From mrbarton@ix.netcom.com Sat Dec  9 07:12 MST 1995
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Date: Sat, 9 Dec 1995 01:29:59 -0800
From: mrbarton@ix.netcom.com (Mark Barton)
Subject: Re: Sparking behavior and a magnifier question
To: tesla@grendel.objinc.com

You wrote: 
>

>Magnifier question(s):
>If I have a 1/4 wave secondary coil that resonates at frequency f, and 
wanted
>to use it in a magnifier setup, do I drive it at f, or f/2?  I thought 

>I heard that it was f/2 once from Richard Quick.

If the primary and extra coil oscillate at f, then the secondary should 
be quarter wave reseonant at a substantially higher frequency near BUT 
NOT EXACTLY EQUAL to 2f.  You do not want resonance effects from the 
secondary, only transformer action.

>
>The other question is: If a magnifier is basically a base driven 
resonator(?)
>and it is driven at a specific frequency that causes it to resonate,
>and a tesla tank circuit oscillates at a frequency, then why not make 
a 
>tank circuit and electrically connect it to the base of a secondary 
from 
>a 1/4 wave coil?  _____
>   ________      (_____)
>  |        |        3
> ===       @        3 
>  |___Z____|________3
>
>Z -- spark gap
>@ -- primary L
>=== -- primary C
>
>
>The only difference between this setup and another tesla setup is that
>the secondary is not nestled within the primary, but is a ways away.
>Assuming that the primary tank circuit is tuned to the correct 
frequency
>(see question 1), would you see any resonance or magnifier action?
>Actually, if I new the answer to 1, I could experiment on 2.
>
>Chip
>

The above will absolutely work.  The problem is the impedance of the 
primary circuit with component values we are used to is too low and 
would provide a bad match to the secondary.  It would require a very 
small cap and large primary coil to be a good match.  This creates the 
problem of how to get power into a small cap.  (Hmm, where have I heard 
that one before?).  Sharp thinkin' though.

Zap,
Mark



