 dave Premium,MVM join:2000-05-04 not in ohio
·Verizon Online DSL
·Verizon FIOS
1 edit | reply to john1290 Re: It's a joke, people.
said by john1290 :said by DaneJasper :You can't transmit a signal via gas. What're you going to do, make the gas wiggle in the pipe? They're not using gas, they're using the iron PIPE. If you read what they say, it's obviously not the pipe, and it's obviously wireless. I'm no radio engineer, but it sounds like the pipe acts as a waveguide.
Equally obviously, the gas is not essential to the wireless propagation, but nevertheless the signal does travel through the gas. -- back from the shadows again... |
|
  Fatal vector
@aol.com | It's what is known in radio as a Waveguide. Mostly used at microwave frequencies. |
|
 jimbo2150
join:2004-05-10 Youngstown, OH
| reply to dave Reading their FAQ it says that metal or plastic pipe can be used, and that the signal can get through as long as the gas is not cut off (completely) by a valve. This would suggest that they are sending the signal 'through' the gas itself and using the pipe mearely as a containment vessel so that the signal does not leak out (like light bouncing though a fiber line). -- - "Techie" Jim |
|