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I have to say that I agree. Other than more common people see sparks & think music so the wrong way of thinking starts. My horn blows now. I saw a tesla coil, Boy have many people seen it now. The coil housed inthe Griffith park Observatory in Los Angeles California not the biggest butwhen I saw it in the late 50s as a kid. I was very impressed so much so that Ihave been in the electrical field my whole life & working life 65 now. Anew coil is currently under construction a small one. Will post a picture whenit is done. On Monday, February 4, 2019, 05:14:24 PM PST, Greg Leyh <lod@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > From: jimlux<jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > On 2/4/19 9:14 AM, Steve White wrote: > I will probably get a lot of responses telling me that I am stepping on > their main interest and to each his own but here goes anyway. > Are there others besides myself that think that musical tesla coils > are a gimmick?It seems that Youtube is just flooded with these things. > I have got to thepoint where I skip over them. > >> Yes, indeed, I agree > > I will admit that it was interesting to hear music played on a TC for a > few times, but after that it got old very quickly. In my opinion, using > these coils to play music subtracts from the inherent majesty of high > voltage generation and discharge. The observers are too busy listening > to the music instead of admiring the high voltage fury. > > Well, I'm not quite of that opinion, but I also think that folks aren't > really exercising the flexibility or potential of the medium - after > all, how many times do we need to hear some single melody line played by > a pulse generator. It's kind of like when you play with an audio > oscillator/function generator and a speaker - you spin the dials and > make cool sounds, and then, ok, what's next. > > They might as well go home and listen to their stereo. Some might say > that the only practical use for tesla coils is entertainment, and I > would agree, so why not add music as another dimension of the > entertainment? I hear this argument but I just don't agree because music > is too distracting. When I have observers stop by during Halloween, > some of them ask if my coil can play music. I happily say no because > it is a spark gap coil even though they probably don't know > what I am talking about. > >> Ah, but if you make your spark gap coil play music, what about that? >> That's a technology achievement - anybody can pulse modulate a high >> power H-bridge or VTTC - but getting a variable speed spark gap is a >> completely different story. > Paul Butterfield, who I don't think is on this list, did develop an ultra-low inertia rotary gap for playing music. The thing was eerie to watch: The armature could change direction at 1500RPM and you would scarcely notice it. He called the setup the 'Thundermonica.' Musical coils really are a completely separate pursuit. The coil itself is largely considered a component, and often purchased turnkey. The focus is on the composition, not on the machine physics. Not being a musician myself, I agree that the actual machine physics [and the applied physics possibilities] are a lot more interesting. It's true that most 'compositions' out there are just simple full-mod playbacks of MIDI, but there are a few composers who coax some very subtle effects out of a single resonator with custom gear. -Greg _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla