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On Thu, Mar 20, 2014 at 9:51 AM, dave pierson <dave_p@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Bifilar coils effectively increase the wire diameter by two. The > > difference is a higher current, lower potential output at the > > top load. > I can't think why the potential would drop? > Think (approximation only) of two secondaries > in parallel: But there are not two secondaries. There is only one with a thicker wire and half the turns. > > Now that I think about it, It also seems to add > > an extra dimension to the resonance in the secondary. > > Instead of having a single conductor in > > resonance, there are now two conductors in resonance. > Should be the same resonance? > It might be, but if the two conductors are electrically isolated and there is a different capacitance in one leg than in the other, then the LC calculation would have to change. The inductances and potentials will be the same, but the capacitances would be different. > > I haven't tried it on my bifilar and trifilar coils, > > but it seems that putting a capacitor in line with one > > of the wires could have a unique effect. For example, > > causing the second wire to be 90 degrees or 180 > > degrees out of phase with the first would > > for the 180 cause: the output to go to zero as > the two secondaries cancel? > Yes, you are probably right about the 180 degree case. In fact, the phase difference would probably need to be fairly small to still have a spark. Dave _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla