Tag Archives: spark gap

Tesla coil for Physics Dept

University TCThe Physics Dept of the Uni of Western Australia had this Tesla coil which dates back 40 years. Made in Germany according to the nameplate. Apparently runs at 1 MHz but lots of problems with the Leyden jar caps. It still not functioning despite various attempts so despite the historical interest it was felt a new one was needed of more modern design. So I put my hand up.

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Neon Sign Transformers

Dual NST'sNeon sign transformers are the starting point for many beginners Tesla coils. They are a handy 12 kV peak unloaded and 30 mA into a short circuit which is current limited.
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Tesla Coil 4-Inch ver 2 components

Power control
The second version 4 inch diameter Tesla coil uses much higher power components.
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Australia’s Got Talent – Videos

Dr Electric Australia's Got Talent Medium

I was invited to perform in the auditions of Australia’s Got Talent in Perth, Western Australia which screened on May 10th Channel 7.  These are the videos of the show.
The setup and details are on the separate Australia’s Got Talent Setup page.
Here is a 7 second animation of the 2 minute act.

Australia's Got Talent

Below is my publicity and performance from the official site.  Dr Electric if you please…

Below is the performance from my hidden video camera (used for safety monitoring). It includes the original sound track and lots of other stuff not seen in the televised show.

The performance had major problems however and the audience and judges had to wait for 6 minutes for me to get going.
Firstly I had left the power switch off, then there was the more complicated technical problem of my spark gap motor not self starting. Hence, power applied and no action. The problem was hidden under the skirt of the coil. Now this is dangerous because there is huge pressure to fix things fast and a risk I won’t realise power is applied and it suddenly starts.
All was well in the end, however.

I got passed through the next round but was eliminated after that. I must have been one of the few contestants that didn’t want to go to the next stage in Melbourne in view of the time and cost and a lot of technical issues.

Below is my recording of whole show. Almost a complete flop …. See how it panned out and how the Gods were not pleased.  It’s a long clip (8 mins) and not that action packed. Perhaps skip this one.

View the Wikipedia entry for Australia’s Got Talent 2011.
Jump to the Australia’s Got Talent video official site
Link to the gallery photo on Australia’s Got Talent.

Audience 1.7 million for episode 1 rising to 2 million for some later ones.

Burning CD'sAustralia's Got Talent promotional photo

Above shows the main two stunts I did. Left shows how to burn CD’s and a wooden rod that I am holding goes up in flames. The right shows sparks onto a metal cage that surrounds me .

The music is an original soundtrack done by my son, Michael Terren who (was then) an 18yo pianist and composer studying at the West Australian Academy of Performing Arts. The music has a pounding industrial theme and runs for 2:17 mins.

Resonant Air-Core Transformer (Australia’s Got Talent) by Michael Terren

Interestingly, I appeared in almost all of the promos for AGT including other episodes and even the second round which I wasn’t in. The sparks onto the cage can be very brief but striking.

All in all an interesting experience. I learnt a lot electrically as well.

The setup and details are on the separate Australia’s Got Talent Setup page.

Photo date: March 23, 2011

Mini Tesla Coil

Physics Expo 2007 Mini Tesla coil with Oscar

This is a mini Tesla coil, made from odd parts from other projects and a neon sign transformer that runs from 240 V mains.
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High Speed Spark Photography 3

HV Rotating Mirror Streamer Hit1

This technique looks at microsecond events in the Tesla coil sparks. Here are some Tesla shots with the rotating mirror setup described here. The TC is my 4 inch one. It was set up for 4 then 6 inch sparks between pointed electrodes to a grounded object. Power was 4 MOT’s and current draw about 10A 250 V so enough to have a reasonable power arc rise in the centre if it got going. The distance from camera lens to mirror was 30 cm and from mirror to TC 140 cm.
 

The left photo shows the the setup (taken with my older camera) and shows the TC at left. The camera (center) picks up the image from the rotating mirror on the right. The right photo shows the TC running with spark just behind my shoulder.

 

The left photo shows the reversed image through the rotating mirror (stationary for this photo) showing the toroid on the left. The right photo shows the single spark with a series of up to 5 parallel sparks. Each space between sparks is 50 pixels which is 5 us period or 200 kHz. This implies a 100kHz waveform if there are two sparks per sine wave. Seems in the ballpark for the running frequency of this coil.
Note that this is not the banjo effect seen on a windy day which is just the spark gap firing rate of 100/120Hz for a synch gap (or 1100Hz with my fast asynchronous gap which was running flat out as I didn’t have a third variac setup). This is 100 – 1000 times faster.
Very high speed observations of spark growth can be made with streak cameras which use a photomultiplier tube to displace and magnify the image. It is about 3 orders of magnitude faster than what I am doing. It gives propagation rates of spark leaders of 10^9 cm/sec (approx 1/30 of speed of light) whereas I can only achieve 10^4 cm/sec.
Still, I was never expecting to be able to see things like that with equipment found around the home.
On the other hand, streamer growth has structure on very slow timescales which is why they are interesting to look at. In short, you can see them move so there are things happening at all sorts of timeframes from nanoseconds to seconds. Streamer brightness is much lower however but should register some interesting images.
Interpretation of streak camera stuff is easy if sparks are a straight line but become difficult if angled or branched so a blurred mess is a possible outcome when I try this with streamers.
I’m not sure how “useful” this will be but I hope to get some streamer data sometime.

 

The left photo shows an arc with no following 100 kHz ring down like in the last photo. The right photo shows a bright arc with faint ring down.

 

The left photo shows gaps in the bright white arc channel filled with faint purple arcs. The right photo shows detail of the initial spark which has a clear central channel on the enlarged view.

 

The left photo shows the ionization around the stainless steel electrode which does glow red hot at the end of a run although that is too faint to see. Thecenter photo shows that the ionization is sometimes delayed by 5 us after the initial spark strikes. The right photo shows an unusual streak that I suspect is the spark channel hitting a dust mote and burning it up.

 

The left photo shows a streamer which is about 12 inches of an 18 inch spark from the toroid side on the left. I was throttling the variac back to try to just get streamers and few hits. It is quite different. Time axis is downward. The initial streamer sparks (the top one) can be broken into perhaps 6 consecutive channels (5us apart = 2 pulses per 100kHz). Although it is difficult to be sure, only the last one makes it across the screen then a 10us gap then the main arc hits. Interestingly there is no ring down on the main arc, however the distances are greater and intensity is down. The center photo shows two different streamers which are unrelated but overlapping. It shows the variability in intensity of subsequent spark channels and the gap before the main arc forms. Perhaps this is a harmonic effect and the spark channel is actually of greater energy than the channel before The right photo shows the streamer ring up sparks of as many as 8 sparks in a row.
I guess the new information from the rotating mirror stuff is that streamers enlarge with successive cycles and ring up leading to a spark that connects. Sparks that connect (often) have a ring down. Not really unexpected from the CRO pics but nice to see it directly. So streamers ring up and sparks ring down – easy to remember.

Photo Date: 2009