resonance@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
I don't know. Probably not. But there is always the problem of the driver, that would have to act as a perfect voltage source. If the secondary coil is superconductive, the primary system would limit the Q due to the equivalent series resistance of the driver electronics. Another limitation would be radiation. The radiated energy counts as loss, and a radiation resistance would appear, even with everything superconductive. For normal metals, liquid helium would be necessary for superconductivity.Antonio: Has anyone ever immersed a Tesla oscillator in liquid nitrogen or other very cold substance to see what kind of Q and voltage gain is possible with super conductivity?
Antonio Carlos M. de Queiroz _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla