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Re: [TCML] Strange Occurrence And Can't Google The Answer



I saw the same slow moving ball of blue light when a tree branch fell
across all the legs of a high voltage, three phase system. After sparking
for several minutes, the entire power line exploded into a spherical blue
light, which raced slowly down the wires until it reached a grounded pole.

The odd thing was that the explosion severed a wire, but the blue light
followed the path where the wires were just before the explosion. It was as
though a magnetic field temporarily owned its own space irrespective of the
conductor that caused it.


David Thomson


On Tue, Feb 28, 2017 at 8:36 PM, Guape Sinnelag <amn1t3@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> I don't know about the plasma actuators. But st Elmo's fire is definitely a
> thought. From reflection and reading follow-ups (TY everyone). I would
> agree(from my knowledge base at least), that I would lean more towards the
> release of flammable gas from my wiring insulation. Idk exactly how it'd
> work. But it would explain why it was a blue "worm" thingy, why it traveled
> slow, and didn't destroy anything.  Kinda like watching a line of gasoline
> ignite. Plus it started at the arcing of the primary to the secondary and
> at that time my primary was 12g solid core insulated wire. Electrically it
> didn't follow "procedure".
>
> I kinda want to recreate it more controllably. It was such a
> fantastic(albeit scary) experience. Something you'd only expect to see in
> the movies. But life is stranger than fiction....
>
> On Feb 28, 2017 15:43, "nickobert testein" <nickobert.testein@xxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:
>
> > Have you tried looking into "plasma actuators"?
> >
> > Notice the blue glow over the electrode buried in the dielectric, perhaps
> > this was your blue light.
> >
> > NT
> >
> > On Fri, Feb 24, 2017 at 6:37 AM, ExtremeElectronics.co.uk <
> > tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >
> > > St Elmo's fire is only another name for Corona,  from the description
> it
> > > doesn't sound like Corona.
> > >
> > > I suspect its more likely to be lit gas from a leaking capacitor or out
> > > gassing from hot insulation than anything HV related (apart from the
> > > ignition source)
> > >
> > > Derek
> > >
> > >
> > > On 24-Feb-17 13:21, BR G wrote:
> > >
> > >> St. Elmo's fire.
> > >>
> > >
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