[Home][2018 Index]
Hi, thanks for all the interesting discussion about NST testing and safe grounding, it's all been instructive for a noob I have this grey resin block neon transformer in the shed I was thinking of experimenting with. It's a 15kv/30mA one with a midpoint ground connection. Is there a way to rectify the output so I can use it for trying out powering a dc tesla? I have a big bag of diodes (1N5408 I think) that were pretty cheap. If they'll handle 1000v each I could solder them up into long strings and use 4 strings of diodes to make a bridge rectifier? I guess I'd need a capacitor on the other side of the bridge as well though to smooth it out a bit. Then I was wondering if there was another way to do it with a midpoint grounded transformer like mine. I'm thinking the 2 secondary windings on the transformer must be out-of-phase, but could I rectify them individually? Between each HV output and the midpoint ground I mean. Then I'm thinking I'd need 2 bridges but they're only trying to rectify half the voltage each and it would be easier to cope with. Basically I'm hoping there's a way to get like 10kv dc out instead of closer to (I think) 20kv Because then I can buy a main MMC capacitor that doesn't have to be rated for the highest voltage (so I can put less caps in series) hope this makes some sense to someone! thanx for advice anyway Ray _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla