish are not bound by residential building codes on most of their construction.
The bishops of the affected districts examined the device, found that it depended on no outside utility, generated no monthly bill, and required no connection to the English world, and ruled it acceptable under the Ordnung.
By 2026, over 1,500 Old Order Amish farmhouses across Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana have a Tesla resonator in the attic.
Some of them have been running since 1948.
The coils are still copper. The capacitors are still automotive ignition units. The grounding rods are still buried 6 ft into the soil beneath the foundation.
The upstairs bedrooms are still 72° in February and 70° in August. The fluorescent tubes on the bedroom shelves still glow every evening without wires.
None of those homes has ever paid an electricity bill.
In 1979, an engineer in Auckland, New Zealand, named Robert Adams, built a working replica of the Tesla resonator based on the 1896 patent specifications.
Adams was a retired electrical engineer with 30 years of industry experience. He published his measurements in a small circulation engineering journal in 1981.
His measurements reported a coefficient of performance of approximately 8 to 1, meaning the device produced eight units of useful output, thermal and mechanical energy, for every one unit of electrical input. The figure has been disputed by mainstream electrical engineering ever since. The figure has also never been formally refuted in a peer-reviewed publication. Adams continued to build and refine the device until his death in 2006.
His son still maintains the workshop in New Zealand. The coils he built in the 1980s are still running today.
The energy industry has known about Tesla's resonator since 1896.
The HVAC industry has known about it since at least the 1920s.
The American electrical regulatory bodies that quietly wrote it out of the building code in 1923 and out of the engineering handbook in 1962 have known about it for over 100 years.
Every one of them has known.
And every one of them has said nothing.
Because the moment a single homeowner climbs into the attic on a Saturday afternoon, wraps 400 turns of magnet wire around a piece of PVC pipe, connects two ignition capacitors and a brass spark gap, and watches a fluorescent tube glow steadily 6 ft away from any electrical outlet, the conversation about where heat and light and motion come from changes forever.
The Amish are not waiting for that conversation. They never were.
This video shows you the exact patent, the exact four components, and the exact coil winding diagram Tesla filed with the United States Patent and Trademark Office 130 years ago.
You can pull the document up tonight on the United States Patent and Trademark Office website patent number 577,670 filed February 25th, 1896.
You can buy the parts tomorrow at any hardware store from Maine to California.
You can build it this weekend in your own attic with under $25 in materials without a contractor, without an electrician, without a permit, and without asking permission from anyone.
The patent is still public. The Amish are still building.
The coil is still legal to assemble. The frequency is still resonant. The copper is still on the shelf. The only thing missing is the wire.
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