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Re: Trip
The Boston Science Museum is Van de Graaff's machine -- it operates at
3.2-3.5 MEV. It was originally two separate machines each operating at 3.5
MEV -- one pos and one minus -- with an accelerator tube between them.
DR.RESONANCE-at-next-wave-dot-net
----------
> From: Tesla List <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com>
> To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Subject: Re: Trip
> Date: Wednesday, September 30, 1998 8:26 PM
>
> Original Poster: Tony Lekas <tony-at-lekas-dot-org>
>
> I live in Hudson NH, across the river from Nashua in the southern part of
the
> state. I would be glad to meet you and discuss coiling. At the moment
my
> coil
> is down with dead transformers, although I may have it working again by
then.
>
> The Boston Museum of Science has Mr. Van DeGraph's original generator
which
> they
> operate and display. It is supposed to generate ~1MV. I have seen it
and
> it is
> impressive. They have more recently acquired a large tesla coil. I have
not
> been to see it and do not know the details. Maybe some on the list
> provided it
> and knows more about it.
>
> Tony Lekas
>
> Tesla List wrote:
>
> > Original Poster: Esondrmn-at-aol-dot-com
> >
> > Fellow coilers. I plan to be in Connecticut, Mass., N.H. and Vermont
the
> > first two weeks of October. Any coilers located in the vicinity that
> maybe I
> > could visit? Or any suggestions of display coils that I should go see?
> >
> > Ed Sonderman
>