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Re: Spinning pipes



In a message dated 11/15/98 11:58:25 PM Pacific Standard Time,
tesla-at-pupman-dot-com writes:

<< 
 Hi All,
 Just finished a new RSG. I switched from an 1800 rpm
 sync (120 breaks) to a direct drive variable DC. I was
 thinking about trying something different than the basic
 singular disk with electrode points. I designed and
 built a squirl-cage RSG using ~6" x 1/2" copper pipe.
 There are two disks with 8 pipes. Since the rotational
 force would be great at high rpm, I built this with as
 tight a tolerance as possible. The fixed electrodes are
 5/8" spheres connected to a 5" x 1/2" bolt. Needless to
 say, I've built the RSG within a 1.5" thick wooden case
 just in case. It spins nice without vibration, so far.
 
 I tried it out tonight. As I was building it, I kept
 thinking this thing is never going to quench like I need
 it to. But to my surprise, it did quite well. The arcs
 were white hot and right into the ceiling of my garage
 at ~2kva. I tried getting the coil as low as possible
 from the top of the garage ceiling which is 4 feet, but
 the arcs just went right up as white and hot as ever
 into the ceiling. Unlike my old RSG, this one is
 producing 1 to 2 arcs per burst where the old one was
 producing many streamers.
 
 Unfortunately, my garage is too small to run it at full
 power to see what effects the variable drive and RSG is
 capable of. It hasn't snowed yet in my area of
 Minnesota, so maybe I'll get a chance this week to run
 it outside. I did note that this particular RSG produces
 a lot of moving air. The fixed electrodes were still
 cold after a few short runs.
 
 I'm sure I'm not the first to build such a gap. Probably
 the old timers have either built this type at some point
 in the past or know of others who have. I wonder how
 some of those performed?
 
 Bart
  >>
Bart,

Sounds real interesting.  How about posting some pictures of this gap?

Ed Sonderman