With his newly created Tesla coils, the inventor soon discovered
that he could transmit and receive powerful radio signals when they were tuned to resonate
at the same frequency. When a coil is tuned to a signal of a particular frequency, it
literally magnifies the incoming electrical energy through resonant action. By early 1895,
he began experimentally monitoring the radio emissions of his high-frequency generators,
first picking up signals around New York City and later 30 miles up the Hudson River.
Tesla was ready to transmit a signal 50 miles to West Point, New York... But in that same
year, disaster struck. A building fire consumed Tesla's lab, destroying his work.
The timing could not have been worse. In England, a young Italian experimenter named
Guglielmo Marconi had been hard at work building a device for wireless telegraphy. The
young Marconi had taken out the first wireless telegraphy patent in England in 1896. His
device had only a two-circuit system, which some said could not transmit "across a
pond." Later Marconi set up long-distance demonstrations, using a Tesla oscillator to
transmit the signals across the English Channel. |
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Tesla
filed his own basic radio patent applications in 1897. They were granted in 1900.
Marconi's first patent application in America, filed on November 10, 1900, was turned
down. Marconi's revised applications over the next three years were repeatedly rejected
because of the priority of Tesla's patents.
The Patent Office made the following comment in 1903:
Many of the claims are not patentable over Tesla patent numbers 645,576 and
649,621, of record, the amendment to overcome said references as well as
Marconi's pretended ignorance of the nature of a "Tesla oscillator" being little
short of absurd... the term "Tesla oscillator" has become a household word on
both continents [Europe and North America].
But no patent is truly safe, as Tesla's career demonstrates. In 1900, the Marconi Wireless
Telegraph Company, Ltd. began thriving in the stock marketsdue primarily to
Marconi's family connections with English aristocracy. British Marconi stock soared from
$3 to $22 per share and the glamorous young Italian nobleman was internationally
acclaimed. Both Edison and Andrew Carnegie invested in Marconi and Edison became a
consulting engineer of American Marconi. Then, on December 12, 1901, Marconi for the first
time transmitted and received signals across the Atlantic Ocean.
Otis Pond, an engineer then working for Tesla, said, "Looks as if Marconi got the
jump on you." Tesla replied, "Marconi is a good fellow. Let him continue. He is
using seventeen of my patents."
But Tesla's calm confidence was shattered in 1904, when the U.S. Patent Office suddenly
and surprisingly reversed its previous decisions and gave Marconi a patent for the
invention of radio. The reasons for this have never been fully explained, but the powerful
financial backing for Marconi in the United States suggests one possible explanation.
Tesla was embroiled in other problems at the time, but when Marconi won the Nobel Prize in
1911, Tesla was furious. He sued the Marconi Company for infringement in 1915, but was in
no financial condition to litigate a case against a major corporation. It wasn't until
1943a few months after Tesla's death that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld
Tesla's radio patent number 645,576. The Court had a selfish reason for doing so. The
Marconi Company was suing the United States Government for use of its patents in World War
I. The Court simply avoided the action by restoring the priority of Tesla's patent over
Marconi.
http://www.pbs.org/tesla/ll/ll_whoradio.html |