Project Timmins Canada's Area 51 Of Tesla Experiments

1 year ago
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Project Timmins was an experiment that involved using Tesla wireless transmission systems to send electricity without wires from an abandoned mine shaft in Northern Ontario to anywhere in Canada. The experiment was conducted in the late 1970s with the help of engineers from three other companies and the National Research Council of Canada, national defense, and Hydro-Quebec. Over looked by Virginia University. The experiment was apparently successful, and Ontario Hydro office in Timmins was willing to supply 20 megawatts of power. However, the Toronto head office of Ontario Hydro refused to supply the electric power, even if it was paid for, due to various personal interests and investments. Simultaneously, The Soviets had used the regions near Timmins, Ontario, as a human experimental territory because they had a large spy network in this area. They used several earth transmitters to help control the direction of the flow of energy globally, kind of like a waveguide, with the help of top-secret plants like Dussehra ball, woodpecker, and under heart-like secret facilities. The Soviets preferred Tesla's art by having a large satellite in polar orbit to help control the standing wave pattern. On January 24, 1978, this powered Soviet satellite crashed near Timmins. Around the same time, the phenomenon of RF and light patterns has been reported and investigated around a key focused abandoned mine site near Timmins. This spy ring was then busted and broken up by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in February 1978, and 26 KGB agents operating out of the Russian embassy in Ottawa were also expelled from Canada. Project Timmins was apparently not fully functional at that time, probably for lack of funds, according to the documents and information available today. They claim to say note that at least one of the three monitored by pace networks of scientists and governments of Canada Russian Tesla magnifying transmitter facility complex is still intact on the ground after more than a decade of abandonment.

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