Tag Archives: volts

Tesla Envy

 

Telsa Envy cut

Video: “Tesla Envy – getting VERY close to huge sparks”. The title is a play on words  and … well you will just have to see for yourself.

The 1:44 min video includes sparks from my largest Tesla coil striking a Faraday cage only inches from my face (and me looking like a dork).

Video has 335,000 views now. On reviewing this video 5 years later I should not have pulled out the sparks quite so far onto the rod in my hand. You need to expect the spark can jump around an object up to 1/3 longer (or more rarely), which puts my arm just with in range.
For a big power arc it is less of a problem but if it “breaks” then there may be a problem.
I am a little older since then, perhaps not wiser, but still here…

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Faraday cage
Big Tesla coil sparks
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Magnetic sensor array

Photo Date: June 6, 2007

Faraday cage

A fencing wire cage acts as a Faraday cage and protects anyone inside.

This is a snug single person Faraday cage that allows you to get up close and personal with 6 foot sparks. It’s shape is reminiscent of a Dalek from Dr Who. Remember “We will ex-term-in-ate”. It is a simple walk in and walk out affair, open at the back.
For more details and photos:   Continue reading

My First Tesla Coil

My first proper Tesla coil

My first Tesla coil using a neon sign transformer with a ferrite cored secondary giving 2 inch sparks.  I developed this idea with an old transformer from a dumpster which in retrospect was an old unpotted NST (neon sign transformer). I used a single static gap with a 12 inch ferrite cored coil of 11 primary and 100 turns secondary giving 2 inch sparks with 26 small ceramic capacitors with 2 strings of 13 x 10 nF at 2.5 kV each. It ran nicely for about 20 years!  This photo is a mock up with most of the original parts.

I developed this from my first “Tesla coil” discovery while doing a spark spectroscopy project.  Years after I made it I heard that Tesla had beaten me to that discovery by quite a few years! This photo is a mock up with most of the original parts.

It now has new life as a Jacob’s ladder.

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 first “Tesla coil” discovery

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Photo Date: Jan 19, 2003