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Re: Sparklength inquiry
> Original Poster: FutureT-at-aol-dot-com
> I posted the square law suggestion some time ago, based on my
> results with the sync gap coils in which I obtained 42" sparks using
> 620 watts, and 64" sparks using 1570 watts. I was relating input
> power to spark length. I then scaled up the spark lengths using the
> square law, and your 25' spark TC fit well on the curve. This
> posting was before I improved the efficiency of my coils, the old
> figures were:
>
Power input (revised) spark length toroid dia (inches)
> 680 W 620W actual 42" 20
> 2100 W 1570W actual 64" 30
> 8400 W 6280W 128" 60
> 33.6kW 25kW 21' 120
> 67kW 31' 240
> 134kW 100kW 42' 480
> 538kW 400kW 84' 960
> 1.6MW 168' 1920
> ***new** 5.1MW 300'
> I noted in my posting above that this chart was created before I
> improved the efficiency of my coils. I added a new column in the
> chart above, and plugged in the values for my present efficiency
> of my coils (see chart). Using these new values, I show a need
> for only 5.1MW to develop the 300 foot spark, which by coincidence(?)
> agrees exactly with your figure.
>
> John Freau
Here's another correlating datapoint for your curve --
At the NZ site, Electrum produced a 40 - 45ft ground strike
(observed 3 times) with 109kVA on the main transformers.
There's this one particular plant (called a 'flux' plant?!)
that seems to attract strikes, when the wind is right.
My two coils land pretty close to the square-law curve
that is defined by your two coils.
And Ed's halfwave coil lands fairly close as well, beating
the revised curve by about 20%. But a halfwave coil should
be more efficient at producing spark length -- since the spark
channel is supported at both ends, the ends of the spark need
be only as thick as the base of a single spark half its size.
So with 5 data points that span over 7 octaves of power,
it would seem that a simple square-law is a good fit.
Can it be that easy? Here's where a good survey would
come in useful.
--
-GL
www.lod-dot-org