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I once got what seemed to be a reasonable measurement of the voltage of an NST by making a voltage divider from a long (3-4 feet), shallow (probably 1/8" deep) trough of tap water (needs to be very level). Used a little hand held dvm (with meter movement; not electronic) to measure a small distance in the water. It gave a reasonable measurement after measuring distances, and measuring several different gaps between the DVM probes, showed the proper expected linearity, on comparison. I haven't done any calculations on scaling this up, but perhaps a really long plastic tube, filled with distilled water, and capped on each end with a metal plug? Might need to let it sit for a long time, to allow any trace contaminants inside the tube to diffuse evenly throughout the water? Not sure I'd try this, but it might spark a few saner ideas... Wes B. On 2018-02-26 21:22, Chris Boden wrote: > Ignoring limitations of cost and size, is it possible to build a large > precision voltage divider (imagine something inside a 10' tall PVC pipe on > a stand with a toroid in top) that would be able to accurately measure the > output voltages of medium-sized Tesla Coils? > > Thoughts? Details? Design/method/parts suggestions? > > Has anyone ever done this before at the hobbiest level? > > -- > > Chris Boden > President > The Geek Group National Science Institute > www.thegeekgroup.org [1] Links: ------ [1] http://www.thegeekgroup.org _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla